Listen........i never liked the democratic party.....they were never for america ........only the destruction of america ...it was obvious to all extents they favoured infected ........ illegals........ over homeless vets and starving children ......nothing but a party of parasitical bastards ......and a useless war in ukraine which they should never have spent a penny on ......not my fucking problem foight the russkies yourself ........on your own dime/skel/nickel/penny ...or whatever your fucking currency is for fuck sake ,,.we have kids dyong of hunge r here in america and america is giving these cunts money ......no sirreeeee fucking bob ........no !!!!!!!!....if they had an american agenda i would support them but i can't if i did i would but they are anti American ......their only saving grace is they have AOC a hot little vixen ...that's it nothing else /.......the other girl omar something or other no good ....... just AOC.......however i am straying off subject and well you know what i i eman .......by the way they did get a fucking ebating of epic proportions ............
go......DONALD .J.TRUMP .............
Democrats are coming off a 2024 beating. Will their rising stars block a Republican trifecta?
Coming off a brutal bruising in the 2024 election, Democrats in Washington are poised to play defense for much of the next two years against President-elect Donald Trump and the resurgent GOP.
But before they can try to counter a Republican trifecta, Democrats have an important question to answer: Who's in charge?
The leader of the Democratic Party, President Joe Biden, will leave the White House in January, and Vice President Kamala Harris is expected to be largely sidelined after her 2024 defeat. On Capitol Hill, both of the party's leaders will be in the minority and have limited power to stop the Trump agenda. As Democrats face a leadership vacuum, lawmakers and organizers told USA TODAY they will find a path forward and have colleagues ready to step up.
“We've got to figure out what went wrong," said Jim Manley, a longtime Democratic strategist and former aide to one-time Democratic Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid. “But in the meantime, we don't have a leader. We've got a lot of people that contribute to the debate."
“It's going to be really important to give the next generation of leaders a bigger microphone, because I think we've seen the last generation just can't cut it,” added Amanda Litman, a former Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton presidential campaign staffer and now the co-founder and executive director of Run for Something, a progressive organization recruiting and supporting young candidates.
Who are the rising Democratic stars set to go toe-to-toe with their Republican colleagues and the Trump administration – at least until the 2026 midterms and the start of the 2028 presidential campaign? And how will they work with Republicans to try to avoid government shutdowns and pass pivotal legislation? Here's what to know.
Who are the Democratic stars?
The party at large has a rank of prominent figures, including governors like Josh Shapiro of Pennsylvania and Gavin Newsom of California, as well as Biden administration officials such as outgoing Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg. They all picked up national attention as potential running mates for Harris – and when they hit the campaign trail after she selected Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz. All are considered potential candidates to run for the White House in another four years when Trump's term expired.
In the halls of Congress, several Democratic lawmakers have made a name for themselves – or promise to.
Elections for the 119th Congress saw a number of history-makers. Rep. Andy Kim, D-N.J., became the first Korean-American senator, while Rep. Lisa Blunt Rochester, D-Del., and Democrat Angela Alsobrooks of Maryland became their states’ first Black senators. Their wins mark the first time two Black women will serve in the upper chamber at the same time.
Sarah McBride, a Delaware state legislator, will also be sworn into the House next year, the first openly transgender person to serve in Congress.
Still, it's not all new members set to lead the Democrats. Other star figures including returning representatives and existing leadership, such as House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.
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