Blue Surge Ends Trump’s One-Party Rule

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A new, more constrained day is dawning for Donald Trump.

While the political tsunami the president’s opponents hoped for didn’t materialize, Democrats’ takeover of the U.S. House cripples his conservative agenda. It also opens the door to investigations into Trump’s scandal-plagued administration, 2016 presidential campaign and family business empire, Justin Sink, Jennifer Epstein and Toluse Olorunnipa report.

Trump now faces a fundamental choice: attempt to reach bipartisan deals on infrastructure and health care or stick to a strategy of stoking passionson immigration and other issues that resonate with his base.

Foreign policy is one area where Trump will retain largely a free hand. Don’t expect much change in his focus on unilaterally pursuing tariffs on China and other trading partners, or withdrawing from pacts like the 2015 Iran nuclear deal and thawing ties with North Korea and Russia. Those efforts don’t hinge on who controls Congress.

With the 2020 presidential election now taking center stage, the question is whether Democrats can build yesterday’s gains into a successful campaign to stop a second Trump term.

The Count:- House: Democrats have so far won a net gain of 26 seats. They needed 23 to flip the chamber.- Senate: Republicans have so far won a net gain of 2 seats, padding their current 51-49 majority.
Photographer: Aaron P. Bernstein/Getty Images North America

Key takeaways

2020 red alert | Trump got a warning sign from the Midwestern and Rust Belt states that handed him the presidency, as voters delivered big victories to Democrats and offered a road map for the crowd of candidates lining up to challenge him in 2020. Democrats in Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Michigan swept the races for Senate and governor, and picked up valuable House seats, defeating Trump-backed Republicans.

Speaker-in-waiting | House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi is poised to reclaim the speaker’s gavel, which she held from 2007-2011. But the 78-year-old San Franciscan is signaling publicly she’s ready to serve as a “transitional” leader while she lays the groundwork for an eventual successor. Trump called Pelosi before midnight to congratulate her.

The map | Democrats didn’t get the outcomes they wanted in some closely watched contests, including the Texas Senate race – where Republican incumbent Ted Cruz prevailed – and gubernatorial races in Florida and Ohio, two presidential battleground states. To see our interactive map of up-to-the-minute race results, click here.

Breaking the glass ceiling | Women took a record number of house seats following a surge for female candidates fueled by Democratic opposition to Trump. At least 95 women had won as of early this morning, including Rashida Tlaib, the daughter of Palestinian immigrants, and Somali-American Ilhan Omar, who became the first Muslim women elected to the House after victories in Michigan and Minnesota.

Weighing the gridlock | U.S. Treasury yields declined and the dollar retreated against most major peers as investors mulled the results. Losing control of the House will make it harder for Trump to pursue some of his core agenda, including tax cuts, that have had a positive effect on equities, yields, as well as the greenback. That said, the result was close to what investors expected. The key thing to watch now is what happens to the trade war.

Your roundup of headlines from elsewhere around the world:

  • U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May is preparing to ask the cabinet to approve a draft Brexit deal, potentially within days, if she can overcome new resistance to her strategy from euroskeptic Tories in her team.
  • Meetings between U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and North Korean officials planned for later this week have been postponed, in a new sign of tension as the regime seeks sanctions relief before taking key disarmament steps.
  • The U.A.E. is expanding its military presence in the Horn of Africa – and its new base in the self-declared republic of Somaliland will begin operating by June. It will include a coastal-surveillance system to help protect trade flows through a key shipping lane used by oil tankers and other cargo vessels en route to the Suez Canal, Nizar Manek reports.
  • Fisticuffs in South Africa’s parliament aren’t new, but a brawl during President Cyril Ramaphosa’s question time may give some telling signs about the state of the opposition, Gordon Bell writes.

And finally … Last-minute politicking wasn’t the only thing occupying Washingtonians yesterday. After two days of rain, the clouds parted, yielding a colorful sunset — and a rainbow over Capitol Hill — that formed the backdrop for a bevvy of stunning images shared on social media, alongside wishes for renewed unity after two years of political bitterness. With Republicans still controlling the Senate, though, the U.S. may end up even more divided through the rest of Trump’s term.

— With assistance by Michael Winfrey

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