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Maddow on her ‘profoundly funny’ new documentary on Trump-Ukraine scandal, ‘From Russia with Lev’

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    Democrats can’t win without focusing on poor and low-income voters: Bishop William Barber

    05:28

  • ‘Come to Jesus moment’ needed for Democratic Party’s decision-making

    07:52

  • ‘Russia won the Cold War with Trump’: Pro-Russia agenda certain with second term

    07:48

  • ‘Laughing all the way to the bank’: Trump divided America, then these billionaires made $64 billion

    11:46

  • ‘Despair is not an option’: Battle plan for Trump’s mass deportations

    08:10

  • ‘Y’all voted with David Duke’: Joy on 55% of Latino men voting ‘to make deportations happen’

    09:19

  • ‘Trump will consider running in 2028’: Fmr. GOP leader warns he’s ‘not going anywhere’

    06:40

  • Joy: ‘Make sure on the morning of November 6th, you can say you’re proud of what you did’

    11:33

  • ‘Sick of the B.S.’: Trump suggests Cheney should have ‘guns trained on her face,’ GOP says nothing

    11:17

  • ‘Heartbreaking’: Superstar Janelle Monáe decries women killed by Trump abortion bans

    06:53

  • ‘Trump’s critics will be investigated, prosecuted’: Trump second term plan to ‘ruin lives’ with DOJ

    07:36

  • ‘They want to turn the clock back to the 1850s, not 1950s’: Trump’s final, shocking message to women

    11:42

  • ‘This could cost Trump’: 923,003 Puerto Ricans in swing states might decide election

    07:24

  • ‘Sorry, Donald! Her crowd was bigger’: Trump accuses PA of voter fraud after Harris claims 75K crowd

    11:01

  • ‘Margin of effort race’: Harris to ‘criss-cross’ battleground states to win over undecided voters

    05:25

  • Maddow: I’m grateful Harris chose The Ellipse, ‘reconsecrating ground’ after Jan. 6

    11:54

  • ‘Trump means it’: Trump’s GOP makes lame excuses for rally attacks on Puerto Ricans, Blacks, women

    07:06

  • ‘Typical Trump’: Racist rally slandering Puerto Ricans could cost him Pennsylvania and more

    11:06

  • ‘Republicans have laid their own trap’: Trump, Cruz vs. voters at war with abortion bans

    03:22

  • Joy: ‘If I missed something great the Trumps have contributed to America, please fill me in’

    10:47

  • UP NEXT

    Democrats can’t win without focusing on poor and low-income voters: Bishop William Barber

    05:28

  • ‘Come to Jesus moment’ needed for Democratic Party’s decision-making

    07:52

  • ‘Russia won the Cold War with Trump’: Pro-Russia agenda certain with second term

    07:48

  • ‘Laughing all the way to the bank’: Trump divided America, then these billionaires made $64 billion

    11:46

  • ‘Despair is not an option’: Battle plan for Trump’s mass deportations

    08:10

  • ‘Y’all voted with David Duke’: Joy on 55% of Latino men voting ‘to make deportations happen’

    09:19

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Politics

Rep. Salazar touts Venezuela’s Machado before her visit

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Rep. Salazar touts Venezuela’s Machado before her visit

The Florida Republican said Trump will be ‘highly pleased’ with the opposition leader and winner of the Nobel Peace Prize…
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Rand Paul: Bombing Iran ‘is not the answer’

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Rand Paul: Bombing Iran ‘is not the answer’

“I don’t think it’s the job of the American government to be involved with every freedom movement around the world,” the Kentucky senator said…
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Former Rep. Mary Peltola jumps into Alaska Senate race

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Former Rep. Mary Peltola entered the Alaska Senate race on Monday, giving Democrats a major candidate recruitment win and the chance to expand the 2026 Senate map as they look for a route to the majority.

The Alaska Democrat’s decision is a victory for Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, who recruited Peltola to run against Sen. Dan Sullivan (R-Alaska). Peltola’s brand as a moderate problem-solver and the state’s ranked-choice voting system open the door for Democrats, but it’s still a steep climb in a state President Donald Trump won by 13 percentage points in 2024.

In her announcement video, Peltola pledged to focus on “fish, family and freedom,” while also calling for term limits and putting “Alaska first.”

“Systemic change is the only way to bring down grocery costs, save our fisheries, lower energy prices and build new housing Alaskans can afford,” Peltola said. “It’s about time Alaskans teach the rest of the country what Alaska First and, really, America First looks like.”

Peltola’s campaign creates another offensive opportunity in play for Democrats, who must flip four seats in order to retake the majority next fall. The odds are long, but Democrats have become increasingly bullish about their chances since their victories in last year’s elections. Peltola carved a moderate profile during her time in Congress, occasionally voting with Republicans on energy and immigration-related legislation.

Even so, Peltola’s decision to run Alaska presents tough sledding for any Democrat. Peltola’s 2022 wins came in large part because of a bitterly divided GOP field, and besides her victories that year, Democrats have won just one other federal race in Alaska in the last half-century.

Democrats have an easier time winning if Republicans fracture between candidates in a state where ranked-choice voting means every candidate faces off against each other in the first round of voting, and Sullivan has not drawn any serious GOP challengers.

Peltola was first elected in a September 2022 special election to replace Rep. Don Young, who served 49 years in the House and died while in office. She cited Young and former Sen. Ted Stevens, both Republicans, in her Senate announcement, who Peltola said “ignored Lower 48 partisanship to fight for things like public media and disaster relief because Alaska depends on them.”

In November 2022, Peltola won a full term, beating a divided Republican field that featured former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin and Nick Begich. But in 2024, Peltola narrowly lost in a rematch with Begich, when the Republican Party consolidated behind him. She had also been mulling a run for governor this year, making her decision to go for the Senate a big win for Washington Democrats.

Peltola was the first Alaska Native to serve in Congress, and should she win this race would be the first to serve in the Senate.

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