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Republicans win Senate majority as Bernie Moreno wins Ohio

COLUMBUS, Ohio — Bernie Moreno, a Republican political newcomer and Cleveland businessman, won Ohio’s hotly contested Senate race, ousting incumbent Sen. Sherrod Brown by an approximately four-point margin. The Associated Press called the contest around 11:30 p.m. ET Tuesday night with about 90% of Election Day precincts reported. 

The three-term Senator’s loss dealt a deafening blow to the Democratic Party, lost its majority in the upper chamber, according to the Associated Press. Republicans won West Virginia and are leading in four other competitive Senate races around the country. 

Brown, adorned with his signature canary pin and joined by his wife, writer Connie Schultz, and other supporters, delivered remarks to the thinning crowd of attendees scattered across the ballroom of the Hyatt Regency in downtown Columbus shortly after Moreno was named the projected winner. 

“We may be tempted to say hope was not enough. We might be tempted to second guess ourselves and question whether we worked hard enough or long enough, Brown said. “That is not our story tonight.”

“We believe that all work has dignity. We always will. We believe in the power of people over corporate special interests. We always will. We believe if you love this country, you fight for the people who make it work. We always will,” he added. “This is a disappointment, but is not a failure.”

Met with applause and cheers from the audience gathered around the stage, Brown went on to describe the significance of his canary pin as a representation of his vow to fight for blue-collar workers and champion decades-worth of won progress in labor, civil and reproductive rights. 

“In all those fights, progress didn’t happen on its own,” he said, adding: “Tonight, nothing changes. I don’t take off this pin, I’m not giving up on our fight for workers and I know you won’t either.”

Earlier in the evening, attendees of the Ohio Democratic Party’s election night watch party stood on the ballroom floor or in the balcony, bathed in blue lighting, watching MSNBC’s Steve Kornacki provide election night analysis on two wide screens flanking the speakers’ podium at the front of the room throughout the night.

While pop hits blasted from the event speakers, an undercurrent of tension hung in the air. Boisterous cheers erupted with each blue win announced, while a Democratic Party clip featuring GOP political newcomer Bernie Moreno was met with resounding boos. The crowd, once hundreds strong, thinned as the night progressed. After Brown’s speech, most of the remaining attendees left, some exchanging downtrodden hugs as they dispersed.

Congresswoman Joyce Beatty, D-Ohio, took to the stage at the event a few minutes before 8:30 p.m. to welcome attendees to the event, which was hosted, in part, by the campaign for Sen. Brown. 

“Tonight, as Democrats, we will show America how much we value the dignity of work and tonight, Sherrod Brown will be re-elected to the United States Senate,” said Beatty, referencing Brown’s tagline. 

As the crowd erupted in cheers and applause, Beatty — who won her re-election bid in Ohio’s 3rd congressional district — also extended an aspirational welcome to Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris and her fellow congressional Ohio incumbents seeking re-election. She also thanked Ohio women and labor representatives for their support. 

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“If this isn’t a hell of a welcome, I don’t know what is,” she said. “I love Ohio up and down, and I love you because you stand up for us, you understand the value of work, the value of families, the value of education, and the value of not only making Americans have the opportunity to get by, but to thrive.” 

As the count got underway in Ohio Tuesday evening, Trump-backed challenger Bernie Moreno boasted a multi-point lead over Brown for most of the night, per the Ohio Secretary of State. 

While the Buckeye State is no longer a swing state or presidential bellwether — voters chose Trump by a wide margin in 2016 and 2020, and the AP quickly called the state for him this cycle — its contentious Senate race was seen as key to the Democrats’ fight to retain their majority in the upper chamber.

As of Tuesday afternoon, polling averages showed Moreno had taken a marginal lead in the race. Moreno led by just 0.8 points in the FiveThirtyEight average, but left a wider trail of 1.7 points and 2 points in the RealClearPolitics and Decision Desk HQ averages, respectively. However, the RacetotheWH polling average placed Brown just ahead of Moreno by 0.4 points. 

In the campaigns’ final week, Trump-backed Moreno toured the state in a bright red bus joined by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, former Fox Host Tucker Carlson and South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham. At stops, Moreno called for the deportation of undocumented immigrants and defended himself against lawsuits from former employees that accused him of failing to pay overtime, according to The Columbus Dispatch

Progressive Brown spent the end of his campaign courting Black voters in Columbus and visiting a union hall in Akron, amid other events throughout the state. Trump’s eldest son, Donald Trump Jr., and former president Bill Clinton also stumped for their party’s candidate at rallies in downtown Mount Vernon and Cleveland, respectively. 

Meanwhile, Ohioans fielded a final barrage of attack ads accusing Brown of being too liberal for Ohio, criticizing Moreno for his stance on abortion and occasionally spreading misinformation in what has become the nation’s most expensive congressional race.

Early voting in Ohio ended Sunday after starting Oct. 8, with approximately a third of the state’s 8.1 million registered voters casting an early ballot either in-person or by mail, according to data from the Secretary of State. Secretary of State Frank LaRose told the Ohio Statehouse News Bureau that the state could be on track to surpass its voter turnout record if Election Day turnout is high. 

Trump melts down on Truth Social following reports of massive voter turnout in battleground states

Election officials in battleground states say that voter turnout is surging in what is projected to be one of the closest presidential elections in a generation. Despite the massive voter turnout, swing state officials say, there is no evidence of any significant fraud or cheating. 

"The only talk about massive cheating has come from one of the candidates, Donald J. Trump," Philadelphia District Attorney Larry Krasner said Tuesday. Reports from the City of Brotherly Love suggest record-setting turnout. For his part, Donald Trump has targeted the area in a Truth Social meltdown Tuesday. 

 “A lot of talk about massive CHEATING in Philadelphia. Law Enforcement coming!!!” Trump wrote on his social media site.

"There is no factual basis whatsoever within law enforcement to support this wild allegation. We have invited complaints and allegations of improprieties all day. If Donald J. Trump has any facts to support his wild allegations, we want them now. Right now. We are not holding our breath," Krasner pushed back against the former president.

While the Election Day crush has eased in some states like Michigan, where early voting has broken records, in other places, lines of voters were seen snaking out of polling places before they were even open. According to Michigan's voter dashboard, 1,214,449 people cast an early in-person ballot since Oct. 26, while 2,106,337 returned an absentee ballot by mail. "The citizens of Michigan voted overwhelmingly to give themselves the right to vote in person early for at least nine days before any statewide election," said Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson, after happily announcing that Michiganders are voting in "record numbers." ABC 7 local news reported that an early voting center in Romulus, Michigan ran out of "I Voted" stickers.

While Georgia also broke early voting numbers, poll workers are reporting that election day turnout is strong, with some lines starting immediately when polls opened at 7 a.m.

"We opened up with about 100 or so. It took a good hour and a half or so to slow down," Wes Daniel, the precinct manager at Chicopee Baptist Church near Gainesville, told WDUN. "We're at 316 at noon, so we are outdistancing anything this particular precinct has ever seen."

Lines of a hundred or more people formed before polls opened in Pennsylvania as well, according to videos in social media depicting what appears to be massive election day turnout. Unlike Michigan and Georgia, however, slightly fewer people (two million) voted early than in 2020.

That year, election officials encouraged people to vote early due to the COVID-19 pandemic, but the effect was not uniform — Republicans and Donald Trump's campaign falsely claimed that early mail-in voting was a Democratic scheme to commit mass voter fraud and urged their supporters to vote in-person. While a raging disease is no longer a barrier to voting on election day and Republicans continue to spread stories of fraud, the latter have largely abandoned their rhetoric connecting it to any particular voting method and are even exhorting supporters to vote early. As a result, some states like Nevada have seen an uptick in registered Republicans mailing in their ballots.

Veteran Nevada political reporter Jon Ralston posted on election day morning that just under 1.1 million Nevadans voted early, with registered Republicans outnumbering Democrats by 41,800 votes, or 3.9 percent. Vice President Kamala Harris would need to break strongly with independents, he said, predicting that the Democratic nominee would do just enough to win the state by 0.3 points. As of 10am Pacific Time, he posted that 57,000 people have voted in the Silver State on election day.

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The early vote is more encouraging for Democrats in Pennsylvania, where registered Democrats hold a two-to-one advantage in returned mail-in ballots despite GOP ballot requests increasing by 100,000 since 2020. Election experts have cautioned against reading too much into early voting party registration, as it is not necessarily predictive of voters choosing a candidate from another party or how independents might split. In general, however, it can be a good indicator of enthusiasm surrounding a candidate by their own base, particularly at the top of the ticket.

Another good sign for Harris and Democrats is that women are outnumbering men in early voting in an election where polls indicate a widening of the gender gap, where women have typically been voting for Democratic candidates by a 10-15 point margin in recent cycles. According to the Georgia secretary of state's election data hub, 53.3% of early voting ballots were submitted by women, versus 46.5 by men. In North Carolina, where Trump is hoping to maintain a string of narrow GOP victories since 2012, women outnumber men in early voting 51.7 percent to 41.2 percent.

In the run-up to the election and on election day itself, state and federal officials have been fighting off attempts by foreign hackers, GOP activists and others to sow doubt and confusion in the election process. So far, those attempts do not appear to have had a substantial effect on people's motivation to vote.

 

“I was scared”: Five bombshells from Johnny Carson’s biography from toxic marriages to drinking

The trailblazing late-night show host Johnny Carson's life is pieced together in a new biography "Carson the Magnificent."

For decades, Carson dominated late-night television with "The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson" on NBC. Carson would go on to win six Emmys, the Television Academy's 1980 Governor's Award and a Peabody Award. He ruled late night for 30 years, ending his long-running show in 1992. He died in 2005 at 79 from emphysema.

Despite the success, much of the television personality's personal life was tightly guarded from the public. "Carson the Magnificent" written by Bill Zehme (who passed while writing the book, which was later taken on by Mike Thomas) sheds light on Carson's personal life and relationships with his ex-wives.

The book dives into the inner world of one of the most famous talk show hosts in American history:

01
Carson served in the U.S. Navy

According to a review of "Carson the Magnificent" by The New York Times, before Carson became the notable late-night show host, he was drafted into the U.S. Navy during World War II. He was only 18. The Times reported that Carson narrowly missed serving on the U.S.S. Pennsylvania. In an unpublished transcript for a Time article, Carson "told of having to bring up the decomposing bodies of felled soldiers."

02
His marriage to his first wife Jody Wolcott was volatile

During the '50s and '60s, Carson was married to Jody Wolcott, with whom he had three children. According to the biography, the pair reportedly had a very volatile relationship. An excerpt published from Page Six reveals that Carson and Wolcott's marriage was littered with infidelities.

 

“There would be boozy rows aplenty — some in front of other couples — or long silent stews of resentment or recrimination or shame,” wrote Zehme. “Alcohol (while hardly a constant in their early years) was a friend to neither man nor wife; whenever lit, they would both act out, very badly.”

 

Zehme explained that if Carson was under the influence, he would go on a “rampage, and whomever he had been only moments prior would be instantly displaced by an unrecognizable hellion . . . Occasionally he would wake the next day to discover that some such havoc had bruised the flesh of his sons’ mother.”

03
Carson didn't go to his son Richard's funeral

Carson would face other challenges in his life. In 1991, his middle child with Wolcott, Richard Carson tragically died in a car accident after his vehicle tumbled down an embankment during a nature photography session. Richard was only 39.

 

In the biography, it is detailed that Carson is a long-time avoider of funerals. He did not attend his son's memorial because “I don’t want it to turn into a circus,” he said.

04
In Carson's second marriage, the late-night host went on a rampage

Carson's second marriage to Joanne Copeland lasted nine years, ending in 1972. However, similar issues noted in Carson's marriage with Wolcott seemingly were apparent in his marriage to Copeland. According to Zehme, Copeland shared that Carson became "two different people" when he would drink. 

 

“He became a tiger. He went over to beer for a while, thinking it wouldn’t happen, and it was just as bad. It didn’t make a difference. He had a low tolerance. He had blackouts,” she said. 

 

Copeland recalled an instance where Carson ripped off bed sheets from a sleeping Copeland when he came home. 

 

“He’d say, ‘I’m working my a** off and you’re sleeping in bed.’ This is three in the morning. I was dealing with two people. He had a tremendous anger about women that would come out,” she said. She recalled that Carson would feel apologetic for his behavior but would never change.

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05
Carson's drinking hit its breaking point after an arrest

After his divorce from Copeland in 1972, Carson married his third wife Joanna Holland the same year. The late-night personality still struggled with his drinking but it would soon come to a breaking point.

 

Holland shared in an interview, "During that black drunk phase, I was scared. Sometimes anything could set him off. Those were the scary times.”

 

In 1982, Carson would plead no contest to a misdemeanor count for driving over the legal limit. He was fined $600 and placed on probation for three years. The pair got a divorce in 1985.

Portland’s ranked choice voting experiment upends election

When developers announced plans for a new 38-bay diesel truck transfer station on the grounds of a long-abandoned K-Mart department store, East Portland, Oregon, residents who’d hoped it might become a grocery store instead quickly collected more than 6,600 signatures in opposition and worked to stop it. The 260,000-square-foot warehouse sat just a javelin’s toss away from the fields where the Parkrose High Broncos practiced football, baseball, and soccer. Dozens of kids walked to Parkrose high and middle schools each day along NE 122nd Avenue and Sandy Boulevard. Parents filled city meetings, worried about their kids breathing in diesel fumes while running cross-country or dodging 18-wheelers as they hustled toward class each morning. Students studied environmental justice and submitted alternate environmental plans for the site, along with photos from their bedroom windows that overlooked the lot where trucks would spew exhaust, sometimes as close as 15 feet away.

No one listened. City leaders felt no need. Portland’s four-member city council lived far from these neighborhoods, sometimes derided by locals as the faraway “numbers.” Wealthier areas, the business community, the city’s trendy downtown – those interests were always heard. But East Portland? It had no one on the city council. Not now, and only twice in the council’s history has a member lived anywhere to the east of Interstate 205. 

The city could treat it as a literal dumping ground, with very real consequences — the highest rates of juvenile asthma in the city, the lowest household income, the fewest sidewalks and paved streets, even life expectancy rates more than a decade shorter than elsewhere in Portland. The weather neighborhoods had safer walks to schools, and zoning decisions protected residents not trucks. They also had better representation.

“We testified at city hall. We tried so hard to push our representatives, and this is the problem,” says Lily Burnett, who lives in the district and whose child will attend these schools. “They don't have anything to gain by showing up for East Portland. They don't think we're going to show up in big enough numbers to vote for them or vote them out.”

That’s about to change.

Portland revised its city charter two years ago. This week, East Portlanders' is one of the city’s four council districts that will elect three members to the new 12-person governing body. The election will be held using a proportional form of ranked choice voting that will ensure that all voices in this most diverse district – with the highest percentages of voters of color, Indigenous voters, independent voters and Republicans – all have a real opportunity to be heard. The three representatives will immediately become the largest number of councilors this neighborhood has ever had.

“Now is our time,” says Steph Routh, a Parkrose native and one of the leading candidates for a council seat. 

"Ranked choice voting is not a silver bullet, but it’s a very important element of that.”

It’s a sunny Saturday afternoon and the District 1 candidates have gathered for a meet-and-greet pizza party with voters in Luuwit View Park. There’s genuine collegiality amongst the half-dozen candidates, several of whom have been informally running together and lifting each other up, thanks to the new ranked choice system. Candidates are encouraging voters to rank them first, and their similarly-minded competitors second and third.

Fairer rules and fairer representation has changed plenty already. Candidates have been able to laser-focus on their own neighborhoods rather than doorknock across the entire city. And with proportional RCV, there’s a chance for everyone to elect someone to one of their three local seats who represents their views. 

“For working people and communities of color, there was a huge disconnect between who got elected and who voters felt could actually represent them,” says Candace Avalos, an environmental justice activist also seeking a District 1 seat. “Having three seats in each district expands choices for voters.”

“We’re going to have a seat at the table,” adds Routh, a favorite to even become the next council president, a stunning leap for these perpetually underrepresented neighborhoods. “Our lack of political power is evident in the lack of infrastructure, the way that this part of the city has just been left behind. I'm hoping that what we're going to see is people being motivated to participate in our democracy again.”

* * *

East Portland is hardly the only neighborhood here with challenges. This liberal bastion, with a much-heralded music scene, some of the nation’s most celebrated restaurants, even an acclaimed comedy show poking fun at the hipster excess of “Portlandia,” has endured a difficult COVID and post-pandemic period, which included days of riots and protests (and a violent police response) after Minneapolis police killed George Floyd. The new Ritz-Carlton just celebrated its first anniversary, its opulence contrasted against streets filled with homeless people. Walk across the city’s famed bridges and waterfront parks and its fentanyl and drug addiction crises are on full display.

It’s no different a short walk away in Old Town Portland, where on a recent Saturday morning residents gathered over coffee and bagels to learn more about how to vote with the charter reforms and electoral changes that residents enacted in hopes of both expanding representation and making this city’s problems solvable again.

“The city has become a hellhole because of bad leadership,” says Darlene Garrett, the executive director of the District 4 Coalition, which represents 32 neighborhood associations in the city’s both thriving and troubled northwest and southwest. “But this election,” she says, “could be our saving grace.”

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The changes adopted by voters are comprehensive and potentially transformative. Ranked choice voting is at the heart of them. For the first time, Portland will choose its mayor with RCV, ensuring that voters get to consider everyone in a crowded field and that the winner has a majority and a mandate to lead. The city council, meanwhile, will be expanded from a tiny four to a more modern 12, and elected from four geographic districts rather than city-wide. 

It’s a fascinating experiment: Single-member ranked choice for mayor, which gives voters the opportunity to rank their top candidates in order, first, second, third, and so on. If no one wins a majority straightaway, an instant runoff will occur. The bottom candidates will be eliminated, and those supporters will have their second choices counted. 

But for council, Portland will use a multi-winner, proportional form of RCV that seeks to build consensus in another way – by ensuring a full range of perspectives and communities – whether renters, parents, voters of color, or the business community – have a seat at the table. In this system, 25 percent plus one vote will be enough to elect each member – which means that in this three-member district, at least 75 percent of voters will elect a candidate they support. That’s a huge change in an area used to no representation at all.

This feels especially important in a city grappling for the best way forward on complicated issues such as policing, homelessness, drug addiction, development, and transportation, among others. Solutions going forward will be crafted with a wider range of voices; the council will need to hear each other out and find inclusive, common ground.

“You're going to have a government, I suspect, that is going to have a little bit of something for everyone,” says Robin Ye, who co-chaired the city council charter revision committee. “You're going to have big business people on the council, and you're also going to have out socialists. You are going to have renters. You're going to have people who are under 30. You're going to have people who've been in politics for 40 years. That's government. That forces dialogue. That’s how it should be.”

* * *

While Portland voters prepare for big changes in city government, the entire state could experience reform soon. Oregon is one of four states that will consider enacting some form of statewide ranked choice voting this fall, potentially tripling the number of states that offer this extra choice to voters. So while Portland voters use RCV for the first time, they will also be voting alongside the rest of the state on whether to expand it to nearly every election.

Dan Rayfield, the former state house speaker now running for attorney general, drove the legislative effort to put the statewide RCV initiative on the ballot. During his state house years, Rayfield told me, he saw “a blaring, constant reminder of the inefficiency of our system” and realized RCV would fix it by changing the incentives for politicians. Sometimes that manifested itself electorally, when members celebrated their opponent drawing a third-party challenge that might divide the other side. Other times it involved independent voters who had no say in elections at all, with most members elected from noncompetitive elections decided in primaries. And sometimes he watched the inability of lawmakers to form bipartisan coalitions, even when they agreed on the merits of a program and the potential solution.

“You need to have people elected by a majority of voters,” Rayfield says, “and you need to incentivize alternative voices in the system. I think that’s incredibly important. We need to get rid of the divisiveness. Ranked choice voting is not a silver bullet, but it’s a very important element of that.” 

Rayfield often won his re-election races with as much as 70 percent of the vote, but knows that’s a mirage. “I’d love to believe that 72 percent of the people who vote for me every cycle really love me,” he says. “But I’m sure that there are probably some other voices that they would have loved to have been able to consider, and they didn’t get that opportunity.”

* * *

That very normalization has been top priority for Portland and Multnomah County officials, and has birthed some of the most creative election education anywhere in the nation. “It’s a lot of reform happening at once,” as Rayfield notes. 

Much of the coordination has fallen to Leah Benson, the RCV project manager for the county elections office. On a recent Friday afternoon, Benson welcomed me to her office and walked me through what has been a multi-level education plan to try and ensure that every voter understands and feels comfortable with the new ballot they’re seeing this fall.  

The city and county, alongside trusted nonprofits and community voices, have been everywhere: They’ve been at NBA games to teach thousands of Portland Trail Blazers fans. 

“Who doesn’t have their five favorite Trail Blazers to rank?” Benson asks. 

Simulated RCV ballots have been online on city and county websites so voters can practice and become familiar with the process. The pizza toppings at mayoral forums have been chosen with RCV, as has the gourmet ice cream at other forums provided by the local favorite Jeni’s. Educators have worked to reach people where they are, for example, working with a queer artist collective to combine free headshots for artists with a class on RCV and a performance. 

“We’re providing guidance on how to fill out a ballot, and making sure the instructions are clear,” Benson says. “The city’s helping to build awareness and make sure people know it’s coming.”

The charter amendments required officials to embark on a comprehensive education program that could well become a national model. “The guiding light of the outreach is making sure that we’re reaching people who do not live in the economic center, who are socioeconomically disadvantaged,” says Benson, “folks who are housing insecure or people who do not speak English at home. It’s been so creative – and targeted based on peoples’ needs.”

The next night, those outreach efforts had a very different soundtrack – “This Is Halloween” by Marilyn Manson. As Portland teens, families and young couples out at the ScareGrounds at Oaks Park on a Saturday night stood in line for three terrifying haunted houses — the medieval-themed Forbidden Fortress, a Silver Scream where cinematic horror-film killers were unleashed once more, and a modern-day monster hunt in Slayers — RCV activists were there trying to ensure there wouldn’t be anything scary about the new voting procedure.


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At the I Heart Radio table (next to the temporary tattoo station), those who survived the cursed castles and Hollywood’s most infamous serial killers could scan a QR code and immediately take part in a RCV poll to rank the three haunted houses. A group of seven University of Oregon students gathered with their phones and debated the biggest scares. Every ballot naturally looked a little different, but as they debated amongst themselves, Silver Scream became the consensus pick. “I’d never used this before,” said Diane Levine, “but it’s easy and fun.” Scary? She laughs. “Not scary at all.”

* * *

Back at the East Portland pizza party in Luuwit Park, Candace Avalos — an environmental justice activist who describes herself as a first-generation Blacktina as a daughter of Black Americans and Guatemalan immigrants – is rattling off disturbing statistics about the district. The district is home to half of Portland’s children. The average household income is $30,000 less than the rest of the city. The district includes 28 of the 30 high-crash corridors in Portland, where traffic accidents and deaths are the highest. Gun violence is high, police reaction time slow.

“We’re dying with gun violence, we're dying on the streets, we’re dying with polluted air,” Avalos tells me. “All those add to our decreased life expectancy. Ten years compared to the other districts. Streets, lighting, public transportation, parks. These real-life outcomes are happening with a lack of investment. That’s the price we pay for our lack of representation.”

Avalos has made a point of trying to tour each of the city’s 200 parks as she campaigns. It’s yet another story of inequity. The nicest, most renovated parks, with the fanciest playgrounds and the coolest splash pads, can be found in the other districts. She tells me to visit West Powell Hurst Park, which turns out to be about four miles away down 122nd Avenue. Avalos described it as “blank” to me. “It doesn’t really have anything. Nothing.” 

And she’s right, there’s no real playground, certainly no splash pad. The grass has not been maintained. A dirt track runs around the perimeter that is clearly popular with dog owners. Yet it is somehow worse than she described. There’s broken glass everywhere. The road leading to the park is potholed and in disrepair.

“This is what’s going to change,” she says. “We know that giving people more choices gives them more voices.”

Those voices won’t necessarily sing in harmony. Avalos has encouraged a different approach to policing that involves sending the right kind of provider to each incident. Another Black candidate who could win alongside her, Terence Hayes, owns a graffiti removal company and has backed more police officers to take on questions of homelessness, drug use and public camping. Both of them could win seats – which means both perspectives on crucial public issues would have a seat at a table, would hear each other out, and find a path forward, together.

“Now, it doesn’t matter whether you’re part of the minority or part of the majority,” Avalos says. “All of us, everyone, is going to get more representation. 

“We’ll have three,” she says, excitedly. “We'll have more representation on day one than we've had in a hundred years. Which is crazy.”

 

Election 2024: In a shocking victory, Donald Trump has once again been elected president

Early Wednesday morning, the outcome dreaded by Democrats turned into a reality: Donald Trump has been elected the 47th president of the United States. The Associated Press made the call after Trump's win in the state of Wisconsin; Trump has passed 270 electoral votes, with more to follow.

This crushing defeat for Vice President Kamala Harris and her party also includes a Republican majority in the U.S. Senate and possible control of all three branches of government during the first two years of Trump’s upcoming term. While the Democrats' immediate task will be figuring out what went wrong, an early answer would be damn near everything.

As implausible as this may seem, Trump appears to have replicated his surprise victory from 2016, and even leads the national popular vote as well. Trump has carried a long list of solidly red states that he won in his two previous campaigns — faint Democratic hopes of winning states like Florida, Iowa or Ohio are gone with the wind. Harris has won a bunch of expected states in the Northeast and along the Pacific Coast, along with Colorado, Illinois and Virginia, but has failed to win a single important swing state. In what NBC News said "may be the biggest story of the race," Latino voters moved 25 percentage toward Trump since 2020; he also won a plurality of white women for the third election in a row, according to the outlet's exit poll.

Furthermore, Republicans have won a clear majority in the U.S. Senate. They have already gained three seats, in the wake of Jim Justice's expected win in West Virginia, as well as Bernie Moreno's defeat of incumbent Sen. Sherrod Brown of Ohio and Tim Sheehy's victory over incumbent Sen. Jon Tester of Montana.

As of this writing, Republican challengers lead Democratic incumbents Bob Casey in Pennsylvania and Jacky Rosen in Nevada. We know that Republicans will control the Senate, and amid what looks like an unexpected MAGA wave, it seems unlikely, although not impossible, that they won't also hold a majority in the House. (Republicans currently have a projected 206 seats in the Senate, with crucial races in states like California and Pennsylvania still to be called.)

Even two years ago, it seemed unlikely that either Trump or Harris would be here. After the chaos of Jan. 6, 2021, the inauguration of Joe Biden and a second impeachment — consider how unlikely that phrase is, all by itself — it was widely assumed that Trump's political career was over and he might be heading for prison, house arrest or (far more likely) a luxurious retirement as a social media avatar based in Dubai or Grand Cayman. Harris was broadly perceived by the Beltway class as a low-impact vice president and perhaps a political liability. We will never know how Harris would have fared in an open Democratic primary campaign, but as the whisper campaign around Biden began to expand, party donors cast loving glances toward California Gov. Gavin Newsom and Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, among others. The single debate between Biden and Trump in June clearly altered the course of American history — but exactly how is not yet clear.

Both candidates have tried to sound confident of victory in the last week or so, which is customary at this stage of the game. But one of them has run a ragged, undisciplined and often listless campaign, increasingly focused on blatantly false claims and hateful invective, and without the slightest pretense of "moderation" or unifying rhetoric. Yet he now seems very close to defeating the candidate who has run a studied, cautious, relentlessly upbeat but obsessively nonspecific campaign designed to offer nearly all things to nearly all people. One candidate has been convicted of multiple felonies and found liable for sexual assault by a civil jury — and those things have largely played as political advantages against a squeaky-clean former prosecutor whose Black-Indian-Jewish blended family appears to have been carefully cast for a car-insurance commercial.

While the historical precedents behind this election are not the real story, they are striking enough. Trump is trying to become the second president in American history to serve non-consecutive terms (joining the illustrious Grover Cleveland). Harris is the first non-incumbent major-party nominee in 56 years to be chosen without running in the primaries. The last such example was Hubert Humphrey in 1968, also a sitting vice president nominated at a Chicago convention after the incumbent was forced from the race. (Democrats hope to avoid any further parallels.)

It's too early for coherent analysis about whether a red tide of resentful, low-propensity voters, alienated from the undemocratic status quo and eager to punish the so-called elites, have delivered a middle-finger salute to democracy. But it does not appear, at least so far, that the Supreme Court's Dobbs decision and the issue of reproductive rights have proven decisive. Liberals and progressives may perhaps seek comfort in the "anti-anti-Trump" galaxy-brain theory that a Trump win is better for Democrats and the left — because it would supposedly guarantee a major pushback in the 2026 midterms, followed by the first Trump-free presidential election in what seems like a lifetime. Count on just one certainty: The long-term effects of this potentially shocking election will not be what anyone expects.

Democrats successfully framed this election as a contest between normal and "weird," to recycle the cringeworthy epithet from the Harris-Walz peak of early September. But did they manage to convince American voters which of those things they want?

Brie, camembert and other soft ripened cheeses recalled over potential listeria contamination

Several brands of soft-ripened cheeses, including brie and camembert, have been recalled over potential listeria contamination.

According to an announcement posted by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), the recall was issued by Savencia Cheese USA after routine testing found that processing equipment at the company's Lena, Illinois, manufacturing facility may have been contaminated with the bacteria. The company noted that a voluntary recall was initiated to “retrieve the potentially affected product,” even though the finished product testing hasn’t revealed any contaminated products.   

The recalled products had “limited regional distribution in the United States,” per the announcement. They include Aldi Emporium Selection Brie, 12/8oz Brie; La Bonne Vie Brie, 6/8oz; La Bonne Vie Camembert, 6/8 ounce; 12/8 ounce Industrial Brie; Market Basket Brie 6/8 ounce; and Supreme Oval 7oz, 6/7oz. The cheeses all have a “best buy date” of Dec. 24, 2024.

The “few retailers” that received the products are aware of the possible listeria contamination and are in the process of removing products from their store shelves, the announcement clarified. 

At this time, there have been “no confirmed reports of adverse health events” tied to the consumption of the recalled products. Consumers who purchased the aforementioned cheeses should not consume them and instead, return them to their place of purchase for a full refund.

Late Quincy Jones once called Trump “megalomaniac, narcissistic”; claims to have dated Ivanka

After the music titan Quincy Jones' death on Sunday, a controversial 2018 New York Magazine interview resurfaced, revealing Jones had bitter words for Donald Trump and allegedly had a connection with Ivanka Trump.

Jones, 84 at the time, was asked by journalist David Marchese about what ails America. Jones answered racism, but also further explained that the division and hatred in the U.S. exists because of Trump. He said, “I used to hang out with him. He’s a crazy motherf***er. Limited mentally – a megalomaniac, narcissistic. I can’t stand him.”

To Marchese's surprise, Jones also revealed, "I used to date Ivanka, you know."

Then Jones clarified to a confused Marchese, "Yes, sir. Twelve years ago. Tommy Hilfiger, who was working with my daughter Kidada [Jones] said, 'Ivanka wants to have dinner with you.' I said, 'No problem. She’s a fine motherf****r.' She had the most beautiful legs I ever saw in my life. Wrong father, though."

Following the eyebrow-raising interview, Jones' claims about Ivanka made headlines. The alleged date happened in 2006 when he was 72 and Ivanka was 25.

According to the Daily Beast, Ivanka did not publicly comment on Jones' comments. However, Town & Country said a source close to her clarified: “This story is not true.”

 

Nate Silver’s final forecast: “As close as you can possibly get to 50/50”

When Nate Silver says the election is "closer than a coin flip," he's basing it on hard numbers — heads empirically win 50.5 percent of the time, a greater margin than Vice President Kamala Harris' 50.15 percent chance of winning the superstar election handicapper's final forecast.

Harris won is slightly greater than 50 percent of the 80,000 times Silver ran electoral college simulations. Notably, that is twice as many simulations as he normally runs.

“When I say the odds in this year’s presidential race are about as close as you can possibly get to 50/50, I’m not exaggerating,” he said. In six out of the seven crucial battleground states, the model's polling average holds Harris and former President Donald Trump within 1.2 percent of each other. Only in Arizona does Trump maintain "something resembling a clear lead."

The final predicted electoral college count gives Harris 271 votes to Trump's 267 — the same margin between George W. Bush and Al Gore in 2000.

Two weeks ago, Silver wrote in a New York Times op-ed that the race was just as close, but if he was forced to pick a candidate to win, his "gut" would suggest Trump. But he cautioned at the time that people "shouldn't put any value" in gut feeling, and that they should resign themselves "to the fact that a 50-50 forecast really does mean 50-50."

While Harris enjoyed a surge of momentum following her entry into the race, Trump seemed to regain the initiative in the battleground states during most of October. In the final week of the race, however, a slew of polls showed Harris edging ahead once again.

Other polling aggregators show a similarly tight race, with The Economist showing Harris winning 56 times out of 100 simulations, and FiveThirtyEight, which Silver used to manage, giving Harris a 50 percent chance of winning to Trump's 49 percent. Some observers maintain that there's a possibility of an unexpected blowout on either side, with Harris supporters crowing over a highly-rated Iowa poll that showed Harris 3 points ahead of Trump, who won the state by 8 points in 2020.

 

“Human sacrifice”: Tucker Carlson says abortion is to blame for freak hurricanes

Former Fox News host Tucker Carlson said on Monday that he believes climate change is caused by abortions, not burning fossil fuels.

Speaking on a podcast with former Trump campaign strategist and fellow Trump ally Stephen Bannon, who was just released from prison, Carlson denied the scientific consensus that fossil fuel use is behind global heating, and that this in turn fuels hurricanes like those which recently struck the American Southeast. Striking a religious note, Carlson attributed continuously rising temperatures to the supposed moral failures of American women.

“It’s probably abortion, actually,” Carlson said, later describing the practice as “human sacrifice.” After conceding that he will be “attacked” for his opinion, Carlson added “I really believe it.”

While hurricanes are a natural phenomenon, they have become more frequent and more intense over the years. Scientists have provided strong evidence that the dynamic behind this is an increase of greenhouse gasses from human industry that trap heat, cooking the oceans to extreme levels that cause greater evaporation. Additionally, the increase in CO2 allows more vapor to form in the air. This supercharges these tropical storms — and obviously it has nothing to do with health care or reproductive rights.

Carlson’s comments are part of a broader trend of spreading misinformation about both climate change and the pair of recent hurricanes, Helene and Milton, that struck millions of Americans. A recent report by the London-based think tank the Institute for Strategic Dialogue (ISD) found that when those hurricanes struck in October, social media accounts linked to Russian state-affiliated media spread misinformation that promoted right-wing themes. They inaccurately claimed relief organizations such as the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) were incompetent or actively trying to harm ordinary Americans. Many hurricane victims were told FEMA would only pay them up to $750 or that accepting relief money could get their land seized. Trump spread some of this misinformation himself, particularly regarding the relief efforts.

On one occasion, the Russian state-owned news agency RIA Novosti shared an AI-generated image of Florida's Disney World being supposedly destroyed by Hurricane Milton, which quickly went viral on Elon Musk’s social media platform X. Some of the conspiracy theories claimed the hurricanes had been created by Jews to help Vice President Kamala Harris win the upcoming election.

“This type of content is especially prominent on X (formerly Twitter), in line with other recent moderation failures identified by ISD” the authors write. Their views are echoed by other scholars who specialize in climate change denial. Speaking to Salon in April, University of Pennsylvania climatologist Dr. Michael E. Mann said that “Twitter has become a cesspool for the promotion of misinformation and disinformation; Elon Musk is not an honest actor. By some measures, he has engaged in criminal behavior, and I think it's pretty clear that he has to be reined in and we are going to need much tougher regulatory policies.”

See how Beyoncé and Taylor Swift rally voters to cast their ballots on Election Day

Beyoncé is channeling Pamela Anderson for Election Day.

In the video, posted Tuesday morning, the pop diva morphs into different versions of Anderson, like her iconic "Baywatch" and "Barb Wire" characters. 

The video, titled "Beywatch," is backed by Beyoncé's song "Bodyguard" from the genre-bending "Cowboy Carter" released in March. She even lip-synchs to her song in a bleach blonde wig and leather jumpsuit eerily similar to Anderson's own distinct look. The singer also sports a pink fuzzy hat and white corset to inhabit the actor's 1999 VMAs appearance. This is the pop star's first music video since her visual album "The Lion King: The Gift."

But outside of the Anderson getup, the singer also urged her fans to vote. In one scene Beyoncé holds up a toy gun firing out a flag with the words "Vote!" The video closed out Beyonce's costume dress-up with the caption "Happy Beylloween."

Alongside Beyoncé, Taylor Swift, another powerhouse pop star is calling on her fans to vote too. The singer penned a note to her audience as the last few tour dates for Eras Tour have wrapped in Indianapolis, Indiana. The singer thanked fans for coming out to her final tour days, “Couldn’t have asked for a more magical way to end our U.S. shows on The Eras Tour.”

Swift continued, “I know I’ll be looking back on this weekend and smiling because it was just like a dreamscape, all of it. Thank you to everyone who came out to see us on our last 3 American shows!! And here’s a friendly but extremely important reminder that tomorrow is the U.S. Election and your last chance to vote.”

https://www.instagram.com/p/DB9p-9cykPB/?img_index=4

 

 

“They’re up to mischief”: Georgia secretary of state says Russia behind polling place bomb threats

After at least two polling locations in Fulton County, Georgia, were briefly evacuated Tuesday morning, Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, a Republican, confirmed that at least one bomb threat made against a polling place was of Russian origin. In a press conference, Raffensperger noted that and threats were meant to sow fear and confusion and did not constitute any real danger. “We identified the source, and it was from Russia.” He did not, however, specify how he knew that Russia was behind the scheme.

“They’re up to mischief it seems,” Raffensperger said about the Russians. “They don’t want us to have a smooth, fair and accurate election.” 

“Anything that can get us to fight amongst ourselves," he continued, "they can count that as a victory.”

Raffensperger told reporters that the threat, which affected between five and seven precincts across multiple counties, was resolved. CNN reported that the temporary closure of polling places occurred at the Etris Community Center and Gullatt Elementary in Union City, and noted that Union City’s population is nearly 90% Black, according to the US Census Bureau.

There is, however, plenty of precedence for Russian "mischief" in U.S. elections, particularly in crucial battleground states like Georgia. Last Friday, U.S intelligence agencies accused Russia of circulating a fake but viral video of a man claiming to be a Haitian immigrant saying that he and his friend voted for Harris twice. Earlier in October, Russian hackers were purportedly behind a denial-of-service attack against Raffensberger's government website, which provides instructions for people on how to vote in Georgia. Raffensperger said that the issue was resolved after his office added further security measures.

After a string of attempted disruptions in the past several months, including by GOP activists, state and federal officials have been preparing for an escalation on election day itself. Earlier Tuesday afternoon, the FBI warned of two fake videos making the rounds on social media — one falsely cites a high terror threat and urges Americans to "vote remotely," while another includes a fake FBI press release claiming rigged voting by inmates in five prisons.

"Attempts to deceive the public with false content about FBI threat assessments and activities aim to undermine our democratic process and erode trust in the electoral system," the FBI said in a statement.

 

Betting it all on fluoride: Trump takes a risky final gamble to let RFK Jr. “go wild” on health

If the toxic mix of arrogance and certainty could be captured on film, it would look like the faces of Donald Trump and Robert F. Kennedy Jr. The slang phrase, “I can’t even,” with its abrupt stop implying an expression of surprise or frustration, so perfectly fits the emergence of this “issue,” it’s as if the phrase was coined specifically with fluoride in mind.

It hardly matters whose collapsing brain pan the idea of removing fluoride from the nation’s water “on day one” came from. There is already so much planned for “day one” of a potential Trump presidency that Trump will have to issue an additional executive order rejiggering the calendar to fit everything in. That the fluoride thing landed on the list alongside proposed orders to deport tens of millions of immigrants and “round up” Trump enemies like special counsel Jack Smith and Rep. Nancy Pelosi adds a certain absurd perfection to the rest of those planned for Trump to sign. Fluoridated water isn’t even a national policy. Individual city or county water systems can decide whether to add it or not, and neither the president nor a cowed Congress has the authority to end the practice in the places where fluoride is added to the water.

The idea of opposing a vaccine against such a terrible disease – not to mention all the other vaccines Kennedy is against – is not just an intellectual failing, it is the triple crime of negligence, ignorance and ego, a perfect match for the politics of Donald Trump.

The idea of putting fluoride in water systems started way back in the late 1940s and early 1950s after a dentist researching a dental condition involving mottled and discolored teeth called “Colorado brown stain” discovered that the cause was naturally occurring fluoride in the water. It happened that people with the condition also had teeth that were largely cavity-free. A chemist for the Alcoa Aluminum Company doing research on discolored teeth to determine whether it was caused by aluminum discovered that the cause was fluoride, not aluminum. More research was done in Great Britain establishing a statistical connection between the presence of fluoride and reduced cavities. Finally, in 1945, the newly created National Institutes of Health (NIH) did a controlled study of fluoridated water in Grand Rapids, Michigan, which in 1950 showed a significant reduction in cavities in those exposed to fluoridated drinking water. More research was done in Canada, the Netherlands and Great Britain which largely replicated the Grand Rapids findings. By the early 1950s a consensus emerged that fluoride in very small amounts in drinking water could reduce cavities, especially in children, so putting fluoride in water systems began to spread.

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Also spreading throughout the United States at the same time was the Red Scare. Extremist right-wing groups like the John Birch Society and Ku Klux Klan looking for commies found them in the government, not only in the Department of State, but in the NIH, and began a campaign to end water fluoridation, which they saw as a Communist-inspired conspiracy to undermine the health of citizens and weaken the United States.

RFK Jr. appears to be a proud inheritor of the Bircher conspiracy theory about fluoride in the water. On Saturday, Kennedy posted a tweet on Xitter, or whatever it’s called, calling fluoride an “industrial waste.” It is in fact a naturally occurring mineral that is present in the water in 28 countries, including parts of the United States, where in places where fluoride is excessive, it must be removed or reduced through a process of defluorination.

Kennedy also asserted that fluoride in the water is “associated with arthritis, bone fractures, bone cancer, IQ loss, neurodevelopmental disorders, and thyroid disease.” Please note the use of the well-established scientific term “associated” in the above sentence. Also “associated” with bone fractures is playing the game of football, as well as hockey, basketball, gymnastics, skiing, mountain climbing and many other sports.  Arthritis is known to be “associated” with aging.  IQ loss is suspected to be “associated” with attendance at certain political rallies.  As for the rest of Kennedy’s list…well, you can catch bone cancer because it’s in your family’s genes, and “neurodevelopmental disorders” can be “associated” with drinking and usage of various drugs, some of which are even legal.


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I guess at this point, with voting having been underway in person and by absentee ballot for weeks and taking place at polls around the country as we finally arrive at Election Day – get out and vote and you know who I’m talking about voting for – we shouldn’t be surprised by anything. 

Still my proverbial jaw is on the proverbial floor every time I see a picture of Robert F. Kennedy Jr.  This guy thinks you shouldn’t get your kids vaccinated against polio, too.  Pardon me if I get personal for a moment here.  I come from the generation that suffered through an epidemic of this terrible disease in the early 1950’s.  Every school class I was in from kindergarten on had at least one and sometimes two victims of polio.  In 1955, there was an outbreak at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, when I was in the second grade.  Some 70 children came down with polio in a matter of weeks.  We were herded into hastily set-up clinics to get shots of gamma globulin, which was thought to boost our immune systems.  I still have nightmares about those shots.  The needles were several inches long and filled with a substance that had the consistency of motor oil and took more than a minute to get into your arm.  Afterward, your arm hurt for days, and just about when the pain went away, they sent us in for boosters.  When the Salk vaccine came out, we were among the first children who were vaccinated. 

The idea of opposing a vaccine against such a terrible disease – not to mention all the other vaccines Kennedy is against – is not just an intellectual failing, it is the triple crime of negligence, ignorance and ego, a perfect match for the politics of Donald Trump.

If for no reason other than Trump’s promise to allow Kennedy to “go wild” on health, food and medicine, please go straight to your polling place and vote to end this madness.

 

Live updates: Salon’s latest 2024 elections news

Salon's reporters were on the ground in Washington, D.C.; Ohio, New York and Pennsylvania on Election Day to cover the news. Overnight, a win in Wisconsin determined the outcome of the presidential election, which has been called for Donald Trump. 

The illusion of Donald Trump and the fourth founding of America

From Chauncey DeVega: America will now need a fourth founding to defend and renew its democracy

"We must accept the results": Harris concedes election at Howard University

Harris promised a "peaceful transfer of power" in a short speech that urged supporters to keep fighting

Donald Trump won the vibes. Now America's anti-democratic coalition seeks vengeance

From Heather Digby Parton: Will the Resistance have the energy to fight back all over again?

As Russia celebrates, Trump's win leaves Ukraine and the rest Europe unsure of what's next

The president-elect appears on track to negotiate a ceasefire deal in Ukraine — on Russia's terms

Trump victory encourages Jan. 6 defendants to ask for their cases to be set aside

At least two defendants filed requests to Judge Beryl Howell asking for a postponement of aspects of their cases

RFK Jr., Trump's would-be health czar, says he will "clear out" entire departments at the FDA

President-elect Donald Trump has repeatedly said he would put RFK Jr. in charge of federal health agencies

House election forecast flips to GOP as Democrats hold on to their last hope

Russell Payne reports: It could take days or longer to count critical votes in California, which is likely to decide House control

Brian Williams held our hand, giving us a way to check out from cable news – and the election

From Melanie McFarland: Election night cable news is designed to keep us on edge. William's low-key "experiment" eased our way into despair

"This isn't the end": Jon Stewart reassures viewers as Donald Trump clinches win

The "Daily Show" host had choice words on a night that filled many with dread and anxiety

IT'S OVER: In a shocking victory, Donald Trump has once again been elected president

Analysis from Andrew O'Hehir: What went wrong? Donald Trump leads across all the battleground states as a shock MAGA sweep looks almost certain.

President-elect Trump widely expected to shut down legal cases against him

Once he takes power, the Republican will be able to fire special counsel Jack Smith

Most abortion ballot measures pass, but it didn’t translate to a victory for Democrats

Abortion initiatives in Florida, South Dakota and Nebraska failed, but Arizona, Missouri and others passed

Hope in the face of Kamala Harris' loss: Men failed America, but women will not give up so easily

From Amanda Marcotte, who reported from Harris Election Night HQ at Howard University in Washington, D.C.: "In the face of a notorious misogynist's victory, women know we must save ourselves from MAGA"

“A wounding disappointment”: Why Kamala Harris’ defeat cuts so deep for women

From Mary Elizabeth Williams: For women, watching Harris lose the election is like reliving all the disappointments and heartaches of your life

Kamala Harris' loss breaks my heart — for my wife and daughter, and for America

From D. Watkins: Seeing a Black woman claim her seat in the White House would have meant the world to my family

EXIT POLLS: "It would be a miracle": Exit polls show grim outlook for Kamala Harris

Kamala Harris faces a "big headwind" as election results continue to come in.

NATE SILVER: "It isn't capturing the story of this election": Nate Silver takes down model favoring Harris

The model projected Vice President Kamala Harris as the likely winner despite her falling behind in the vote count.

OHIO SENATE FLIP: Trump-backed Bernie Moreno wins Ohio Senate election, flipping seat for Republicans

Salon's Tatyana Tandanpolie reports from Columbus on the toss-up Senate race that was crucial to Democrats' fight to maintain control of the upper chamber.

PENNSYLVANIA: "No truth to the allegation": Trump claims "cheating" in Pennsylvania as voters brave bomb threats

Salon's Charles Davis reports from Philadelphia, the state's largest city, where voters appeared on track to beat 2020's turnout. At the same time, Trump claimed fraud. 

HOUSE OUTLOOK: Congressional races in New York, California could decide control

In the battle for control of the House of Representatives, New York and California are expected to play a pivotal role with at least 13 competitive races between the two states. Salon's Russell Payne reports from Nassau County on Long Island.

ABORTION: Abortion amendments pass in Colorado, Missouri, Maryland and more while Florida measure fails

Live updates on efforts to enshrine abortion rights in state constitutions or tweak existing laws.

Keep reading for Salon's ongoing 2024 elections reporting and analysis.

MSNBC: Lawrence O'Donnell likens Electoral College to voter suppression in safe red-and-blue states

The MSNBC host noted the system keeps millions of voters home, calling it an "enormous" force of voter suppression.

DAILY SHOW: Jon Stewart scolds John Fetterman for last-minute cancellation: "Not like I just have to sit here"

The host revealed that Fetterman pulled out with just 30 seconds to go before his planned "Daily Show" spot.

HISTORIC: Delaware elects Sarah McBride, first openly transgender person to Congress

State Sen. McBride won Delaware's open House seat on Tuesday night. 

FOX NEWS: Fox's Brit Hume stews over "BS issue" of democracy taking lead in network's exit poll

The anchor called voters' 2024 focus on Jan. 6 "ridiculous" and said the assault "was over in a matter of hours"

NORTH CAROLINA: Josh Stein defeats Mark Robinson in North Carolina governor's race following "Black Nazi" scandal

The moderate Democrat was aided in his campaign by a series of scandals involving Robinson

GEORGIA POLLS: More bomb threats cause evacuation of Georgia polling places in final hour of voting

Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger said the threats appeared to originate from Russia.

* * *

EXIT POLL: The state of democracy matters most to Americans as they cast their ballots

The economy was the second most important issue, followed by abortion.

LEGAL: "Parade of horribles": Georgia judge tears into RNC lawsuit seeking to "segregate" ballots

Trump-appointed Judge Stan Baker said the RNC's suit against Democratic counties in Georgia was "legally incorrect"

NEWS: "Stop talking about that": Trump snaps at reporter when asked about Florida's abortion ban

The former President refused to answer questions about abortion after casting his ballot in Palm Beach, Florida. 

NEWS: Trump melts down on Truth Social following reports of massive voter turnout in battleground states

Election officials in battleground states say that voter turnout is surging in what is projected to be one of the closest presidential elections in a generation. Despite the massive voter turnout, swing state officials say, there is no evidence of any significant fraud or cheating. 

* * *

NEWS: Nate Silver's final forecast: "As close as you can possibly get to 50/50"

Slightly greater than 50 percent of the 80,0000 times Silver ran electoral college simulations, Kamala Harris won. Notably, that is twice as many simulations as he normally runs.

NEWS: “They’re up to mischief": Georgia secretary of state says Russia behind polling place bomb threats

At least two polling locations in Fulton County, Georgia, were briefly evacuated Tuesday morning, Brad Raffensberger confirmed at a press conference.

NEWS: "Bottom has started to fall out": Trump campaign aides fret as Election Day "confidence has shifted"

Trump's predictions of total victory are a stark contrast to his aides worrying that they hit a "total train wreck," per multiple reports across several media outlets, including the Wall Street Journal.  

OPINION: MAGA's last stand: A duel between Donald Trump and Kamala Harris in diametrically opposite Americas

Senior Politics Writer Chauncey DeVega: The 2024 presidential election is one of the most important — if not the most important — in the country's history. Today the American people will decide if they will surrender their power to Donald Trump, a man who admires Vladimir Putin and Adolf Hitler and has promised to be the country's first dictator, or if they will instead choose Vice President Kamala Harris, a defender of democracy and believer in American greatness.

Chauncey DeVega has been covering Donald Trump and the MAGA movement for Salon since 2015. 

* * *

NEWS: "Women are withholding their support": How women could decide key Ohio race — and Senate majority

Reported by Tatyana Tandanpolie: Ohio's highly anticipated Senate race has long been rated a toss-up as incumbent Democratic Sen. Sherrod Brown and Donald Trump-backed challenger Bernie Moreno ping-ponged a roughly two-point lead over the last six weeks. Recent poll averages still place odds ever so slightly in progressive Brown's favor on the eve of Election Day — driven in large part by Ohio women. Tandapolie reports from Ohio. 

NEWS: "I am scared every day": Experts say GOP men targeting no-fault divorce to keep women "trapped"

Reported by Tatyana Tandanpolie: As worries grow after Dobbs, experts fear restricting no-fault divorce could be a death sentence for some women. Tandanpolie reports on this underexplored gender-based issue at play in this election. 

Tatyana Tandanpolie, Salon's Ohio-based news and politics writer, will be reporting on the Ohio Senate race from Sherrod Brown headquarters today.  

* * *

OPINION: Trump is terrible for women — but that doesn't mean he's good for men

Senior Politics Writer Amanda Marcotte: In a poll of swing states in early September, CBS News found many voters see this as a "girls v. boys" election. In Michigan, 77% of voters believe Vice President Kamala Harris is for women's interests, but only 55% believe she will work for men. A whopping 81%, however, believe Trump is for men's interests, though most — 54% — correctly understand Trump is against women. Pennsylvania and Wisconsin voters showed similar results, with large numbers of voters believing a candidate could be for men or women but not both. 

Amanda Marcotte has been covering U.S. politics for two decades, and writing for Salon since 2015. She will be in Washington, D.C., today, reporting from Vice President Kamala Harris' Election Night event at Howard University. Sign up for her biweekly politics newsletter, Standing Room Only

* * *

NEWS: Democrats say "all eyes are on this district" to stop Trump and Mike Johnson's "little secret"

Reported by Russell Payne: The campaign between Josh Riley and Rep. Marc Molinaro in New York's 19th District is considered the closest House race. 

NEWS: "Democrats are in a stronger position": Election forecasters give Dems an edge in swing House races

Reported by Russell Payne: Democrats are running strong challengers in a handful of districts that could swing control of the House. 

NEWS: "We know that those threats are out there": Philadelphia officials brace for election shenanigans

Reported by Charles R. Davis: The Republican who helps oversee elections in Philadelphia is prepared for a certain someone posting his name on Truth Social. Already the former president has pledged that people like him — "Corrupt Election Officials" who refuse to manufacture evidence of fraud for the GOP campaign — will be "sought out, caught, and prosecuted at levels, unfortunately, never seen before in our Country." Philadelphia City Commissioner Seth Bluestein told Salon he's prepared to defend the right to vote. 

ANALYSIS: Abortion could tilt swing states like Pennsylvania for Democrats, experts say

Reported by Nicole Karlis: Abortion isn't technically on the ballot in Pennsylvania, but it's an issue Democrats are still hoping will help them win the election in this important swing state. Elizabeth Moro, the Democrat candidate vying for a seat in the state's 160th house district, told Salon she's had interactions with over 10,000 voters and abortion is a "huge issue."

Nicole Karlis, Salon's senior science and health writer, has been covering reproductive access for Salon throughout this election. Follow her reporting here.  

* * *

TV: Amazon Prime's "lo-fi" election night special with Brian Williams draws mixed reactions

The streaming giant's effort to disrupt network TV election coverage is really weird so far, audiences say. 

INTERVIEW: MSNBC's Lawrence O'Donnell: Not knowing how to cover Donald Trump is still the news' biggest problem

On the eve of Election Week, MSNBC host Lawrence O'Donnell talks with Salon's senior culture critic, Melanie McFarland, about how covering "the stupidest person to ever run for president" has made our news worse. 

Melanie McFarland will be watching how TV news covers this historic Election Night, so stay tuned for her analysis. 

CELEBS: See how Beyoncé and Taylor Swift rally voters to cast their ballots on Election Day

A look at how two cultural tastemakers are motivating their fans to get out the vote. 

Want to get your fix of TV news tonight? Salon has you covered with a guide to where to watch election returns. We've even made bingo cards for you to play along with at home, tailored to MSNBC, CNN and Fox News coverage. And because you need to eat, check out these comfort food recipes tailored for eating your election feelings.

* * *

NEWS: Economy top of mind as voters head to polls

Reported by Natalie Chandler: Inflation has cooled, but voters are still thinking with their wallets. A Gallup poll released Friday said registered voters name the economy as the most important factor determining which candidate they are supporting in the presidential election. The 21% of voters who said the economy ranks first includes 35% of Republicans and Republican-leaning independents and 7% of Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents, Gallup said. Natalie Chandler, our Money editor, rounds up Salon's election-related economy stories. 

ANALYSIS: Trump says he loves farmers. His tariff plans suggest otherwise

Reported by Ashlie D. Stevens: A new study shows Donald Trump's proposed tariffs would impact "hundreds of thousands of farmers and rural communities," contradicting Trump's claims, after a new poll showed Kamala Harris with the edge in Iowa, that he has done more for farmers in the Hawkeye State than any other president. Salon's Food editor, Ashlie D. Stevens, examines a study on the proposed impact of a renewed U.S.-China trade war — something Trump has hinted at if re-elected — that could challenge the former president's claim.

* * *

ANALYSIS: Why climate experts say this election could be our last chance for meaningful action

Reported by Matthew Rozsa: The winner of the presidential election will set the tone for at least the next four years on climate policy. Experts repeatedly remind us time is running out when it comes to meaningful action that can reduce the worst outcomes of climate change. Rozsa, Salon's staff writer on the climate beat, talks to experts on why, if Donald Trump wins the election, there is little hope of limiting climate damage. 

NEWS: From psychedelics to marijuana, these are the states to watch for drug policy reform this election

Reported by Elizabeth Hlavinka: Voters in four red states will cast their ballots for legalizing cannabis and marijuana, the extracts from the plant. Meanwhile, Massachusetts voters will decide whether it will become the third state to legalize psychedelics. Hlavinka, a Salon staff writer for the science and health desk, breaks down this Election Day's ballot initiatives involving marijuana and psychedelic legalization.

Play along with Salon’s 2024 election night bingo cards while you watch TV news

To keep yourself entertained while awaiting the results of the 2024 election on Tuesday night, look no further then Salon's official election night bingo cards. There are cards for cable TV news viewers watching MSNBC, Fox News and CNN.

Squares are designed around the campaign jargon favored by pundits, highly specific details that only play out on one network, and election personalities like Steve Kornacki, John King and Arnon Mishkin. Enjoy and please play responsibly.

MSNBC Election Night Bingo Card

Fox News Election Night Bingo CardCNN Election Night Bingo Card

And join Salon on TikTok for more.

@salonofficial

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Play along on Election Night with Salon’s Election Night Bingo Cards, available to download at www.salon.com!

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Trump staffer in top battleground state outed as a white supremacist brags about his influence

Luke Meyer, a regional field director working for Donald Trump's campaign in Pennsylvania since July, was fired last Friday by the state GOP following reporting by Politico that he hosts a white nationalist podcast under the pseudonym Alberto Barbarossa.

As Barbarossa, Meyer co-hosts "Alexandria" with Richard Spencer, who organized the deadly 2017 Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia. On the podcast, Meyer has espoused the view that whites should reclaim America's demographic makeup.

“Why can’t we make New York, for example, white again? Why can’t we clear out and reclaim Miami?” Meyer asked while guest hosting a different podcast in June, according to Politico. “I’m not saying we need to be 100 percent homogeneous. I’m not saying we need to be North Korea or Japan or anything like that. A return to 80 percent, 90 percent white would probably be, probably the best we could hope for, to some degree.”

Meyer admitted he was Barbarossa when Politico confronted him with their reporting. “I am glad you pieced these little clues together like an antifa Nancy Drew,” he wrote to Politico contributor Amanda Moore, an extremism researcher. “It made me realize how draining it has been having to conceal my true thoughts for as long as I have.”

The Pennsylvania Republican Party told Politico that they had vetted him and did not find any connection with white nationalism at the time. “If we’d had any inkling about his hidden and despicable activity he would never have been hired, and the instant we learned of it he was fired,” a spokesperson said. “We have no place in our Party or nation for people with such shameful, hateful views.”

But even after his firing, Meyer struck a defiant tone.

“Like the hydra, you can cut off my head and hold it up for the world to see, but two more will quietly appear and be working in the shadows,” Meyer wrote to Moore. “Slating Trump to speak at [Madison Square Garden], putting ‘poisoning the blood’ in his speeches … In a few years, one of those groypers [white supremacists] might even quietly bring me back in, with a stern warning for me to ‘be more careful next time.'"

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Let’s see how Fox News spins Trump’s recent comments about “German Generals.”

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“Bottom has started to fall out”: Trump campaign aides fret as Election Day “confidence has shifted”

About a dozen Donald Trump campaign aides spoke to Tim Alberta, a staff writer at The Atlantic, about how their candidate strayed from a hitherto on-message campaign to embark on a series of offensive, threatening and self-defeating verbal adventures that have left his team utterly demoralized heading into Election Day. The former president’s predictions of triumph, the reporter who has covered several Republican presidential campaigns concluded, belie a sense of panic among his subordinates that "the bottom has started to fall out" in their efforts.

“I think that there is a real fear that the bottom has started to fall out here at the worst possible moment and that they are closing in about as weak a fashion as you possibly could.”

In the article, campaign sources explain that Trump's newfound discipline unraveled as he succumbed to agitation over his campaign's cautious approach, advice from impatient allies like Corey Lewandowski and the aggravating itch of his natural impulses. In the space of four months, Trump's aides now fear, the former president had dragged himself from probable victory to an avoidable disaster.

Trump, however, still thinks his chances are the same are great. “He does believe that he’s going to win,” Alberta told CNN’s Erin Burnett on Monday, adding that Trump "has a pretty distorted view of political reality, I think that’s been the case for quite some time.”

The takeaway from his conversations, he said, was that the fall campaign had "been a total train wreck of a fall campaign for the Trump folks."

Alberta's campaign observations were echoed by Wall Street Journal reporter Annie Linskey. She reported that the Election Day mood in Trumpworld has quickly turned sour. 

"I've talked to some of the Trump people," Linskey told CNN, "They were flat-out optimistic a week ago. I mean, people I was talking to were saying he is the president, [JD] Vance is the vice president. There was a confidence." But, Linskey noted, "That has shifted in terms of the staff members you talk to over there."

As President Joe Biden stepped aside for Vice President Kamala Harris atop the Democratic ticket, Trump pivoted his rhetoric from attacking Biden's age and capabilities to complaining about Harris' mixed-race ancestry. Diatribes against Democrats, immigrants and other people that should have been contained to the private sphere spilled out into the open while his campaign fought against negative headlines and against each other. Even as polls edged back in favor of Trump by late October, any momentum was seemingly snuffed out by right-wing comedian Tony Hinchcliffe opening a Trump rally in New York by calling Puerto Rico an "island of garbage."

While Trump later claimed not to know Hinchcliffe, aides told Alberta that the former president had spent months courting him. He characteristically blamed the fallout on his campaign managers Susie Wiles and Chris LaCivita, who had been trying to purge "right-wing trolls" from the operation but were now accused by their boss of having "f***ed this up."

“I think that there is a real fear that the bottom has started to fall out here at the worst possible moment and that they are closing in about as weak a fashion as you possibly could,” Alberta said. Many aides in the Trump campaign, he added, feel like they're "crawling or limping through the tape," and they know exactly who to blame.

They "will not be upset if he loses," Alberta concluded.

 

Super anxious about election results? Lean on comfort food with these 7 recipes

Does election week have you stressed? Are you biting your nails in anxious anticipation? Have you gorged on leftover Halloween candies, or abstained from eating them for a few days due to an uneasy tummy?

Do not fret — though this is undoubtedly a fraught time, you can always rely on home-y, warming comfort food for a bit of the pleasure found in a familiar bite. Turn on your favorite shows or movies, play your favorite tunes and cook to your heart's content. Hey, if you're really riled up, why not make every recipe on the list?

Have a little dinner party for your family and friends so they can marvel over your skills. No matter how you approach it, keep in mind that comfort food tastes good whether you're celebrating or not. 

So, indulge and enjoy. 

Salon columnist Maggie Hennessy shared this recipe along with the story of how it went viral back in 2013 on her "now-defunct WordPress account." The recipe, courtesy of her Oma, "never fails to warm me through on those especially dark and bitter winter nights. And I always marvel when I retrieve each perfect little packet at the end of cooking, which forgives every lazy wrap job and torn cabbage leaf during assembly."
 
The recipe calls for items you probably already have on hand and comes together in about two hours, at which time it'll perfume your home in the most wonderful way. There's a bit of manual labor with the cabbage folding, but if you like that sort of dexterous, tactical work and find that it might help pass the time, this might be the perfect election week recipe for you.
Courtesy of Salon's food editor, Ashlie D. Stevens, this classic-yet-revamped casserole is an ideal choice, especially from a seasonal point of view. Stevens omits cream of mushroom soup by making a classic, rich béchamel, along with garlic, mushroom and onion, as well as shredded rotisserie chicken, peas and carrots, cheddar, fried shallots and panko bread crumbs.
 
Sounds terrific, right? Don't waste any more time — go preheat the oven so you can dig into this gem ASAP.
Another Stevens original, this über-rich, decadent classic is a surefire hit. There's also a simplicity inherent here, with only five ingredients (plus salt and butter), and the taters all come together in under an hour. "The whipped butteriness of the mascarpone cheese gave the potato filling both flavor and volume, while the cheddar cheese was just decadent. It was kept fresh by the bite of the cooked and fresh chives," she wrote. 
 
If curling up with a stuffed potato is your idea of comfort, then this is truly the pick for you.

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Salon senior writer Mary Elizabeth Williams gives a Molly Yeh dish a "modern twist" here, incorporating the classic tater tot and a slew of other ingredients that might seem disparate — edamame, ground turkey, Swiss, pale ale or broth — into a perfect combination. As Williams writes, "I may not be Midwestern, but somehow, hotdish makes me feel nostalgic and incredibly American."
 
In that case, there may be no better dish to eat on election day than this.
 
To sell you even further, here's how Williams sums it up: "Topped with a very vigorous shake of chipotle Tabasco, 'totdish' is like medicine and followed with a chocolate mousse chaser, it's definitely an antidepressant."
My recipe for Salisbury "steak" calls instead for ground chicken, or whatever ground protein or plant-based protein you'd like, as well as some of the usual suspects: various seasonings, bread crumbs, eggs and some other odds and ends, like A1 sauce, Dijon and Worcestershire. For the sauce, you'll be cooking shallots, mushrooms, red wine, stock or broth, butter and chives. When this dish all comes together, you'll be amazed.
 
Back in January, I wrote, "Part-meatloaf, part-meatball, part-burger, this peculiar amalgamation (sometimes called "hamburger steak") is any sort of patty comprised of whatever you'd like — plant-based proteins, pork, lamb, beef, turkey — then browned and enveloped in a lush mushroom gravy."
 
There's also a fun, retro vibe to this dish, which might be just the thing you're looking for this week.
Williams is back with another cozy option with this gnudi dish. As she writes, "Gnudi is gnocchi's even simpler cousin. Made with flour and ricotta and little else, these doughy pillows are simultaneously delicate and substantial. They are also beautifully achievable, with no special ingredients or fancy techniques required. The only tricky part is figuring out how to choose your own gnudi adventure."
 
Williams' version calls for flour, ricotta, egg, Parmesan, butter, salt and pepper. She notes this dish makes "supremely delicious, little ricotta nuggets that I then finished in a simple sauce of brown butter." 

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There's a sort of timeless comfort to a pot pie: The buttery, flaky crust; the stew-like filling, packed with large chunks of chicken, carrots, peas and much more. My version calls for a sheet of puff pastry or a pie shell, as well as a rich, decadent filling consisting of chicken, leeks, carrots, celery, peas, white miso, creme fraiche, stock or broth, cream and peas.
 
This is pretty darn filling and restorative in a truly comforting way. I think you'll love it. As I noted when this recipe was first published, "Do your part this winter to help boost the pot pie into the upper comfort food echelon, which is exactly where it belongs."

“Unhinged and unstable”: Nancy Pelosi hits back after Trump jokes about calling her the “B” word

Former President Donald Trump capped off his third and possibly final presidential campaign with a broadside against former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif. during a Tuesday morning rally in Grand Rapids, Michigan.

“She‘s a crooked person, she‘s a bad person. Evil! she’s an evil, sick, crazy bi—" Trump said, stopping himself. "Oh no," he added, before silently mouthing the word into the microphone. “It starts with a ‘b’ but I won’t say it. I wanna say it. I wanna say it.”

Evangelist Franklin Graham admonished Trump not to use "foul language," the former president recalled, but Trump argued it is not a "real bad word" and "I don't use it much."

“He’s wrong about one thing,” Trump said of Graham. “It is a little better when you use the foul language.”

Pelosi led House Democrats throughout Trump's presidency and then his years as de facto leader of the opposition, repeatedly defying him through two impeachment processes, a government shutdown, legislative fights and a number of contentious meetings in the Cabinet Room captured on camera. Her opposition earned her the epithet "Crazy Nancy" from Trump, who on Monday called her a "bad, sick woman" and "crazy as a bedbug."

A spokesperson for Pelosi told The Independent that Trump's remarks were "just the usual projection of his own insanity."

“The former President is showing himself to be increasingly unhinged and unstable," she added, repeating Pelosi's own comments Sunday suggesting that the former president was undergoing a a "cognitive degeneration."

The Trump campaign fired back at those comments on Monday on Fox News, saying “the only thing deteriorating is Nancy Pelosi, who is a decrepit washed up corrupt politician who America can no longer stand … she should go back to the City of San Francisco, which she has totally destroyed, and never return.”

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Trump and the money men: Billionaires are repeating the Hitler mistake

In 2019, I interrupted private equity emperor Stephen Schwarzman as he addressed several hundred of his and my Yale classmates at our 50th-year reunion dinner under a great white tent on the college's Old Campus. 

"That's enough, Steve, You've dispossessed tens of thousands of Americans out of their homes," I announced in my stentorian, second-bass Yale Glee Club voice, rising from a seat at a table not far from the dais, where Schwarzman was holding forth self- indulgently about a donation he'd made.

"Well, it looks like someone has had a few too many," Schwarzman responded — somewhat lamely, I thought. But more than half of my classmates in the room leapt to their feet and applauded him as I turned my back to them and sauntered out into the night. 

An hour later, I returned and learned that more than a few classmates had felt as I did but hadn't done much more than squirm.

They knew that Schwarzman and another Yale alumnus, Steve Mnuchin, the future treasury secretary, had indeed foreclosed on properties whose residents had been hoodwinked into over-leveraging their purchases in ways that doomed their ownership, as I recounted in the New Republic a few months after confronting him.

After my outburst that evening, our class website carried a frank discussion of the incident. Schwarzman didn't join in; I’d been criticizing his premises and practices since 2017 in the Washington MonthlyDissent and other venues, and I criticized him with renewed purpose days after the 2020 election here in Salon.

The question matters now as never before. You might think that I’ve had my say by now about Schwarzman. I'd be glad to see others take up the torch of remonstrance and dissent. Fortunately, Financial Times writer and American editor Edward Luce has come close to doing just that in his Oct. 23 column, headlined "What Croesus Wants From Trump." Luce sees Schwarzman as an American Croesus, horrifically influential in politics as in finance, like Elon Musk, Peter Thiel and other billionaires.

More tellingly still, historian Christopher R. Browning, writing in the New York Review of Books, describes how wealthy, reactionary German elites anticipated that they'd be able to profit from, but also control, Adolf Hitler’s alarming if erratic demagoguery. That's pretty much what some American billionaires, including Schwarzman, Elon Musk and Peter Thiel, think they can do with Trump after they've secured his election. 

If they "elect" Trump, they'll regret it, as I've warned since writing the Salon article referenced above. Yet they may feel vindicated even if Trump loses narrowly to Harris but his acolytes erupt in litigious, violent and protracted fashion. I'm glad to report that Yale School of Management professor Jeffrey Sonnenfeld has now assembled 20 former CEOs of major American corporations who endorse Kamala Harris, as he and Doug Parker, former CEO of American Airlines, have explained on CNBC and in Fortune Magazine. But Schwarzman isn't one of them.

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Schwarzman's and my alma mater has been riven like this before — long before our own years there in the 1960s: In 1860, before the Civil War began, some Yale students and alumni, including John C. Calhoun — Southerners deeply invested in slavery — packed up their bags and left New Haven, breaking from Northern classmates who would defend the Union and abolish slavery. 

What will today's Ivy League alums, caught in what Yale Law professor Daniel Markovits dubs "The Meritocracy Trap," decide to do about what Harvard political theorist Danielle Allen describes as "The Road to Serfdom"?

Some of the nascent Yale abolitionists who stayed loyal to the Union were capitalists-in-training and by inheritance who were already profiting indirectly from slavery. Yet they also concluded that slavery was morally wrong and that a Southern slaveocracy's secession and success would cripple the republic, not to mention their own dignity.   

What will today's Ivy League alums, caught now in what Yale Law School professor Daniel Markovits dubs "The Meritocracy Trap," decide about Americans' submission to our own approximation of what Harvard political theorist and classicist Danielle Allen describes as "The Road to Serfdom" — the casino-like financing, the vicious political demagoguery and the caste-like inequities that Trump, a corrupt Supreme Court and a paralyzed Congress have all but normalized?


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Kamala Harris may not be an Abraham Lincoln who'll crush the worst of it, but the rest of us need to stop normalizing our  submission to finance and corporate marketing which, especially since the Citizens United ruling, has deranged public debate in consequence of Schwarzman and others' Croesus-like interventions in free speech. We need to intervene in other ways, not only by voting against Trump but by reconfiguring our priorities and habits as investors and as citizens.  

No one has said it better than the 19th-century social theorist and economist — and inveterate social-justice warrior — Henry George, who, in "Progress and Poverty," warned that "forms are nothing when substance has gone … and a government of universal suffrage and theoretical equality may, under conditions which impel the change, most readily become a despotism. For there despotism advances in the name and with the might of the people…. There is no unfranchised class to whom appeal may be made, no privileged orders who in defending their own rights may defend those of all…. [It] was the middle classes who broke the pride of the Stuarts; but a mere aristocracy of wealth will never struggle while it can hope to bribe a tyrant."

So now, too? Trump, Schwarzman, Musk and the rest would have it so. And so, at least according to polls, will half the American electorate. May more of us than of them say otherwise.

Bracing for MAGA’s backlash: The strategy behind secret Kamala Harris voters is safety

When it comes to political bait, it was the tastiest sort: a cheeky ad run by Vote Common Good, and voiced by Julia Roberts, reminding women that they don't have to tell their husbands if they vote for Vice President Kamala Harris

It followed a Lincoln Project ad based on the same premise, though with a more somber tone. 

Whatever the intention behind these ads, they set off a major tantrum in the GOP, which confirmed that feminists have been right all along: the MAGA movement is about controlling women. Fox News host Jesse Watters, who cheated on his first wife with his current wife, compared a wife refusing to vote for Donald Trump to having an affair. Former GOP House Speaker Newt Gingrich, who is married to his third wife after cheating on his second, called the ad "sick" and evidence of moral "decay." Charlie Kirk of Turning Point USA obsessed about this, claiming Harris could only win by "the largest mass conspiracy of spousal lying in political history" and suggested wives who vote for Harris are "stealing money." Trump himself, of course, got caught up in the MAGA outrage about wives who exercise their own judgment. 


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In an election that may have the largest gender gap in history, these ads couldn't have done a better job of making their point than drawing this reaction. Trump is out there talking about how he'll "protect" women "whether the women like it or not," making the threat underlying the chivalrous pose all the more undeniable. Now all these MAGA pundits are saying the quiet parts out loud, that the goal is to dominate women, even to the point of controlling women's votes. The MAGA tantrum could very well backfire, making women more determined to vote for Harris and prove their independence. Unsurprisingly, then, progressives are widely sharing the stories about angry MAGA dudes ranting about disobedient wives, amused that the misogynists are giving the game away. 

This is about women's basic right to self-determination, inside the voting booth and out.

As with many stupid things we hear from MAGA leaders, however, what's darkly funny can also be dangerous. That's especially true with this fit over wives voting against their husband's wishes. These Republican leaders are sending an unmistakable final message to men: Women have no right to think for themselves. By acting as if it's a given that women should vote how their husbands tell them, these leaders are normalizing the attitudes that lead to domestic abuse. 

Decades of research show there's a direct link between beliefs in male dominance over women and domestic violence. Common sense tells us why: when men feel entitled to control their wives or girlfriends, they also tend to feel it's okay to use violence to keep their power over women. The National Domestic Violence Hotline's list of red flags for abuse literally includes "[p]reventing you from making your own decisions."

But even if a man doesn't resort to hitting a woman, bullying a wife or girlfriend into voting for Trump is a form of emotional abuse. It's a way of denying a woman her full human rights and relegating her to second-class status. This was amply illustrated when one Trump voter on Twitter declared, "That’s why I make my wife do a mail-in ballot so I can make sure she votes for Trump, she’s not gonna vote behind my back." As many folks pointed out in the community notes that overwhelmed his tweet, "This is called voter intimidation," and can be a crime.

It's terrible under any circumstances, but it's especially on the nose to force a woman to vote for Trump, a man whose violence against women is well-documented, including by his own bragging about it on the "Access Hollywood" tape. Last year, a civil jury in New York found Trump liable for sexually assaulting journalist E. Jean Carroll. In court documents after the decision, federal Judge Lewis Kaplan wrote, "Trump 'raped' her as many people commonly understand the word 'rape.'" Forcing women to back a man like that reinforces the ugly message that women don't count as people and the abuse of women is acceptable to maintain male dominance. 

Whether Trump wins or loses, it's worrisome that his near decade of running for president has unleashed an army of male talking heads who openly promote the idea that women are meant to be dominated by men. Media Matters reported Monday, for instance, that Royce White — the Republican challenger to Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn. — told listeners on a podcast that it "would probably not be a good idea" to marry a college-educated woman. The podcast host, Jesse Lee Peterson, opposes women having the right to vote and said, during the interview, "educated women do not make for good wives and mothers."

White claimed, falsely, that educated women are likelier to divorce their husbands. In reality, college-educated women are less likely to get divorced than women without college degrees. But it's also true that it's easier for women to leave unhappy marriages if they have the means to achieve financial independence. White's comment illustrates how the MAGA movement is becoming more open about the view that marriage isn't about love and companionship, but control. As Tatyana Tandanpolie wrote Monday for Salon, there's increasing chatter within the MAGA movement about ending no-fault divorce laws. Joanna Grossman, a professor of family law at SMU Dedman School of Law in Texas, told Salon that the goal is to trap women in marriages that are often with controlling and abusive men. 

The ads that kicked off this MAGA hysteria about voting wives may take a joking tone, but as Rebecca Solnit at the Guardian wrote, in another light, it feels like "a hostage video." That's because it's rooted in this larger and growing right-wing discourse that explicitly treats women like they're male property, instead of people. It's a threat to women's safety on many levels. Men are hearing signals that treat it as normal — expected, even — to bully and abuse their wives. And it's being used to justify policy moves that make it harder for women to leave dangerous relationships. It isn't just the abstract notion of democracy that is on the line this election. This is also about women's basic right to self-determination, inside the voting booth and out.

MAGA’s last stand: A duel between Donald Trump and Kamala Harris in diametrically opposite Americas

The 2024 presidential election is one of the most important — if not the most important — in the country’s history. Today the American people will decide if they will surrender their power to Donald Trump, a man who admires Vladimir Putin and Adolf Hitler and has promised to be the country’s first dictator, or if they will instead choose Vice President Kamala Harris, a defender of democracy and believer in American greatness.

If enough lost Americans and an antiquated Electoral College put Trump and his MAGA movement back in the White House, it will be the signed death certificate of American democracy. The stakes are that high. These are not normal times in America. These abnormal times have made Trump and Harris not “just” politicians.

As I have repeatedly warned here at Salon for more than eight years, Trump has long been a symbol more than he is a man. Trump is the country’s first White President. In that role, Trump is and continues to be the leader, figurehead and symbol of a decades- and centuries-long White male power restoration project that seeks to give White “Christian” men as a group (and rich white men specifically) de facto unlimited power over every aspect of American society.

Trump’s symbolic power is also religious: His MAGA followers and other cultists increasingly view him as some god or prophet, a tool of destiny, who is divine and may even have supernatural powers.

Trump has long been a symbol more than he is a man.

Trump’s symbolic power is also violent. He gives permission to his MAGA followers and other Americans to be increasingly violent and to engage in other antisocial behavior. Trump himself has repeatedly, and publicly, threatened his and the MAGA movement’s enemies and “the left” and “enemy within” with prison or death. Trump, like other “conservatives” and Republicans, has also attempted — and mostly succeeded — in monopolizing the great symbolic power of the American flag, guns and the Christian cross.

As a symbol (and human being and candidate), Vice President Harris is almost the exact opposite and antithesis of Trump and his MAGA movement. This collision of symbols and their meaning in this historic moment is one of the main reasons why the 2024 election is so combustible.

Trump is 78 years old; Harris is 60 years old. Trump is a man; Harris is a woman. Harris is Black and South Asian; Trump is a White man. Trump is the first sitting or former president to be convicted of felonies; Harris is a former prosecutor and attorney general. Trump is an authoritarian and a fascist; Harris is a fierce defender of America’s democratic institutions.

But there is much more going on in this duel of symbolic power.  

Harris’ personhood, body and life experience as a Black woman holds the specific weight of history, oppression, violence and yes, struggle and triumph. Trump, as a White man, also possesses great meaning and power in the symbolism and historical meaning of his body and power. “White” and “male” are not the universal “I” or the baseline of humanity and normal. These are specific group identities that have an origin, history and meaning.

Harris is a child of and heir to the Black Freedom Struggle and the long civil rights movement. She is the country’s first Black Vice President. She graduated from a Historically Black College and University (HBCU), educational institutions created during Reconstruction and that continue to be a central part of the Black public sphere and civil society. On election night, Harris will be at Howard University, her alma mater. Harris would also be the first president-elect to celebrate their victory at a historically Black college or university.

Trump, the MAGA movement and the larger white right and neofascist cause view Black people’s votes and equal citizenship rights, and multiracial democracy more broadly, as illegitimate and fraudulent.

Harris is an American citizen. Her parents immigrated to the United States from Jamaica and India. Trump and the MAGA movement and the large white right view nonwhite immigrants as “poison” in the “blood” of the nation. Moreover, Trump and the other fascists and racial authoritarians believe that the United States is a “garbage can” because of nonwhite immigrants like Harris’ parents.

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Trump and the MAGA people believe in the White supremacist antisemitic conspiracy theory-lie that “globalists” and “elites” and other “enemies within” are “importing” nonwhite immigrants to “replace” white people.

To “protect” White America, Trump and the other MAGAfied Republicans, “conservatives” and the larger white right want to change the United States Constitution to end birthright citizenship as a way of ensuring that white people are the largest demographic group. One of their main goals is restoring such laws as the Immigration Act of 1924 (The Johnson-Reed Act) that de facto prohibited immigration from “nonwhite” countries. If Johnson-Reed had still been in place Harris’ parents would not have been able to immigrate to the United States. Part of this white supremacist racial project involves making “whiteness” a prerequisite for citizenship and national belonging as established by the Supreme Court in the infamous Ozawa and Thind cases.

Harris is married to Douglas Emhoff, a white Jewish man. The MAGA movement and the larger white right want to return the country to an era when interracial marriage was illegal. Trump has also made antisemitic comments suggesting that Jewish Americans who do not support him are traitors who will be collectively punished by his regime for their “disloyalty.” During a recent interview, Trump agreed with a right-wing radio host who said that Imhoff is a “bad Jew.”

Harris’ opportunities, career and rise to power were made possible by the women’s rights and feminist movement(s). Specifically, by the Black and brown women and their white allies who worked against the white supremacist elements in those social movements.

In total, Harris’ body, identity, personhood and the meaning of those identities in American society are both racialized and gendered. To view Harris’ identity as primarily being that of a woman — which is a great error in much of the writing and analysis of the 2024 election by the mainstream news media and its largely white commentariat — is to ignore the very specific and unique experience and struggles of Harris specifically as a Black woman and as a woman of color more broadly. 

As many experts have emphasized, the experiences and struggles of white women, especially white middle and upper-class white women, are not universal to all women. Womanism, Third World, Queer and other forms of feminism are an attempt to intervene against the centrality of whiteness in the (white) American and Western feminist project.

To that point, in the landmark volume, “This Bridge Called My Back: Writings by Radical Women of Color,” Cherríe L. Moraga Gloria Anzaldua speaks this truth: “We are challenging white feminists to be accountable for their racism because at the base we still want to believe that they really want freedom for all of us.”


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The Combahee River Collective Statement of 1977, several of whose contributors would also have their essays and other writing featured in “This Bridge Called My Back,” offered this still much-needed intervention:

We believe that sexual politics under patriarchy is as pervasive in Black women's lives as are the politics of class and race. We also often find it difficult to separate race from class from sex oppression because in our lives they are most often experienced simultaneously. We know that there is such a thing as racial-sexual oppression which is neither solely racial nor solely sexual, e.g., the history of rape of Black women by white men as a weapon of political repression.

Political scientists and other experts have shown that Trumpism and the MAGAfied Republicans and the larger “conservative” movement are fueled by hostile sexism and misogyny. One of their main policy goals is to take away the reproductive rights and freedoms of women. Ending Roe v. Wade is just the beginning of the right-wing’s plans to make women second-class citizens and a type of chattel, the property of their husbands, fathers and the other men in their lives. Men’s domination and control over women and their bodies and agency is a defining feature of fascism and other forms of authoritarianism such as the MAGA movement.

During an excellent interview last week with Lawrence O’Donnell on his MSNBC show, author and journalist Isabel Wilkerson explained the great symbolic weight and meaning — and stakes — of the 2024 election and questions of national identity in the following way:

When we look at this when people look at this as an election or only as an election, then it doesn't make sense. When you look at this as an existential crisis over what the country will be, then it begins to make sense. People are not voting against their own interests; they're voting for the interests that matter most to them. And for many, many Americans as we saw on January 6th, this means maintaining their position at the very top of the American hierarchy, [and] at the top of the American caste system with all the rights and privileges that accrue to that. [T]hat is not something that maybe is in the best interest of the planet or the country, but that is the best interest of the people as they ascertain it for themselves.

Wilkerson, summoning W.E.B. Du Bois’ famous analysis of what he termed “the psychological wages of whiteness,” then explains why poor and working-class white Americans would support public policies that would cause them financial and economic and other harm:

[W]hat unites them is that they are both voting for their caste in this society…. Caste is an arbitrary graded ranking of human value in society, and it's what determines the rights and privileges [and] who will be protected by the authorities and who will be attacked by the authorities. [T]his system has been in place for 248 years.

We were forged in revolution and in civil war. We should not be the least bit surprised at the enduring divisions that we are seeing right now. And this is rising up in part because of the demographic shift that we are facing as a country…. The 2020 census found that for the first time in American history, the historical majority in this country, white Americans, that group is the only group whose numbers fell for the first time in American history….

The existential crisis that we're facing as a country and what we are tasked with having to do is to figure out a way to imagine what we could be as a nation even if the demographics are not the same. [It is] this sense of dread, the sense of fear is what's driving so much of what we are seeing.

On Election Day, the American people are making a choice between two candidates who represent radically divergent possibilities and futures for American society. With Trump, they can choose some of the worst parts of the country’s past and his MAGA threat to make America white again. Or the American people can choose a better present and future by supporting Vice President Kamala Harris and doing what will be the hard work required to renew and immunize our democracy against authoritarianism and the systemic, institutional and cultural failures that vomited out such antidemocratic and fake populist energy. The 2024 election and the choice between the candidates and symbols, Trump and Harris, is also a test of the American people’s morality and character. What type of people and nation are we? Most importantly, what type of nation and people do we want to be? We will soon find out.

“Women are withholding their support”: How women could decide key Ohio race — and Senate majority

Ohio's highly anticipated Senate race has long been rated a toss-up as incumbent Democratic Sen. Sherrod Brown and Donald Trump-backed challenger Bernie Moreno ping-ponged a roughly two-point lead over the last six weeks. Recent poll averages still place odds ever so slightly in progressive Brown's favor on the eve of Election Day — driven in large part by Ohio women.

The contentious race has been a statistical dead-heat for weeks, with either candidate's hair-thin lead falling within each poll's margin of error, which is typically around 3%. That hasn't changed at the eleventh hour. The Cook Political Report still rates the Ohio Senate race a "toss-up," while the FiveThirtyEight polling average notches a 1.2-point lead for Brown as of Nov. 3. But as time before the election has narrowed, so too has the gap between former luxury car salesman Moreno and the three-term United States senator, who is relying on GOP ticket splitters to secure a win. 

"The outcome of the race will dictate a good deal about how competitive Ohio will likely be between Democrats and Republicans moving forward," said Robert Alexander, the founding director of Bowling Green State University's Democracy and Public Policy Research Network in Ohio. 

"A Moreno win would likely mean Ohio could be drifting rightward for some time," Alexander told Salon in an email. "A robust Brown victory would give Democrats hope that they can be competitive in the state in upcoming elections."  

Polls have returned leads for both candidates among Ohio voters in the weeks leading up to the election. The BGSU Democracy and Public Policy Research Network's October survey of 1,000 likely Ohio voters found Brown had a slight edge over Moreno, 47% to 45%. That poll, which has a 3.6% margin of error, was conducted Oct. 10-21. Meanwhile, a Morning Consult poll of 1,254 likely voters, conducted between Oct. 23 and Nov. 1, showed Moreno leading Brown by one point, 47% to 46%. That survey's margin of error is 3%. 

Another recent poll from the Ray C. Bliss Institute of Applied Politics at the University of Akron in Ohio showed Brown with a two-point lead over Moreno, notching 46% support to Moreno's 44%. It also saw Trump leading Democratic candidate and Vice President Kamala Harris by seven points among Ohio voters, 51% to 44%. The poll, conducted between Sept. 12 and Oct. 24, surveyed 1,241 registered Ohio voters pulled from the state's voter database.

While Brown's lead remains within the poll's 2.8% margin of error, J. Cherie Strachan, the director of the Ray C. Bliss Institute, told Salon it suggests Ohioans are willing to split their tickets to elect him despite high partisan polarization. 

"It's clear that at least a handful of people are planning at this point, to either split their ticket or just not vote in the Senate race," she said in a phone interview. "That support is coming from people who are going to vote for Trump — not a huge number, but enough to keep Brown in the race. At least men are saying, 'I'm going to vote for Brown instead,' and that drops off Moreno's support a little bit. But for women, they're just saying, I'm not voting for either one of them, or I'm not voting at all."

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Also of note, Strachan said, was the difference in Ohioans' support for Trump compared to Moreno by gender — especially among women. In a highly polarized political landscape characterized, in part, by a national decline in split-ticket voting, one would expect the percentage of voters declaring their backing of the Republican presidential candidate to reasonably match with that of the Republican senatorial candidate, she explained. That was not the case here.

Fifty-three percent of polled men said they were voting for Trump, while only 49% said they'd be voting for Moreno. Brown received 44% support from male respondents compared to the 41% who said they were backing Harris. This dynamic was far more pronounced among women voters, among whom Trump led by a single point, 49% to Harris' 48%.

While 48% of women surveyed indicated they'd be casting a vote for Brown, only 40% of women said they'd vote for Moreno. Another 12% of surveyed women said they weren't supporting either Senate candidate, compared to the 3% who said they weren't supporting either presidential candidate.

Strachan speculated that the split between support for Trump and support for Moreno among women surveyed could be indicative of the car dealer hemorrhaging support in the aftermath of his now-viral, controversial comments in September, calling it "a little crazy" for Ohio women to heavily weigh abortion access when casting their ballots. 

"Women are withholding their support more than men from Moreno," she said, adding: "It strikes me that women, interestingly, are holding Moreno more accountable for that negative commentary about women or reproductive rights issues than they are Trump — perhaps because of that video in particular, or that it creates some scrutiny [and] raised their attention to that issue in relationship to the Senate race."


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Brown and Moreno's face-off has become the most expensive congressional race in U.S. history, according to AdImpact data reported by NBC News, nearing $500 million in ad spending or reservations as of Oct. 31. The Ohio Senate race is crucial to determining which party will assume control of the upper chamber in the next term. 

Democrats this election cycle are aiming to retain control over the Senate, a task made harder by independent Sen. Joe Manchin's retirement in West Virginia, whose open seat is expected to flip. With Democratic Montana Sen. John Tester's race leaning Republican, the party is banking on incumbent Sens. Brown, Tammy Baldwin, D-Wis., and Bob Casey Jr., D-Pa., claiming victories on Nov. 5 in their toss-up races as well as successfully filling the open seat in Michigan. 

Alexander said that Democrats have "a great deal riding on this contest" as they need a Brown win to have a chance at maintaining their Senate majority, though his victory would by no means be a guarantee. 

"The chances that Democrats can hold on to the Senate would likely end if Brown lost," he added. "At the same time, if he has a strong showing, it could give Democrats hope not only in keeping the Senate, but perhaps portend positive outcomes in House races and even the presidential election. The outcome of the race will be spun in multiple directions given its implications not only in Ohio but for the nation."

Often described as fighting for his political life, Brown has faced an uphill battle this election cycle. The gravelly-voiced Clevelander is one of the only statewide Democratic elected officials Ohio has left, and he's running for re-election in a political landscape that has twice voted for Donald Trump with an eight-point margin.   

Experts have told Salon that a large part of what has made this race a "toss-up" instead of a "lean-Republican" is Brown's popularity and name recognition in the state as one of the last true retail politicians. Political newcomer Moreno's lack of name recognition, despite having Trump's endorsement, also works in Brown's favor. 

Moreno, a Columbian-American businessman and former Mercedes dealer in Cleveland, has worked to increase his name identification in the state through a bevy of ads and campaign stops. Originally a critic of the former president, Moreno has since glued himself to Trump and the GOP's policies and campaigned, in part, on being a political newcomer with an aspirational immigration story. 

Strachan said that in the final moments of the Senate race, she expects the candidates to continue making plays toward voters who are undecided or not expressing interest in either candidate, like the 33% of Independents or 12% of women surveyed in the Bliss Institute's poll.

"There's still movement out there," she said. "If you could lock down some of the potential voters who are registered, who are saying, 'I haven't decided yet,' or 'I'm alienated from both candidates,' I think you would see them both, up until the very end, trying to flip those voters and turn them out — tooth and nail to the end."

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This election isn't just about the presidency. Here are 5 Congressional races you should watch out for.

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Economy top of mind as voters head to polls

As voters head to the polls today, a familiar worry is on their minds: the economy.

A Gallup poll released Friday said registered voters name the economy as the most important factor determining which candidate they are supporting in the presidential election. The 21% of voters who said the economy ranks first includes 35% of Republicans and Republican-leaning independents and 7% of Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents, Gallup said. 

Salon's coverage of economic issues in the 2024 election has analyzed how much control the next president will have over the economy, whether voters should make their wallets a priority, how the candidates plan to tax Americans, the growing role that cryptocurrency voters have played and the overall economic lessons from this election. Here are some of those:

The president doesn't control the economy

Although half of Americans believe the winner of the election will affect their finances, a president's impact on the overall economy and the stock market is pretty nuanced and often requires cooperation from Congress. 

One notable exception is tariffs — taxes on imported goods from other countries. Federal law allows presidents to impose them without Congress' approval, and former President Donald Trump has said he would increase rates if elected in order to stimulate American manufacturing. Critics have said the costs would be passed on to consumers and could hurt the stock market. 

Tax cuts, hikes and credits proposed by Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris would need a friendly Congress, which means down-ballot races are important when considering which elected officials would most impact the economy.

Think twice about voting with your wallet

Even though inflation has cooled, food and housing costs remain higher than before the pandemic. That may be one reason why some people are thinking about voting with their wallet, but experts warn that it's important to understand a president's influence over the economy.

"A president has influence over both fiscal policy and monetary policy, but the influence is indirect," said Michael Walden, a Reynolds Distinguished Professor Emeritus at North Carolina State University.

Fiscal policy is implemented through the federal budget, which is determined by Congress. Walden recommended that voters follow the Federal Reserve, which has more direct influence on the economy in reducing the rate of price increases, and do some long-term planning regardless of who is elected. Save funds for emergencies, create a budget, contribute to a retirement plan and stay the course in investing. 

Tax proposals are "a mixed bag"

Money policies are a key part of campaign platforms, starting with taxes, and Harris and Trump have floated various policies to raise them, lower them and expand tax credits. But these would need to survive Congress, and the initiatives may not provide the relief that is being touted, experts said.

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Harris has focused on lowering taxes for middle- and low-income earners, and raising taxes on the wealthy and corporations. She wants to give down payment assistance to homebuyers and tax deductions to new businesses, but the impacts of these may be limited, experts said.

Trump's proposed tax breaks would help mostly higher earners and companies. His all-tariff policy would eliminate income taxes for all workers, which experts warn would effectively raise tax costs for lower-income earners. He has indicated support for eliminating federal income tax on Social Security benefits, exempting overtime hours from income taxes and extending his 2017 tax cuts that are set to expire next year.

Watch the crypto vote

Cryptocurrency voters emerged as a force in this election, scrutinizing candidates' positions on everything from regulatory clarity to innovative policies and government overreach. Their influence is likely to be felt in future election cycles. 

In a September Consensys Crypto Voter study, nearly half (49%) consider it important for their candidate to support pro-crypto policies. Republicans and Democrats are evenly split in who they trust on crypto policies, but 56% support Trump's pro-crypto stance, and 54% say Harris needs to take a clear position on crypto.

At the top of crypto voters' wish list is an end to regulatory uncertainty. 

"I think making it a place where there's less questions and not fear of retaliation without clear regulation is extremely important," said Alicia Cepeda Maule, co-founder and CEO of Givepact, a crypto-focused philanthropy platform. 

Economic lessons

Finally, the lesson from this election is that everything related to the economy is connected, and the policies proposed by Harris and Trump would have ripple effects.

Some experts point to how progress on one issue, such as affordable housing, could improve several others: jobs, mental health, addiction.

On the other hand, mass deportations of immigrants "will disrupt our supply chain, decreasing our economy and increasing costs, which lead to higher inflation,” said Chris Clarke, an assistant professor of economics from Washington State University. Tax credits to help people buy homes could overwhelm an already strained housing market.

There is consensus that Harris’ plans will result in a less chaotic economy overall with less impact on the budget deficit, according to the Wall Street Journal, the CBRF, Goldman Sachs, 16 Nobel Prize-winning economists and others.

But ultimately, Congress is "the elephant in the room," said economist Claudia Goldin of Harvard. 

 

Joe Rogan officially endorses Trump following sit down with Elon Musk

It's been nearly two weeks since Joe Rogan engaged in a three-hour-long interview with Donald Trump for a now widely snippeted episode of “The Joe Rogan Experience,” but it took a sit down with Elon Musk to give his official endorsement. 

In a share of the episode to Musk's social media platform on Monday night, Rogan wrote, "The great and powerful @elonmusk. If it wasn't for him we'd be fu**ed. He makes what I think is the most compelling case for Trump you'll hear, and I agree with him every step of the way. For the record, yes, that's an endorsement of Trump. Enjoy the podcast."

During Rogan's lengthy chat with Trump, the Republican candidate mostly talked about windmills and, when prodded, the perceived Democratic "strategy" for allowing undocumented migrants to cross the border. But in Musk's episode, they mostly talked about Trump — well, and video games. Oh, and how the COVID vaccine was/is bad. That's all in there too.

After all that, with a bit of trans bashing thrown in, for good measure, Musk brought it home with: "I think this is the last election. If Trump doesn't win, this is the last election."

Watch here: