Tag

Slider

Browsing

DNC Chair Jaime Harrison hit back at Sen. Bernie Sanders’ claim that the Democratic Party has “abandoned working-class people” as “straight up BS.”

“This is straight up BS … Biden was the most-pro worker President of my life time — saved Union pensions, created millions of good paying jobs and even marched in a picket line and some of MVP’s plans would have fundamentally transformed the quality of life and closed the racial wealth gap for working people across this country,” Harrison wrote on X Thursday.

“There are a lot of post election takes and this one ain’t a good one,” he continued.

Harrison’s remarks come after the progressive senator and former presidential primary candidate claimed the Democratic Party “defends the status quo” after Vice President Kamala Harris’ resounding loss to Donald Trump.

“Will the big money interests and well-paid consultants who control the Democratic Party learn any real lessons from this disastrous campaign?” Sanders, a Vermont independent who caucuses with Democrats, said in a statement Wednesday.

President Joe Biden praised Vice President Kamala Harris for running “an inspiring campaign” and called on the country to unite behind a fair election during his first public remarks since President-elect Donald Trump’s victory.

“The will of the people always prevails,” Biden told a group of his staffers, Cabinet members and some family members in the Rose Garden Thursday. He added, “I’ve said many times: You can’t love your country only when you win. You can’t love your neighbor only when you agree.”

Biden, who spoke to Trump Wednesday to congratulate him on his victory and invite him to a White House meeting, commended Harris as having “a backbone like a ramrod” amid her decisive loss.

The president is already facing heat from fellow Democrats who blame him for not stepping aside from his reelection campaign soon enough, squandering Harris’ chances at winning.

But Biden praised his legacy as leaving behind “the strongest economy in the world” and called on members of his administration to “make every day count” before passing the torch in a peaceful transfer of power.

He also repeated his call for Americans to “bring down the temperature” amid deep political divisions.

“Setbacks are unavoidable, but giving up is unforgivable,” Biden stressed, adding, “We’re going to be okay, but we need to stay engaged.”

Donald Trump is leaning on many of the people who served in top positions in his first administration to help prepare an aggressive set of policies he plans to pursue right out of the gate. The result is an administration that will be better prepared than in 2016 to implement Trump’s priorities soon after the inauguration — especially on core agenda items like trade and tariffs.

The Trump transition is formally being led by former Trump Small Business Administration chief Linda McMahon, who is handling the policy side, and billionaire financier Howard Lutnick, who is overseeing the personnel vetting. Lutnick, one of the few members of the team who did not work for Trump’s White House, has been the public face of the operation thus far, while drawing scrutiny for his potential conflicts of interest and combative appearances on cable news.

The policy preparations have been far lower-profile — by design, given the backlash the conservative Heritage Foundation attracted for its Project 2025 blueprint for a second Trump administration. But behind the scenes, the Trump transition is leaning on a diffuse roster of former Trump administration officials, according to conversations with 16 people familiar with Trump transition planning, who were granted anonymity to discuss confidential operations.

A small sample includes:

U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer, who is crafting trade and economic plans, along with Jamieson Greer, Lighthizer’s former chief of staff
Special envoy for Iran Brian Hook, who is involved with preparing a Trump State Department
Director of National Intelligence John Ratcliffe, who is involved with national security personnel and policy planning
Office of Management and Budget general counsel Mark Paoletta, who is helping craft the policy playbook for the Justice Department

Interior Secretary David Bernhardt

A former Trump administration official with knowledge of the discussions said transition officials are mindful of the lessons from the 2016 transition, and are keen to avoid the same turmoil. “They’re being more confidential about it. … They don’t want distractions and personnel stories popping up.”
The Trump transition did not respond to requests for comment.

Another person familiar with transition policy planning confirmed Lighthizer is crafting economic policy for the Treasury Department, the National Economic Council, the U.S. Trade Representative’s office, as is former Trump speechwriter Vince Haley, who is also working for the Trump campaign. Those figures are preparing an aggressive trade agenda for the first 100 days, which will likely include some executive action on tariffs, though the details are still being debated.

Lighthizer is also expected to assume a top economic role in the Trump administration.

“There’s one policy area that’s going to be defining for the second Trump administration, and that’s tariffs,” said the person with direct knowledge of policy planning. “And there’s a very small group of people working on that and it’s the most important part of the policy planning for the second administration.”

President-elect Donald Trump has promised a sharp, dramatic about-face on the Biden administration’s energy policies — including “drill, baby, drill” and a sharp drop in Americans’ fuel prices.

Meeting some of those pledges won’t be easy. Or quick. Federal bureaucracy grinds slowly, and the energy markets don’t move at presidents’ whims.

These are among the energy promises Trump pledged for Day 1 — and his odds of delivering on them:

Cutting energy bills in half — in a year: “If you make doughnuts, if you make cars — whatever you make, energy is a big deal, and we’re going to get that — it’s my ambition to get your energy bill within 12 months down 50 percent,” Trump promised at a rally in September.

That’s essentially an impossible goal, energy experts say.

Oil prices move on a global market, and a president can do little to significantly change them. The U.S. is already producing oil at peak levels. And while Trump is certain to remove regulations and ease permitting on fuel production, that won’t dramatically cut prices, and producers certainly don’t want to see prices bottom out.

“It’s going to be a struggle for him to be able to bend the system enough to be anywhere in the ballpark of cutting energy prices in half,” said Patrick De Haan, head of petroleum analysis at GasBuddy.com. “I would call it virtually impossible, short of an economic collapse, or short of something else that’s difficult to imagine at this point.”

Axing all price-raising regulations: “On Day 1, I will sign an executive order directing every federal agency to immediately remove every single burdensome regulation driving up the cost of goods,” Trump said while campaigning in Albuquerque, New Mexico.

But rescinding regulations finished by a previous administration takes time.

A new administration must make a robust case for why it’s pulling back, issue a proposal, take public comment and respond to those comments. For complex rulemakings, the process typically takes two or three years.

And opponents can sue. Almost 80 percent of the first Trump administration’s regulatory actions were defeated in court, the Institute for Policy Integrity at New York University School of Law estimated.

Tying disaster aid to bending to Trump’s will: Trump made this threat explicit during a rally in California rally, saying he would force Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom to increase water deliveries to agriculture if he wanted disaster relief money.

“We’ll force it down his throat, and we’ll say, ‘Gavin, if you don’t do it, we’re not giving you any of that fire money that we send you all the time for all the forest fires that you have,’” Trump vowed.

This threat is legitimate. Federal law gives the president sole authority to approve or deny a governor’s request to declare their state a “major disaster” and reimburse states for millions — or billions — in recovery costs.

Read this story from POLITICO’s E&E News for more of a reality check on Trump’s Day 1 energy pledges.

Trump’s second term will have major implications for the future of U.S. clean energy — and for the more than $150 billion in private-sector clean energy manufacturing investments triggered by Democrats’ landmark climate law.

Those investments are expected to create about 160,000 jobs, mainly in Republican congressional districts, with most projects coming online during Trump’s second term, as POLITICO reported this week.

That economic bounty is a reason for Republicans to keep the Inflation Reduction Act in place, some of the law’s advocates argue, despite Trump’s pledge to rescind its unspent funds as part of a dismantling of President Joe Biden’s climate policies.

“Because it is undeniably true that the IRA is good for businesses and good for all Americans, any attempted rollback of the IRA is a fool’s errand,” Biden’s former White House national climate adviser Gina McCarthy said this week.

She and other climate advocates vowed to fight to defend Biden’s climate progress despite Trump’s victory.

One politically inconvenient fact for Democrats: Only a fraction of the clean energy investment unleashed by the IRA is up and running, and roughly 53 percent of announced facilities have yet to begin construction, according to a POLITICO analysis of data from policy research firm Atlas Public Policy. That limited the amount of concrete economic progress that Kamala Harris and other Democrats could brag about during the campaign. It could even allow Trump to claim credit for the new jobs.

For now, manufacturers are likely to stay the course, the head of one clean energy organization said.

There “will certainly be the potential for some chilling effect” for clean energy manufacturers, especially if Trump keeps up his rhetoric on prioritizing fossil fuels, said Andrew Reagan, executive director of Clean Energy for America. But Reagan predicted that companies will keep doing work until something on the policy side “dramatically changes.”

In a break from his approach in 2016, Donald Trump has turned to a pair of staunch allies from the private sector — Howard Lutnick and Linda McMahon — to lead his transition effort. Lutnick is in charge of personnel, while McMahon is overseeing policy.

Lutnick, the longtime CEO of the financial services firm Cantor Fitzgerald, was Trump’s leading conduit to Wall Street during this year’s campaign. He personally gave more than $10 million to the former president’s campaign and raised more than $75 million. Trump is close with Lutnick, who once appeared on “The Apprentice.”

But Lutnick’s approach to leading the transition has been controversial among some in Trump’s orbit. He has faced accusations from some Trump insiders that he has improperly mixed his business interests with his duties standing up a potential administration. Concerns about potential conflicts of interest for Lutnick include Cantor Fitzgerald and its relationship with one of the most controversial cryptocurrency companies in the world, Tether, which issues a digital token that is pegged to the value of the U.S. dollar and is reportedly under federal investigation.

Some Trump allies have also accused him of working to sideline advisers who worked in the first Trump administration in hopes of filling the second administration with new people who could be personally beneficial to him.

Lutnick’s camp has denied the accusations and he said in a statement that the “entire transition team is solely focused on ensuring President Trump is victorious and that he is ready to start building out his historic second administration immediately.” Two people close to Lutnick, granted anonymity to discuss private conversations, say he has been intimately involved in building out a roster of potential staffers and Cabinet officials so that Trump can hit the ground running on day one.

“I promise you, the greatest field of people ever to walk into government is going to join him on Jan. 20,” Lutnick declared at an October town hall.

McMahon served in Trump’s first administration, as head of the Small Business Administration from 2017 to 2019, and has remained an important player in his orbit since leaving government. She serves as board chair of the America First Policy Institute, a think tank formed by Trump allies after his 2020 election loss that has long been quietly preparing for a second term, and has led the pro-Trump super PAC America First Action.

McMahon was one of the forces behind transforming World Wrestling Entertainment from a small business into a multibillion-dollar enterprise. A personal friend and donor to Trump and Republicans, she twice ran unsuccessfully for Senate in Connecticut more than a decade ago.

McMahon’s AFPI has done much of the initial policy planning for a second Trump administration already, including drafting more than 100 proposed executive actions. McMahon engaged with former Trump administration officials and allies to create policy memos and present policy ideas to be enacted in the first 100 days.

In addition to McMahon and Lutnick, Trump’s sons, Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump, his running mate Ohio Sen. JD Vance, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and former Democratic Rep. Tulsi Gabbard have been given honorary roles on the transition. Trump Jr. is expected to help with selecting staff.

New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy forged a unique relationship with President Donald Trump that could help the blue state when Trump returns to the White House.

While the Democratic governor is preparing to clash with Republicans on immigration and women’s rights, Murphy is also looking to work with Trump on issues like infrastructure.

“If it’s contrary to our values, we will fight to the death,” Murphy said in a Wednesday press conference on the election. “If there’s an opportunity for common ground, we will seize that as fast as anybody.”

Nobody is calling them besties but Murphy has a relationship with Trump and his family unlike any other blue state leader. Murphy, who has led both the Democratic Governors Association and the nonpartisan National Governors Association, expects talking about his Trump strategy with other Democrats could be a “big chunk of my life over the next couple of months.”

Some Democratic governors walked a fine line with Trump when he was in office, but Murphy kept it up after Trump left the White House by staying in touch with the former president, his daughter Ivanka and son-in-law Jared Kushner.

It’s paid off — Kushner reportedly helped secure the 2026 World Cup, Trump greenlit a new bridge to New York City and Murphy praised the former president’s aid to New Jersey during the pandemic.

But after Harris’ defeat, Murphy is prepared to be at odds with Trump on issues like immigration, women’s rights, gun safety and clean energy.

“You can never give up your values and principles to get something done,” Murphy said in an interview.

Donald Trump won. Now the sprint to turn over one of the largest organizations on the planet begins.

Trump’s transition team — working parallel to Kamala Harris’ — has already spent months quietly crafting plans to realign the federal government. They’ve been making shortlists for Cabinet jobs, assembling “landing teams” for federal agencies, vetting a slew of potential political appointees, hammering out ‘Day One’ policy plans and doing all the other prep work the next leader of the free world needs. But now that there is the official winner, much of this work moves into the open.

With less than 11 weeks until Inauguration Day, here’s what happens next:

— Every four to eight years, the agency primarily tasked with managing the government’s vast real estate holdings becomes a hub of transition resources for an incoming administration. The General Service Administration — which became a target of Trump’s ire in 2020 — provides office space, tech support and funding for the president- and vice president-elect from now until as late as to 60 days after the inauguration, depending on their needs.

— National security briefings begin. The president-elect’s team will receive a classified summary of national security concerns as soon as possible.

— Mid-November: Trump’s transition team starts sending “agency review teams” to at least a few dozen of the more than 100 federal agencies. Those teams are tasked with sussing out the state of the career workforce and budget, how its current work fits into the new administration’s priorities, and what headaches are waiting for them. They compile reports and submit them to the transition leaders before Inauguration Day.

— Late November: Transition staff are expected to select its top 50 candidates for Cabinet positions and several key White House personnel, such as general counsel and domestic policy adviser. They will also recruit and train “sherpas” — the officials who help guide nominees through the Senate confirmation process. Those Sherpas will start putting out feelers to key Senate committees and members of leadership in an effort to get many nominees confirmed by Inauguration Day.

— Early-to-mid-December: The president-elect is expected to have a slate of executive orders and regulations prepared and an early draft of the budget proposal the incoming president will send to Congress in early 2025.

— Late December. The GSA will start supporting President Joe Biden’s transition out of office — support that can last up to seven months.

— By the end of January, trainings and orientations for incoming Cabinet members take place, particularly those with less experience with the federal government. They also need to select roughly 4,000 political appointees for positions across the executive branch, about a quarter of which require Senate confirmation.

Democrats made significant inroads in state legislative races in recent election cycles and hoped to build on those gains on Tuesday. But with many state legislative races still too close to call — and likely to trigger recounts — Republicans appear to have largely staved off big challenges in key states and flipped Democratic seats in others.

Most notably, they partially reversed big Democratic 2022 gains in Michigan and Minnesota that gave that party total control of those state governments and ushered through bold progressive agendas. The GOP flipped at least one legislative chamber in Michigan and appeared to have battled Democrats to a draw in the Minnesota House, with control of the chamber still up in the air.

And Democratic dreams of big gains in Wisconsin — under redrawn maps that gave them their best shot in more than a decade — largely didn’t materialize.

About 80 percent of the country’s 7,386 state legislative seats and 11 governorships were on the ballot Tuesday. Republicans have dominated state capitals for more than a decade, since eviscerating Democrats in the 2010 cycle. And if the early returns are any indication, they’ll do so for the foreseeable future.

“Democrats hyped up the cycle as their best shot since 2010 when they got blown out in the states to gain some real power, and they largely fell short,” said POLITICO’s Liz Crampton, who reported on many of the most closely watched state-level contests in recent months.

We assembled a team of POLITICO reporters and editors — Crampton, Madison Fernandez, Zach Montellaro and Lisa Kashinsky — who have been tracking state races throughout the 2024 cycle to break down the most compelling and surprising results from Tuesday.

Two of the battleground state legislatures were in a holding pattern as of Wednesday afternoon. Arizona appeared to be Democrats’ best shot at earning a complete flip — but it will come down to a handful of races that will likely take days for results to be finalized. In Pennsylvania, Republicans appear to have maintained control in the Senate, while Democrats are hoping to cling to a one-seat majority in the House.

Eight of the 11 governorships on the ballot this year were open seats, raising the prospect of pitched battles. But in the end, not a single state executive post flipped parties. Even the most competitive race in the country — New Hampshire — ended up being a runaway victory for Republican Kelly Ayotte.

This conversation has been edited for length and clarity.

Liz, you wrote about a bunch of state legislative contests this cycle. What’s your big takeaway from what we saw on Tuesday?

Liz Crampton: Bottom line — it was a great night for Republicans and a mediocre night for Democrats. Democrats hyped up the cycle as their best shot since 2010, when they got blown out in the states, to gain some real power — and they largely fell short.

Madison, Zach, what would you add to that?

Madison Fernandez: I’m interested to see and hear from folks what the reasoning for that is. In the lead up to the election, Dems were stressing that ballot roll-off is a big thing for them, where voters don’t vote all the way down ballot in these races. So it could be that. But also, when you look at the national Democratic enthusiasm on Tuesday, it wasn’t great really anywhere up or down the ballot. So I think there’s a few factors at play here.

Zach Montellaro: It was also a pretty mixed-to-bad bag for generally liberal-coded ballot measures. Some abortion right measures won — more won than lost — but they lost in Florida, most notably, the biggest state to reject an abortion rights ballot measure.

Voting reform — most parties don’t embrace it, but generally liberals are happier to vote for ranked choice voting than Republicans. Ranked-choice voting pretty uniformly lost across the country.

Banning non-citizen voting — which to be clear is already illegal in federal elections — passed by big margins basically across the country.

Ballot measures on the whole were better for liberals than the results were for Democrats, but they still suffered some pretty big defeats.

What were the biggest surprises or the most intriguing results?

ZM: The easy one is North Carolina for me. Harris lost the state, but Democrats won basically every other big statewide race. They won the next governor. They won the next lieutenant governor. They won the race for attorney general.

They broke the supermajority in the state House — very, very, very narrowly — but that’s a big deal, because now incoming governor Josh Stein actually has some authority in a way that Roy Cooper didn’t under a supermajority.

If you’re only looking at the federal election, bad night for Democrats in North Carolina. Underneath that, though, not a bad night for North Carolina Democrats.

What do you attribute that disconnect between how Harris fared in North Carolina and how the rest of the Democratic ticket fared?

MF: Some Democrats will say that it has to do with Mark Robinson and his scandalous candidacy for governor. In the race for attorney general, Democrats really tied Dan Bishop, the Republican candidate, to [Robinson], which was something that Bishop tried to push back on, but he was just hit with ad after ad.

But ticket splitters are alive and well in North Carolina, and I think that has a lot to do with it, too.

LC: To that point on ticket splitting, I want to see more information on Pennsylvania, because I was watching a couple of races in Bucks County that Democrats had identified as potential flip opportunities. And in several of those races, they fell short. In particular, there was one race where it was a repeat matchup of two candidates in suburban Bucks. And last cycle, the Democrat lost to the Republican incumbent by 700-ish votes. And this time around, she lost by a much, much wider margin. So in some cases, we saw fewer ticket splitters in Pennsylvania.

MF: Also in North Carolina, there’s a lot of conversation about what the role of state parties is in politics nowadays. But the North Carolina Democratic state party is one that really had a lot of life injected into it after Anderson Clayton, the party chair, stepped into the role.

We’re less than 24 hours after polls closed. A lot of races are still too close to call, and many will ultimately trigger recounts. What are we still looking out for in terms of results right now?

LC: Arizona is Democrats’ best shot at changing the narrative around this election. There’s still a possibility that they flip either chamber, and it’s going to come down to a handful of races with very tight margins that we probably won’t know the results of for several days.

Keep an eye on the Tucson suburbs. The Democratic candidates in both the state House and Senate there are leading — not by a comfortable margin, but they’re ahead — and that’s a good sign for the party statewide.

Do you see any separation between the national contests and state-level races in terms of the issue set that really drove the outcome of these races?

ZM: No. Ticket splitting isn’t totally dead, right? Ask Kelly Ayotte, who just won in New Hampshire, and ask Josh Stein. But the only place people still ticket split, really, this day and age, is governors’ races. State legislative races — more and more and more — are just being tied to your presidential vote.

If you can’t build your own brand as a politician — and increasingly, the only people who can do that are not senators, are not House members, are not state legislators, are governors — the issue sets run about the same.

The other exception that we haven’t mentioned is Phil Scott, the most popular politician in America. In a state that elects Bernie Sanders, they also elect a Republican governor by Saddam Hussein margins.

LC: One footnote on Vermont: Republicans broke the Democratic supermajority there. That completely changes the dynamic between Scott and Democrats in the Legislature. So the fate of supermajorities is an interesting subplot of this election.

Let’s get Lisa into the mix. The New Hampshire governor’s race was the most closely watched, tightly contested in the country. Ultimately, Kelly Ayotte won by about nine points. Why did she pull away?

Lisa Kashinsky: There were a few factors. First of all, Kelly Ayotte has been a household name in New Hampshire for about two decades now, first as the state’s attorney general, then as a senator. She only narrowly lost reelection to the Senate in 2016. And she had the backing of the state’s really highly popular governor, [Chris Sununu], though apparently not as popular as Phil Scott.

[Sununu] campaigned extensively for her. He was in ads. He was on the trail. He’s really well-liked in New Hampshire, which despite being blue federally is still very purple, and obviously after these elections red at the state level. And Ayotte really ran as an extension of his administration and his policies.

Democrats really used their national abortion-rights playbook in this race. And it wasn’t enough to combat all of these advantages that Ayotte had. She was able to parry all of their attacks on her past stances … by saying — effectively, it seems — that she would uphold New Hampshire’s current law, allowing pregnancies to 24 weeks with some exceptions afterwards. After a year of running ads about that to combat Democrats’ attacks, it looks like people believed it.

And New Hampshire, like everywhere else, is worried about the economy. That was the top issue in polls for voters. When you’re running as an extension of Sununu — Live Free or Die, no taxes, don’t Mass. up New Hampshire with the high taxes and all that stuff — that’s a really salient message to voters there.

There were a couple other governor’s races that were on the radar screen. Former Congressman Dave Reichert, running in Washington, had Republicans very excited. Democrats were hopeful that they might spring an upset in Indiana with a former state superintendent of education and former Republican. But both those races ended up being blowouts. Any thoughts on why those really didn’t end up being competitive races?

ZM: If you told me at the beginning of the cycle that there’d be zero flips, I’d be like, “Yeah, that makes sense.” How we got there certainly was surprising — like the margin of Kelly Ayotte’s victory, Mark Robinson’s implosion in North Carolina.

But at the end of the day, Washington is not a bluish state, and Indiana is not a reddish state. Washington is a blue state, and Indiana is a red state. And people came home.

You can only defy gravity for so long in politics. And Dave Reichert is probably the best example of that, too. He bowed out from Congress during the Trump era because he didn’t think he’d survive, and then ultimately couldn’t really escape the Trump orbit. He was kind of doomed from the start.

What other subplots are you guys watching? What else struck you coming out of these state leg and gubernatorial contests?

MF: On abortion, I wonder how Democrats are going to approach it, if they’re going to keep relying on it so heavily, if they’re going to tweak their message at all. You’ve seen that abortion is really successful, typically in statewide races. Look at Andy Beshear in Kentucky in ’23. That’s what helped him get to reelection. It obviously didn’t work in New Hampshire.

I can imagine Dems saying, “Oh, that’s just a one-off.” But I think it really is sort of a blemish on the record, for lack of a better term. It’s also interesting when you look at some of the abortion rights ballot initiatives that went down. Those were the first losses since Roe was overturned for these initiatives.

When you look at issue polls, abortion’s still up there. But it’s definitely not number one. It’s the economy. It’s democracy. So I’m interested to see how the party is going to be approaching abortion messaging in the coming year.

LK: It feels like they might need to actually have a reckoning with it, not just in the states. They lost a federal election where their candidate, Kamala Harris, was running on protecting women’s rights against Donald Trump, noted misogynist, and person who helped fell Roe v. Wade. I’m curious to see if that actually sinks in, like down the ballot, in these state-level races, and if Democrats choose to confront or grapple with this really at any level.

ZM: Early test for that? Give Abigail Spanberger a call. There’s no off years in politics, folks. And we have two governor’s races next year, two competitive ones maybe, in Virginia and New Jersey.

Abigail Spanberger probably doesn’t feel great right now, because Democrats just lost the White House. But if she’s solely thinking about her chances of being the next governor of Virginia, she probably feels a little bit better, because Virginia — blue-ish-leaning state — it’s always the biggest referendum. Glenn Youngkin very famously won in 2021, kind of beating back Biden’s advance.

If you ask me right now who the next governor of Virginia is going to be, I bet more often than not it’s going to be a Democrat. How does Abigail Spanberger talk about abortion is going to be a huge hint to if this has any sort of staying power in 2025, 2026, or if Democrats need to figure out something else to talk about?

How do you see the results that we saw in state races fit into sort of the national narrative that’s developed over the last 24 hours with Trump winning by a much bigger margin than most folks anticipated, Republicans flipping the Senate and still up in the air about whether they ultimately end up in control of the House?

LC: State-level Democrats are going to have to confront the same question that the Harris campaign is: Does ground game truly matter? Because this was their strongest ground game in many states across the country, and they still lost. So traditional politicking seems to be no more.

MF: Both Dems and Republicans, the [state legislative] national committees were telling me in the lead up to the election that they’re still not getting enough attention, still not getting enough resources. Part of that is because we were in a really high stakes, high dollar presidential year. But I am interested to see how the attention on state legislatures is going to progress in the coming years, especially in the off years when that’s one of the bigger races on the ballot.

It’s evident that Dems still have some work to do, even though there is some more national investment than there has been historically. After last night, sure, they are celebrating some gains. But I don’t think it’s where they want it to be.

The fight for the House majority is still too close to call.

While Donald Trump has won the presidency, it may be days or weeks until he knows if he’ll have powerful allies atop the House, due in part to close races in states that take longer to count ballots like California and Arizona. For months, neither party has held a significant edge, and both sides predicted modest gains if they get control of the House.

Results were still too close to call in a slew of battleground House races early Wednesday morning. The Associated Press projected that two Republican incumbents in New York would lose reelection: Reps. Marc Molinaro and Brandon Williams.

Both of them represent districts won by President Joe Biden in 2020. Democrats had invested heavily to try to wrest back control of the blue-state seats and saw them as a key path back to the House majority. In other battlegrounds, Republican Reps. Don Bacon (Neb.) and Anthony D’Esposito (N.Y.) were locked in close races, as were Democratic Reps. Susan Wild (Pa.) and Matt Cartwright (Pa.).

Other incumbents in competitive races held on. For Republicans, that included Reps. Zach Nunn in Iowa, Tom Kean Jr. in New Jersey, Nick LaLota in New York and Monica De La Cruz in Texas. Democratic incumbents, like Reps. Pat Ryan in New York and Gabe Vasquez in New Mexico, also prevailed.

With the Senate in Republican hands, Trump could get the sought-after trifecta if House Republicans win — paving the way for Republican legislative priorities on tax cuts and more. But if Democrats manage to flip the chamber, a split Congress could mean Trump faces the same partisan fights over spending and the debt ceiling that have plagued lawmakers over the past two years.

Speaker Mike Johnson, in a statement early Wednesday morning, vowed that “House Republicans stand ready and prepared to immediately act on Trump’s America First agenda to improve the lives of every family, regardless of race, religion, color, or creed, and make America great again” if the GOP keeps the majority. Johnson appeared with Trump as he spoke to supporters early Wednesday morning in West Palm Beach, Florida.

With the hopes of expanding their majority, Republicans were far more intentional with their candidate recruitment and which challengers they backed in the primaries than they were in 2022. House Republicans’ campaign arm worked closely with Trump, coordinating to boost candidates the party saw as the most likely to win the general election.

Meanwhile, Democrats, who held a commanding lead on fundraising and hammered on the message of abortion rights, relied in part on a slate of repeat challengers who narrowly lost in 2022. The bet was that they would benefit from existing campaign infrastructure and name ID among voters. It’s to be seen if that strategy pays off, as many of those matchups have yet to be called.

Both sides had hoped that redistricting would provide their side with a significant advantage, but several new maps in a handful of states ultimately didn’t heavily tilt in Democrats’ or Republicans’ favor overall. The creation of new districts in the South to provide more voting power to Black voters was largely offset by an aggressive GOP gerrymander in North Carolina, and a not-so-aggressive Democratic redraw in New York.