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Donald Trump is King of All Comebacks four years after sour defeat

Being wrong has never felt so good. Following Donald Trump’s sour defeat four years ago and the disastrous events of Jan. 6, my view of the 2024 election was simple: Republicans couldn’t win with Trump, and they couldn’t win without Trump. I didn’t even think about whether the opponent would be Joe Biden or somebody...
Read full article on: nypost.com
Jake Tapper’s stunned reaction to Kamala Harris failing to outperform Biden in a single state: ‘Holy smokes! Literally nothing?’
CNN anchor Jake Tapper was left dumbfounded Wednesday morning after learning that Vice President Kamala Harris could not outperform President Joe Biden's 2020 record in any state.
nypost.com
This secret ‘flower power’ hack helps brokers sell luxury apartments
Sotheby's International Realty broker Diana Rice is saying it — and selling it — with flowers.
nypost.com
PR queen Nadine Johnson lists artsy upstairs duplex for rent in Chelsea
The four-story red brick home was recently featured in the World of Interiors magazine. 
nypost.com
‘Really sad’ Cardi B reacts to Donald Trump’s 2024 presidential election win after Kamala Harris endorsement
The rapper, who went viral for a teleprompter glitch while speaking at Harris' Wisconsin rally on Friday, shared her thoughts on social media.
nypost.com
"Narco sub" carrying 3.6 tons of cocaine intercepted in Pacific
Navy ships arrived to intercept the boat, which was carrying 102 packages filled with bricks of cocaine, authorities said.
cbsnews.com
‘Siesta Key’ billionaire loses $2M on Miami home sale
Vegan entrepreneur and billionaire Scripps heir Sam Logan has taken a $2 million hit on the sale of his Miami Beach home. 
nypost.com
Super Bowl champ Tony Dungy cheers Florida abortion amendment's failure
Super Bowl champion head coach Tony Dungy cheered the failure of the abortion amendment push in Florida. The amendment did not reach the 60% threshold it needed.
foxnews.com
Democrat Sarah McBride of Delaware to become first openly transgender person to serve in Congress
Delaware state Sen. Sarah McBride has been elected to the U.S. House and will become the first openly transgender person to serve in Congress.
nypost.com
'Enjoy retirement': Veteran pollster mocked after Harris prediction in Iowa was 'shockingly wrong'
An Iowa pollster is facing intense backlash on social media after Trump cruised to victory in the Hawkeye State despite the poll showing Harris up by 3 points.
foxnews.com
How Leaders Around the World Are Reacting to the U.S. Presidential Election
Key political figures across the globe have begun extending congratulatory messages to former and future U.S. President Donald Trump.
time.com
The Knicks are better than their so-so start — and they’ll figure it out
The Knicks are 3-3. They’re still learning each other. They’re still figuring things out. The first 10 games are a bear. They’ll be fine.
nypost.com
This type of person experiences more work stress, study says — it’s only a quarter of adults
Researchers at Osaka University found that a subset of the population is "more susceptible" to stress and may be experiencing it at higher levels than their colleagues.
nypost.com
What the election results could mean for your retirement account
No president — Democrat or Republican — has all that much influence over the stock market, so it’s best to remain calm and stay focused on your financial goals.
washingtonpost.com
Christina Applegate details sharp pains amid MS battle: ‘I lay in bed screaming’
Christina Applegate has shared the grueling effects of her battle with Multiple Sclerosis. The “Dead To Me” actress, who was diagnosed with MS in early 2021, has been open about how the condition — which affects the brain and nerves — has affected her daily life and Hollywood career. Speaking on Tuesday’s episode of her “MeSsy” podcast,...
nypost.com
Dave Portnoy reacts to Trump's election victory: 'The Democrats gave us no choice'
Podcaster and political commentator Dave Portnoy reacted to Donald Trump winning the presidential election in a video shared to social media.
foxnews.com
Women voters: How do you feel about Trump winning the presidency?
Washington Post journalists want to know how women feel about the election results. Share your thoughts with us through this form.
washingtonpost.com
Netanyahu leads world leaders in congratulating Trump on election victory: ‘History’s greatest comeback!’
“Your historic return to the White House offers a new beginning for America and a powerful recommitment to the great alliance between Israel and America,” Netanyahu told Trump.
nypost.com
Democracy Is Not Over
Americans who care about democracy have every right to feel appalled and frightened. But then they have work to do.
theatlantic.com
Raygun vows to never compete in Olympics again after intense backlash, scrutiny
Gunn, 37, disclosed her retirement after she went viral for the style of breakdancing she brought to the streets of Paris for the 2024 Olympic Games.
nypost.com
Republican Montana Rep. Ryan Zinke wins re-election in state's 1st Congressional District
Republican Rep. Ryan Zinke won a second term representing Montana's 1st Congressional District, defeating Democrat Monica Tranel on Tuesday night.
foxnews.com
Democrat projected to defeat Trump-backed challenge in Michigan's 8th Congressional District
Former Democratic Michigan State Rep. Kristen McDonald Rivet and former Trump administration official Paul Junge battled it out for Michigan's critical 8th Congressional District.
foxnews.com
The 'Squad,' Warren and Sanders among prominent political figures who cruised to re-election victories
The House members of the "Squad" and Senators Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders are some of the prominent figures who have been re-elected to office.
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foxnews.com
Rutgers star freshmen embracing Steve Pikiell’s tough love: ‘Take the world by storm’
Everything about Ace Bailey and Dylan Harper is different than what Rutgers is used to except the way that they want to be coached.
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nypost.com
Cardi B, Quentin Tarantino fume over 2024 election result as Trump emerges victorious: ‘I’m gonna f–k you up’
Celebrities have rushed to social media to air our their frustration with Trump emerging victorious in the 2024 presidential election.
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nypost.com
Republican lawmakers react to projected Trump victory: 'Welcome back'
Republican lawmakers weighed in after Trump was projected the winner in the 2024 presidential contest.
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foxnews.com
Blues player hit in neck with puck, keeps playing before eventually being stretchered off
St. Louis Blues' Dylan Holloway was hospitalized on Tuesday night after taking a puck to the neck against the Tampa Bay Lightning.
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foxnews.com
Donald Trump projected to become the 47th president of the United States
Get all the stories you need-to-know from the most powerful name in news delivered first thing every morning to your inbox.
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foxnews.com
Nathan Hochman ousts embattled liberal prosecutor George Gascón as LA County DA amid crime concerns
Nathan Hochman, a former federal prosecutor, defeated incumbent progressive prosecutor George Gascón in the race for Los Angeles County district attorney.
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foxnews.com
Early takeaways from Trump's election win
Donald Trump is returning to the White House after voters elected him the 47th president of the United States. Norah O'Donnell anchored CBS News special coverage.
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cbsnews.com
Saints' Khalen Saunders, brother of Swift backup dancer, defends Jason Kelce after phone smashing incident
New Orleans Saints defensive lineman Khalen Saunders, whose brother is a backup dancer for Taylor Swift, defended Jason Kelce after he smashed a Penn State fan's phone.
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foxnews.com
How Donald Trump won the presidency
How Donald Trump won the 2024 presidential election.
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abcnews.go.com
Trump won. So what does that mean for abortion?
As a candidate, Donald Trump waffled on his positions on abortion. | Joe Raedle/Getty Images Kamala Harris elevated abortion rights to the heart of her campaign, but Donald Trump is the winner of the 2024 presidential election. So what does this mean for reproductive rights on the federal level?  The short answer is that there are many ways Trump could ban abortion, and the most likely way isn’t through Congress, even with a Republican-controlled Senate. (It is not yet clear whether Republicans will take control of the House.) The long answer is that as a candidate, Trump waffled on his positions on abortion. Despite frequently bragging about appointing the Supreme Court justices who overturned Roe v. Wade, Trump started to soften his tune in the months leading up to the election, especially as his vice presidential pick JD Vance began generating negative media attention for his anti-abortion views. As Election Day drew nearer, Trump began insisting he’d be “great for women and their reproductive rights” but he also repeatedly dodged questions about whether he’d veto any national abortion bans that land on his desk. At the presidential debate in September, Trump refused to answer that question multiple times, insisting it wouldn’t be necessary since abortion rights are now a matter of state discretion. By October, though, he finally came out to say he would veto a federal abortion ban, posting on social media that he would “not support a federal abortion ban, under any circumstances.”  Unfortunately, that’s not as reassuring as it sounds. Federal abortion bans in 2025 are not likely to take the form of bills landing on the president’s desk. Any bill out of Congress would still require some bipartisan agreement unless lawmakers overturned the filibuster. Republican senators have already promised to preserve the filibuster in a Trump administration, and the anti-abortion movement, for its part, has not been counting on the GOP to push bills with a simple majority. Given the widespread support for abortion rights across the US, passing a federal ban would also be politically dangerous for congressional lawmakers from swing or moderate districts, making the near-term prospect of such efforts highly unlikely. “Quite frankly, unless something really unusual happens in this election, neither side is going to have the votes in Congress to pass a national law,” Carol Tobias, president of the National Right to Life Committee, told the Associated Press in early October. “So that wasn’t really at the top of our list anyway.” They do have a list, though. Sending abortion pills by mail is more at risk One agenda item at the top of the anti-abortion movement’s list is enforcement of the Comstock Act, an 1873 federal law that could prohibit anything associated with abortion from being sent in the mail. Such a ban could mean not only restricting abortion medication — the most common method used to end a pregnancy in the US — but also any medical equipment used during abortion procedures, like speculums, suction catheters, and dilators. “We don’t need a federal abortion ban when we have Comstock on the books,” Jonathan Mitchell, the legal architect behind a 2021 law in Texas that effectively banned abortion in that state, told the New York Times earlier this year. Mitchell urged anti-abortion groups to “keep their mouths shut as much as possible until the election” regarding this strategy. The Comstock Act was rendered moot by Roe in the 1970s but never formally repealed, and now, with Roe gone, many conservatives see it as an ideal vehicle for restricting abortion nationwide, precisely because it wouldn’t require the passage of a new federal law.  For months Trump dodged journalists’ questions regarding the Comstock Act, but by August, he finally said he would not use the old statute to ban abortion drugs in the mail. However, many people in his close orbit, including the vice president-elect, are on record urging the opposite, and it was a core item of Project 2025, the notorious policy blueprint drafted by the Heritage Foundation and many people close to Trump’s campaign. Trump could also ban abortion by appointing anti-abortion leaders to control key federal agencies that could use executive power to restrict reproductive rights, including the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), Department of Justice (DOJ), and the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Kristan Hawkins, president of Students for Life of America, says her top priority is to push Trump to appoint anti-abortion leaders to executive agencies so they can integrate anti-abortion policies into existing federal programs. “I think reversing the Biden-Harris abortion agenda will be vibrant, it’ll be active,” she told the New York Times over the summer.  Hawkins says her group’s second priority will be to push HHS to defund Planned Parenthood. While federal funds are already barred from financing abortion, Planned Parenthood receives federal money from the Office of Population Affairs for family planning and preventive health services, including contraception, cancer screenings, and STI testing. (In 2019, Trump issued a rule to limit this money, which was subsequently reversed under the Biden administration.) Appointing anti-abortion leaders to agencies like the FDA and DOJ could affect anti-abortion litigation. In October, three Republican attorneys general (Raúl Labrador in Idaho, Kris Kobach in Kansas, and Andrew Bailey in Missouri) filed a lawsuit to force the FDA to heavily restrict access to mifepristone, one of two drugs used to induce abortions. (Though medication abortion has a lower risk of complication than many other widely available drugs, it has faced stricter regulation in the US largely for political reasons. Since 2016, the FDA has gradually reduced these restrictions, including allowing for telemedicine prescriptions.) While the Supreme Court threw out a similar FDA complaint over the summer, concluding the plaintiffs lacked standing to bring the lawsuit, the Republican attorneys general believe they’ll be better able to prevail in this new attempt. Notably, they also argue in their complaint that the FDA has violated the Comstock Act by permitting abortion bills to be sent by mail. While a 2022 Biden DOJ opinion ruled that the Comstock Act doesn’t criminalize mailing abortion drugs if the sender lacks intent for unlawful use, a Trump DOJ could interpret the law differently. A Trump FDA also may not fight changing rules on abortion pills at all. The judiciary awaits The last major way Trump could promote a federal abortion ban is through federal court appointments. In his first presidential term, for example, Trump appointed one of the most anti-abortion judges in the country — Matthew Kacsmaryk — to a federal court in Texas. Kacsmaryk greenlighted the now-overturned legal opinion that the FDA should revoke its approval of mifepristone. Trump’s campaign has maintained close ties to Leonard Leo, the co-chair of the right-wing Federalist Society, which helped Trump vet all his anti-abortion judicial appointments in his first four years in office. (Leo also helps finance groups to bring cases to the Supreme Court and orchestrates strategy for the conservative legal movement broadly.)  The anti-abortion movement has been explicit that its long-term goal is “fetal personhood” — endowing fetuses, embryos, and fertilized eggs with full human rights and legal protections. This once-fringe idea has been gaining traction over the last few years. (Kacsmaryk also embraced the idea of “unborn humans” and fetal personhood.) At least 19 states have declared that fetuses at some stage of pregnancy are people, according to a report from Pregnancy Justice, a group that advocates for pregnant people’s rights. In February, the Alabama Supreme Court issued a decision that claimed frozen embryos count as “children” under state law. In April, the Florida Supreme Court signaled openness to hearing a future challenge on fetal personhood when its chief justice asked whether Florida’s constitution should include “the unborn” in its equal protection statute.  And in the 2022 majority opinion for Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, the case that overturned Roe, Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito seemed to lay the groundwork for a fetal personhood challenge by repeatedly emphasizing the significance of “fetal life.” Over the spring, Alito also seemed to endorse the idea that a fetus needed the same “stabilizing treatment” in a hospital as a pregnant patient. Codifying a fetal personhood standard could lead not only to the outright ban of abortion but also most forms of birth control and in vitro fertilization (IVF). While Trump and Republican lawmakers insist they are determined to protect reproductive rights, including IVF and contraception, their anti-abortion judicial picks could do just the opposite. 
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vox.com
Voters reject criticisms of Trump from former staffers as they send him back to White House
Democrats ran on the argument that Donald Trump is unstable, unhinged and unchecked, claims bolstered by criticisms of Trump from his former White House staffers. But voters felt differently, sending him back to the White House. Norah O'Donnell anchored CBS News' special coverage.
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cbsnews.com
The Capitals’ early-season surge doesn’t feel fluky
The current pace might not be entirely sustainable, but with fresh faces meshing with franchise veterans, Washington already knows what its best looks like.
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washingtonpost.com
San Diego man sentenced to two years for sexually abusing teenager aboard flight
Ryan Coffey was sentenced to two years in prison, 10 years of supervised release afterward and saddled with just under $11,000 in fines and restitution for sexually molesting a 14-year-old.
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latimes.com
The best freebies and discounts for L.A.'s 50-plus crowd
Free college classes, national park passes, cheap movie tickets, public transit rides and more. Growing older comes with bounties aplenty.
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Letters to the Editor: Democrats in Sacramento shouldn't forget that they serve Republicans too
The majority governs in a democracy, but what happens when we have a supermajority? Sacramento Democrats, don't forget you serve all Californians.
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latimes.com
Letters to the Editor: The mussel invasion of California waterways that didn't have to happen
In 2022, the EPA was asked to better regulate water discharges from ships. The agency punted, and now California has a potentially disastrous mussel problem.
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latimes.com
Walk on, L.A.! Why you should absolutely explore the city by foot — and how to do it
Join a walking group, visit a new neighborhood and feel the ground beneath your feet.
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latimes.com
Perspective: How do you make a play about Joan Rivers without Joan Rivers?
'Joan,' a new play by Daniel Goldstein at South Coast Repertory about the life of comedian Joan Rivers, mixes biography with the comedian's old stand-up material.
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latimes.com
L.A. walking guides
Want to explore L.A. foot but don't know where to go? Here's our complete collection of city walking guides
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latimes.com
Tell us: What's your favorite walk in L.A.?
Do you have a favorite neighborhood, trail or secret pathway to walk in Los Angeles? The Times wants to hear from you.
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latimes.com
11 essential walks to see the best of Los Angeles
From the Venice Boardwalk to Rodeo Drive and Boyle Heights' Cesar E. Chavez Boulevard, these walks allow you to experience L.A.'s streets and sidewalks by foot.
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latimes.com
K-pop star Joshua rose to fame in Seoul but forever reps L.A.: 'It's where my roots are'
The K-pop singer talks about his past life in L.A., making current memories with music and food in his hometown before the group makes a two-night stop in at BMO Stadium this weekend.
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latimes.com
Letters to the Editor: Targeting transgender people says a lot about the Republican Party
Transgender people make up a small minority of Americans. It's too bad they must suffer demonization because of the GOP's fear of social change.
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latimes.com
Invasive mussels could harm California Delta ecosystem and add to water costs
An infestation of non-native golden mussels could cause ecological harm and compromise water infrastructure in the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta.
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latimes.com
Letters to the Editor: Trump's disgraceful, violent rhetoric against Liz Cheney
Trump should be more careful with his violent rhetoric, says a reader: 'As we have seen, advocating violence tends to bring it back to you.'
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latimes.com
Part theater, part puzzles, this real life video game takes you across L.A. — literally
"Great Gold Bird," a theatrical mystery that touches on love and grief, turns audience members into participants who must travel from Arlington Heights to Los Feliz.
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latimes.com