What’s Next for Kamala Harris? Here Are Six Options.
Her friends, aides and political allies say it’s too soon for her to even contemplate her next career move. But the speculation has already begun.
By Reid J. EpsteinKatie Rogers and
Her friends, aides and political allies say it’s too soon for her to even contemplate her next career move. But the speculation has already begun.
By Reid J. EpsteinKatie Rogers and
Control of the House is still unclear, but President-elect Donald J. Trump and the Republican Party, which has already won a majority in the Senate, are expected to bring significant policy shifts to Congress and cases already before the Supreme Court.
He made one essential bet: that his grievances would become the grievances of the MAGA movement, and then the G.O.P., and then more than half the country. It paid off.
By Shane GoldmacherMaggie Haberman and
President-elect Donald J. Trump named Susie Wiles as his chief of staff, turning to his top political aide to fill the critical post when he returns to office. President Biden, in his first remarks since Vice President Kamala Harris’s loss, encouraged supporters to “keep the faith.”
Harris Says She Concedes the Election, but Not Her Fight
Her commitment to a peaceful transfer of power was more than President-elect Trump ever offered to President Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris after they defeated him in 2020.
By Nicholas Nehamas and
In her concession speech, Kamala Harris offered an image for a long fight.
By
10 Takeaways From the Night Trump Marched Back to the White House
America’s democracy will again be put to the test, and its government will veer sharply to the right. Kamala Harris and Democrats were dealt stunning defeats across the country.
By
Presidential Election Results: Trump Wins
Get live presidential results and maps from every state and county in the 2024 election.
How Harris’s Loss Could Haunt Biden’s Legacy
In the wake of Donald J. Trump’s resounding victory, many Democrats are casting President Biden as a one-term president who set his party on a path to failure in 2024.
By Michael D. Shear and
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In states like Arizona and Nevada, some voters split their tickets, supporting abortion rights measures while also backing Donald Trump.
By Ruth Igielnik
Vice President Kamala Harris ran a 107-day campaign under extraordinarily rare circumstances after President Biden dropped out of the race. But burdened by the legacy of her incumbency and the history of a nation that has been reluctant to elect a woman of color, Ms. Harris lost ground among most major groups of voters. Erica L. Green, a New York Times White House correspondent, explains what her emotional and defiant concession speech means to Black women in the country.
By Erica L. Green, Claire Hogan, Christina Shaman, Nikolay Nikolov and James Surdam
Vice President Kamala Harris is slated to speak at 4 p.m. Eastern time from Howard University, according to a campaign official briefed on her plans.
By Remy Tumin and Katie Rogers
Speaking on the campaign trail in Atlanta, Mr. Vance told supporters that “in our movement, we love every citizen of this country.” Seconds later, he called Vice President Kamala Harris “trash.”
By Chris Cameron and Simon J. Levien
The vice president made a brief appearance on “Saturday Night Live” this weekend.
By Dave Itzkoff
Appearing in a mirror opposite her longtime impersonator, the vice president gave a little positive encouragement to her comedic reflection.
By Katie Rogers, Nicholas Nehamas and Maggie Haberman
Wesley Morris has a theory.
By Wesley Morris, Elyssa Dudley, Wendy Dorr, Paula Szuchman and Rowan Niemisto
As the year began, few expected Kamala Harris to make a historic march toward the presidency. After a head-spinning summer, her campaign’s remarkable story awaits its conclusion.
By Nicholas Nehamas
Mr. James, the N.B.A.’s all-time leading scorer, campaigned for Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton in previous election cycles. He has made no secret of his low opinion of Donald J. Trump.
By Tania Ganguli
Donald Trump and other Republicans have said repeatedly that she does. Her history on the issue is complicated.
By Emily Baumgaertner and Margot Sanger-Katz
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