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Republicans make major gains in control of state governments

OVERLAND PARK, Kan. — Before the election results began rolling in, Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly took the stage, confident that Democrats could break the long-held Republican supermajority that has thwarted many of her legislative priorities.

“If we do that, you will not only make my life better, you will make the life of every Kansan better,” Kelly told supporters Tuesday.

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Government transparency group begs Biden to fill vacancies for ethics jobs before Trump

The Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) is begging President Joe Biden to fill 100 government vacancies for ethics and inspectors general before leaving office.

On X over the weekend, CREW pointed out that Biden has an opportunity to "safeguard" the American democracy.

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'Train wreck': Experts sound the alarm on Trump's plan to blindly purge federal workforce

Experts are already worried about the immediate impacts on the country as former President Donald Trump gears up to wipe out much of the federal government workforce, reported The New York Times on Monday.

The Heritage Foundation's infamous Project 2025 plan calls for broadly reclassifying much of the civil service who perform basic, nonpartisan government functions to allow the president to fire career employees at will and replace them with people loyal to him. Trump, while he distanced himself from much of Project 2025 as it became unpopular with voters, has made clear his plans to do something similar.

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'Wow this is odd': Reporter says Trump Team is weirded out by 'guest that wouldn't leave'

A powerful ally of President-elect Donald Trump is already weirding out members of his transition team who view the supporter as the "guest who wouldn't leave," a CNN journalist says.

Tesla and X CEO Elon Musk has already rankled insiders as he dazzles Trump with "nerd glamor" amid a high-profile bid for political influence, tech journalist Kara Swisher said Monday morning.

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'Shrug': Expert says Trump's 'threat to democracy' was so over-played fans glazed over it

Many voters set aside their concerns about Donald Trump's authoritarian ambitions — while others willingly embraced those anti-democratic tendencies, a new report claimed Monday.

The former president won many traditionally Democratic neighborhorhoods, including in Pennsylvania where he got the widest margin of victory since Ronald Reagan, with gains all over the crucial swing state including in working-class communities like Allentown and Johnstown.

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Trump's first move could doom his presidency: WaPo analyst

Donald Trump has a new dilemma to face as he prepares to start a second term, former-conservative-turned-anti-Trump columnist Jennifer Rubin wrote for The Washington Post — abandon his promises, or let them destroy his fledgling administration.

"He could, for example, enact draconian, across-the-board tariffs; begin massive roundups and deportations of law-abiding 'dreamers';'repeal the Affordable Care Act and major bipartisan legislation passed under President Joe Biden; and enact a new round of massive tax cuts for big corporations and wealthy individuals," wrote Rubin — but in doing so he would "make himself extremely unpopular, induce economic and social chaos and create political problems for his party in the 2026 midterms."

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These voters supported both Trump and AOC — here's what they were thinking

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) this cycle ran better in New York's 14th congressional district than Vice President Kamala Harris, which means that there were many voters who backed both an avowed democratic socialist and President-elect Donald Trump.

After election results showed that Trump made major gains in New York City this election cycle, Ocasio-Cortez solicited responses from locals who backed both her and Trump to get a sense of why they would support two candidates who appeared to be polar opposites politically.

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'He's concerned': Analyst says new demand reveals Trump's Republican loyalty problem

President-elect Donald Trump's recent demand to Republican supporters in the Senate reveals worries about the loyalty of his own political party, a CNN legal expert says.

Trump's request that Senate majority leader hopefuls back recess appointments for his nominees suggests he has problems with Republican support, political analyst Mark Preston argued Monday morning.

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House Dems see 'rays of sunlight' despite tough election results

As of this writing, Republicans appear set to retain control of the House of Representatives.

However, as Punchbowl News reports, Democrats at the moment are not making a push to oust their leadership for one simple reason: Things could have gone much, much worse.

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'Amazed we even got close': Harris allies describe 'deep hole' she started in

Kamala Harris allies pointed fingers after her loss to Donald Trump, but they also agreed that she started her abbreviated campaign from the bottom of a "deep hole."

More than a dozen campaign aides, Democratic operatives, strategists and White House officials told NOTUS that the vice president was punished for her involvement in President Joe Biden's administration, and they also blamed the 81-year-old chief executive for remaining in the race after billing himself as a transitional candidate and for failing to clearly articulate a case against Trump.

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'Chaos voters': Analyst reveals why Trump supporters want to watch 'things burn'

A desire for chaos is a key reason that some supporters of President-elect Donald Trump are thrilled he'll resume the White House in 2025 despite economic plans that experts warn could ignite an "inflation bomb," feminist author Jill Filipovic argued in a MSNBC editorial Monday.

"But what if a good number of Trump’s fans are simply chaos voters?" Filipovic wrote. "They may not feel horribly mistreated so much as they resent what they perceive as the better treatment accorded to people they don’t think deserve it. These voters wouldn't be turned off by Trump’s aggression and his threats because his brash rhetoric is part of the appeal."

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'Targeted for retribution': Democrats say they're already afraid Trump is coming for them

Democrats are afraid a convicted felon will be coming after them in 2025 when he reclaims his position as president of the U.S., journalists revealed Monday morning.

Donald Trump is the object of alarm for Democrat political aides and federal workers who fear they could face financial ruin and prosecution as the president-elect claims new powers for the executive branch, panelists said on CNN.

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Project 2025 authors gloat over Trump win: 'What a joke – it was all lies'

Staffers at the right-wing Heritage Foundation are gloating over their controversial Project 2025 plans for Donald Trump's next presidency.

The former president won re-election Tuesday despite being saddled with the deeply unpopular blueprint for remaking the federal government, from which Trump's team tried to distance themselves during the campaign, but sources told NOTUS that Heritage group chats have been how conservatives “tricked the Libs into believing Project 2025 wasn’t real.”

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