Democrats hoped the country would deliver a decisive verdict to President Trump and the Republicans in the midterm elections, but it did not. @nancypelosi’s party flipped about 30 GOP-held seats to take over the House. Democrats won majorities of women, young people and nonwhite voters, according to exit polls, and captured contests in historically Republican suburbs of cities like Richmond, Chicago and Denver. They chipped away at the GOP’s edge in governor’s mansions, reclaimed the Rust Belt strongholds that put #Trump in the White House and won the total vote by about 9 percentage points. But a president who turned the #election into a referendum on himself saw plenty to like in the results as well. The GOP gained ground in the Senate, easily defeating Democratic incumbents in Indiana, Missouri and North Dakota. Much of the country’s deep-red interior got redder, and Trump-hugging GOP candidates appeared to turn back strong challenges from talented Democrats who had vaulted to national celebrity. Rather than a country rising up as one to rebuke the president and reverse 2016, the election showed an intensification of the trends that put Trump in office. The president’s party typically loses ground in the midterms because only the opposition is roused to anger. But these were not typical: turnout surged to levels not seen in decades for a nonpresidential contest. It wasn’t only Democrats who were riled up; Republicans, too, came out at high levels, perhaps vindicating Trump’s strategy of ginning up his core supporters with race-based and culture-war appeals. The nation didn’t come together in agreement; it drew further apart. America remains, as #Trump revealed it to be two years ago, an angry and divided country whose citizens blame one another for its ills. Read more on TIME.com. Illustration by @edelrodriguez for TIME; animation by @brobeldesign

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TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 11月8日 22時25分


Democrats hoped the country would deliver a decisive verdict to President Trump and the Republicans in the midterm elections, but it did not. @nancypelosi’s party flipped about 30 GOP-held seats to take over the House. Democrats won majorities of women, young people and nonwhite voters, according to exit polls, and captured contests in historically Republican suburbs of cities like Richmond, Chicago and Denver. They chipped away at the GOP’s edge in governor’s mansions, reclaimed the Rust Belt strongholds that put #Trump in the White House and won the total vote by about 9 percentage points. But a president who turned the #election into a referendum on himself saw plenty to like in the results as well. The GOP gained ground in the Senate, easily defeating Democratic incumbents in Indiana, Missouri and North Dakota. Much of the country’s deep-red interior got redder, and Trump-hugging GOP candidates appeared to turn back strong challenges from talented Democrats who had vaulted to national celebrity. Rather than a country rising up as one to rebuke the president and reverse 2016, the election showed an intensification of the trends that put Trump in office. The president’s party typically loses ground in the midterms because only the opposition is roused to anger. But these were not typical: turnout surged to levels not seen in decades for a nonpresidential contest. It wasn’t only Democrats who were riled up; Republicans, too, came out at high levels, perhaps vindicating Trump’s strategy of ginning up his core supporters with race-based and culture-war appeals. The nation didn’t come together in agreement; it drew further apart. America remains, as #Trump revealed it to be two years ago, an angry and divided country whose citizens blame one another for its ills. Read more on TIME.com. Illustration by @edelrodriguez for TIME; animation by @brobeldesign


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