Wednesday, 8 August 2018

Politics A.M.: Winners and losers from Tuesday’s elections

Democracy Dies in Darkness
Politics
The most important politics stories today
 
The Fix •  Analysis
Winners and losers from Tuesday's elections
Trump is not the big winner Tuesday night. House Democrats are.
GOP declares victory in a U.S. House race in Ohio that's too close to call
Voters Tuesday also chose nominees for governor of Kansas and Michigan, along with primaries for the House and the Senate.
 
Democratic Party's liberal insurgency hits a wall in Midwest primaries
Six weeks after Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez toppled a powerful incumbent in New York, the left wing suffered big defeats.
 
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Analysis
Trump did play a big role in the result in Ohio — but not the one he wants you to think
Trump's obvious role in Ohio's 12th was making the race close, not helping the Republican win.
 
Analysis
Ohio special election shows Democrats remain on the march — even if they don't win Tuesday
Democrats are routinely beating their 2016 performance by double digits, and Ohio shows the suburbs are trending sharply away from Republicans.
 
Rick Gates forced to admit extramarital affair as Manafort's defense team attacks his credibility
Gates testified he embezzled money from lobbyist Paul Manafort and had a transatlantic romance.
 
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Fact Checker • Analysis
President Trump's new favorite trade talking point falls apart under scrutiny
The president keeps saying the trade deficit declined $52 billion in the second quarter. That's fuzzy math.
 
Brett Kavanaugh once predicted 'one race' in the eyes of government. Would he end affirmative action?
The judge's hiring, writings and statements provide a window into his views on race.
 
 
Trump to make New York trip to sign defense bill named for John McCain
Trump will join GOP Rep. Elise Stefanik at Fort Drum, where he will sign the sweeping, $716 billion bill named for one of his most pointed congressional critics.
 
Colombia's young, pro-American leader takes office, faces challenge to meet Trump's expectations
The White House welcomes Iván Duque's get-tough approach but warns that coca growth, despite $10 billion in U.S. aid, is "unacceptable."
 
 
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