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Ted Cruz and Jim Carrey are trading barbs on the eve of Election Day

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ted cruz

  • Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas and comedian Jim Carrey traded barbs at each other on Twitter, one night before Election Day on Tuesday.
  • Carrey, who supports Cruz's Democratic opponent, Rep. Beto O'Rourke, likened Cruz to a vampire in an art piece.
  • "Hollywood liberals all in for Beto," Cruz replied to Carrey in a tweet. "But (self-described socialist) Jim Carrey made a mistake here: Vampires are dead, and everyone knows the dead vote Democrat...."

Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas and comedian-actor Jim Carrey traded barbs on Twitter, one night before Election Day on Tuesday.

Carrey, who supports Cruz's Democratic opponent, Rep. Beto O'Rourke, took a jab at the Republican incumbent by likening him to a quintessential undead creature.

"Go Beto! Go Democrats! Vote like there's no tomorrow," Carrey said in a tweet on Sunday. "Let's make this Tuesday like the end of every great vampire movie. Pull back the curtains and let the sunshine turn all those bloodsuckers to dust."

Carrey also included artwork depicting O'Rourke pulling back a curtain to let sunlight into a room, while Cruz begins to burn from the sun's rays:

Cruz bit back with a caricature of Hollywood celebrities and echoed a conservative dog-whistle that baselessly suggests Democratic candidates receive fraudulent votes from deceased constituents.

"Hollywood liberals all in for Beto," Cruz replied in a tweet. "But (self-described socialist) Jim Carrey made a mistake here: Vampires are dead, and everyone knows the dead vote Democrat...."

Carrey, who has created political art depicting Trump in an unflattering light, fired back with another tweet — this time, making light of Cruz's complicated relationship with President Donald Trump. The two Republicans appeared to cast aside their differences in recent weeks, a stark departure from their rivalry during the 2016 presidential Election.

"Wow...sorry I rattled your chain, @TedCruz," Carrey said in a tweet on Monday. "I thought you would have more important things to do two days before an election — like sucking up to the guy who called your wife ugly and accused your dad of murder. But I get it! It's hard to say no when Trump grabs ya by the p---y!"

Hollywood stars and music artists have been increasingly vocal about their political views since Trump's election, and have urged people to vote in the November 6 midterm elections. Carrey has not been shy about his embrace of Democratic socialism and has become a popular target of conservative strategists.

The race for Texas' Senate seat hit fever pitch after early voting began in late October. Despite lagging in several polls, O'Rourke's campaign received $38 million last quarter — more than the $18 million Trump took in, and more than triple the $12 million Cruz raised.

SEE ALSO: Beto O'Rourke says he may have gone 'a step too far' for calling Ted Cruz 'Lyin' Ted'

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NOW WATCH: Trump once won a lawsuit against the NFL — but the result was an embarrassment


The 10 most important things in the world right now

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amazon ceo jeff bezos

Hello! Here's what's happening on Tuesday.

  1. The word is out that Long Island City neighborhood in Queens, New York, will be the new home of Amazon and here's why that could be a real bad idea. Amazon is reportedly nearing a deal to make New York City its second headquarters, HQ2.
  2. Control of the Senate could go either way, so keep an eye on the "thin red nine." Will the Democrats flip the House? Experts say the chances of a "blue wave" reaching the Senate could depend on these nine races.
  3. Meet China’s mysterious H-20 nuclear bomber which has reportedly made "great progress" and may even fly publicly next year. While little is known about the much-hyped H-20 bomber, experts say it’s less about nuclear deterrence patrols and more about fighting actual wars.
  4. President Donald Trump’s final message to voters, two ads widely viewed as racist attacks on immigrants, was even too much for Fox News. Major cable news networks – including Trump’s favored outlet – plus the world’s largest social media site stopped carrying it.
  5. Shares in Apple's Asian suppliers are in steep decline Tuesday following a report the tech giant has canceled a production boost. Big name suppliers like Foxconn are taking a dive after reports the iPhone-maker scuppered additional production lines dedicated to its new iPhone XR
  6. NASA's Parker Solar Probe just smashed the record for the fastest human-made object. And it's only just getting started on a series of feats that defy comprehension.
  7. Drum roll ... despite median home prices here falling for 13 straight months, the undisputed global champion of house price growth over the last 40 years is ... Hint: Deutsche Bank says home prices in this country are still overvalued by around 40%.
  8. The electric-scooter company Bird can't fully launch in Britain yet, (thanks to a few arcane public road rules) but the buzzy US startup has still found a clever route into Albion. From Tuesday, Bird says it will make its scooters available along a route in the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park in East London, thanks to "multiple private landowners."
  9. Ivanka Trump’s brand took out a bunch of new Chinese trademarks in October, despite closing up shop in July. The president's daughter filed trademarks for everything from umbrellas to sausages raising eyebrows and questions of continued conflicts of interest.
  10. Sworn competitors in an ultra-low-cost-carrier-world just became one with Wow Air, acquired by Icelandair, subject to approval. Wow Air shareholders are set to receive 5.4% of Icelandair's value at $18 million to $25 million.

And finally ...

One ticket, two days, 50+ insightful speakers, and 600+ executives. Business Insider's flagship IGNITION conference headliners include Mark Cuban, Janice Min, Sir Martin Sorrell and Barbara Corcoran. Join us for IGNITION, December 3-4, New York City.

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NOW WATCH: A sleep expert explains what happens to your body and brain if you don't get enough sleep

Facebook suspended more than 100 accounts the day before the US midterm elections

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mark zuckerberg

  • Facebook announced on Monday that it blocked several accounts after US law-enforcement officials warned they may be connected to foreign entities.
  • The social media network said it found and blocked 30 Facebook accounts and 85 Instagram profiles that is said were exhibiting "coordinated inauthentic behavior."
  • Facebook said it is still trying to figure out what exactly these accounts were up to, but that given the sensitive nature of the US government's warning, and the close proximity to the November 6 midterm election, it chose to take preemptive measures. 

Facebook announced on the eve of Election Day in the US that it had blocked several Facebook and Instagram accounts after US law-enforcement officials warned that they may be connected to foreign entities.

The social media network said it found and blocked 30 Facebook accounts and 85 Instagram profiles that is said were exhibiting "coordinated inauthentic behavior."

"As part of our efforts to prevent interference on Facebook during elections, we are in regular contact with law enforcement, outside experts and other companies around the world," Facebook's head of security Nathaniel Gleicher, said in a press release on Monday night. He said those partnerships had already helped the company remove several "bad actors" from the website. 

Facebook said that "almost all" of the Facebook accounts that it had blocked featured French and Russian-language content. The company noted that the 85 Instagram accounts that it deactivated were mostly filled with celebrity and political news in English. 

Facebook said it is still trying to figure out what exactly these accounts were up to, but that given the sensitive nature of the US government's warning, and the close proximity to the November 6 midterm election, it chose to take preemptive measures. 

Facebook received tremendous criticism over its failure to address Russian influence campaigns that helped taint political discourse online during the 2016 presidential election. US intelligence agencies have found that those efforts by Russia were intended to swing the election in Donald Trump's favor.

Facebook has said publicly that it is committed to making sure every user on its site is authentic, citing how it blocked 82 Iranian-linked Facebook accounts on October 26 after US authorities notified them about "inauthentic" pages spreading divisive political posts to about one million followers.

SEE ALSO: Facebook has discovered an Iranian influence campaign that was followed by more than 1 million people

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NOW WATCH: Megyn Kelly in 2017: 'I regret a lot' of the controversial stuff I've said on live television

Trump stood nearly silent for several minutes at his rally in Missouri while medics treated a supporter who collapsed

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Donald Trump

  • President Donald Trump's last campaign speech ahead of the midterm election on Monday night was interrupted for nearly 10 minutes after a woman collapsed and was later wheeled out of the Show Me Center in Cape Girardeau, Missouri, on a stretcher.
  • "Is there a doctor in the house, please," Trump said while pointing to the crowd. "Doctor, please. Take your time. We have plenty of time, right?"
  • Some people in the audience broke the silence by intermittently shouting their approval of Trump, insulting CNN, singing "Amazing Grace," and saying the Lord's Prayer.

President Donald Trump's last campaign speech ahead of the midterm election on Monday night was interrupted for nearly 10 minutes after a woman collapsed and was later wheeled out of the Show Me Center in Cape Girardeau, Missouri, on a stretcher.

During his final campaign rally before Election Day, Trump offered glowing remarks to his supporters when he suddenly stopped and looked at the crowd in front of him.

"Is there a doctor in the house, please," Trump said while pointing to the crowd. "Doctor, please. Take your time. We have plenty of time, right?"

Some people in the audience broke the silence by intermittently shouting their approval of Trump, insulting CNN, singing "Amazing Grace," and saying the Lord's Prayer.

"I love you DJT," one person shouted.

"Expose 9-1-1," another person exclaimed, apparently in reference to a 9/11 conspiracy theory.

"Thank you for fixing us," a person cried out.

The crowd later erupted in laughter and cheers after a person blurted "CNN sucks."

"That was really something," Trump said, after the woman was taken out of the building. "I want to just thank everybody for the way you behaved. That was beautiful. At the end that was beautiful."

"Hopefully she'll be ok."

The incident marks the second time in a row Trump paused his speech after a medical emergency. In a previous rally at Fort Wayne, Indiana, on Monday, Trump paused after a person required medical attention.

Trump has been on a campaign blitz since last week and headlined multiple campaign rallies in different states on the same day.

SEE ALSO: Obama zings hecklers at a campaign rally for Florida Democrats

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NOW WATCH: Megyn Kelly in 2017: 'I regret a lot' of the controversial stuff I've said on live television

The Coast Guard is looking, but it really seems like Japan has lost an island

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Japan flag barbed wire

  • Japan appears to have lost an island
  • It's only a small one, but probably not a good look when taking into account that country's various maritime disputes.
  • The Coast Guard is looking, but no one has seen Esanbe Hanakita Kojima since at least September.
  • Unless it can be located, Japan just got half a kilometer smaller.

With its ongoing maritime disputes with China hopelessly unresolved, the last thing Japan needed to do was go and lose an island.

And yet.

It appears no one can find the Japanese island formerly known as Esanbe Hanakita Kojima.

Not even the Japanese Coast Guard, which has been out searching for the strategically significant sliver of land last sighted somewhere off the coast of Hokkaido.

Even worse, the island first named in 2014 may have shuffled below this mortal coil a fair while ago.

This was back in September when author Hiroshi Shimizu visited nearby Sarufutsu village to write a sequel to his picture book on Japan’s “hidden” islands.

Shimizu told the local fishing cooperative, which sent out a flotilla to its former location only to find it had disappeared.

Japanese officials now believe that the island that once rose about five feet above sea level, has been inexorably broken apart by the pack ice that covers the area throughout the bitter winter. The Guardian seems to confirm this.

The uncertain conclusion is that it has gradually, uncomplainingly, slipped beneath the surface.

While Esanbe Hanakita Kojima, might have been too small to be of much practical use, it did have an importance well beyond its fragility.

Before its unexpected absence, the island marked the very western indent of another disputed island chain Japan calls the Northern Territories, while Russia claims the archipelago as the Kuril islands.

China's South China Morning Post said that the island was formally named by Tokyo in 2014 as part of Japan's multipronged attempts to reinforce its legal control over hundreds of outlying islands and extend its exclusive economic zone, (EEZ) appears to have sunk without a trace.

The Japanese coastguard has been tasked with carrying out a survey of the area to see if the remnants of the island remain.

It was last formally surveyed in 1987, when records showed it was about 500 metres off Sarufutsu.

The Japanese government used the island to buffer its EEZ a similar distance out to sea where Japanese waters mingle into Russian territory.

But even if they can find the waterlogged remains of Esanbe Hanakita Kojima, it can no longer meet the very basic international legal definition of an island — land — and Japan's territorial claims appear to be about half a kilometer smaller.

SEE ALSO: For the love of goods, an ambitious Alibaba plans to double down on Singles' Day this year

DON'T MISS: French President Emmanuel Macron holds on to New Caledonia, but with another referendum in just 2 years, Paris is further from paradise than ever

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NOW WATCH: The true story behind Boston gangster Whitey Bulger

10 things in tech you need to know today

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Jeff Bezos

Good morning! This is the tech news you need to know this Tuesday.

  1. Facebook suspended 115 accounts the day before the US midterm electionsThe accounts were brought to Facebook's attention by law enforcement, who suspected links to "foreign entities."
  2. Amazon plans to set up 2 different locations for its HQ2, in New York and Virginia. Amazon is said to have selected two cities as the site of its second headquarters: The Long Island City section of Queens, New York, and the Crystal City area of Arlington, Virginia, The New York Times reported on Monday evening.
  3. Facebook pulled Donald Trump's controversial immigrant ad for violating its advertising policy on "sensational content." After Fox News and NBC pulled the ad which was widely condemned as racist, Facebook decided to block it from paid distribution.
  4. Apple's new MacBook Air and 2018 MacBook Pros physically disconnect the microphone when you close the lid to stop hackers from eavesdropping on your conversations. The cameras on the latest MacBook Air and MacBook Pros aren't disconnected, however, as the "field of view is completely obstructed when the lid is closed."
  5. Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff got into a Twitter beef with another exec over a controversial measure tackling San Francisco's homelessness crisis. Proposition C is a ballot measure in San Francisco, California, that would tax the city's largest corporations to provide more funding to homeless services.
  6. A new app can show you the voting history of your friends and coworkers, and even which political party they're registered with. The app, called Vote With Me, provides information about the elections taking place in your district, lets you know whether a race is tight, and shows you how to prepare for Election Day.
  7. Electric scooter hire is coming to the UK under a deal struck by $2 billion startup Bird. Bird is the first electric scooter company to launch in the UK, beating competitors like Lime and Uber to the punch.
  8. Twitter is struggling to curb fake Elon Musk accounts promoting cryptocurrency scams. The scammers are hacking a verified account, changing the display name to "Elon Musk," copying his profile photo, and tweeting about a fake cryptocurrency giveaway.
  9. Amazon is launching a new delivery program and hiring thousands of drivers, with a warning against "peeing in bottles," a source told Business Insider. Amazon is hiring its own fleet of full-time drivers to deliver packages to Prime customers, having previously relied on delivery services provided by UPS, FedEx, the US Postal Service, and contractors.
  10. A Chinese tech billionaire has been accused of plying a student with drink and then forcing himself on her during a trip to the US. The Minneapolis Star Tribune published a long account describing a student's rape allegation against Liu Qiangdong, the billionaire founder of Chinese tech firm JD.com.

Have an Amazon Alexa device? Now you can hear 10 Things in Tech each morning. Just search for "Business Insider" in your Alexa's flash briefing settings.

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NOW WATCH: First impressions of the Google Pixel 3 and Pixel 3 XL

Remain would win a new Brexit referendum by 8% according to a huge nationwide poll

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Brexit protest

  • The UK would vote to stay in the European Union by 54% to 46%, according to a major poll of 20,000 people.
  • The poll, the biggest of its type since the 2016 referendum, suggests a significant shift in public opinion towards reversing the result of two years ago and staying in the EU.
  • 105 local authorities that voted Leave in 2016 would back Remain in another vote, the research says.
  • These areas include Birmingham, Nottingham and Luton in England, plus Swansea in Wales.
  • Pro-EU MPs call on Theresa May to listen to the findings and hold another referendum.

 

LONDON — The United Kingdom would vote to stay in the European Union in a new Brexit referendum, with over 100 local authorities that backed Leave in 2016 switching to Remain, according to a new poll of 20,000 people.

Survation has carried out the biggest public survey on Brexit of its sort since the referendum, using the methods that helped the few pollsters who correctly predicted a hung parliament at last year's general election.

The poll, revealed by Channel 4 on Monday night, found that in another referendum on Brexit, 54% of people would vote for the UK to stay in the EU, while 46% of people would vote to stick with the 2016 decision to depart.

The research says 105 local authorities that voted for Leave in 2016 would vote for Remain in a new referendum.

These include Nottingham, where just 40.1% of people would vote for Brexit after 50.8% of people there voted for it in 2016, and Luton, where the 56.5% Leave vote in 2016 would drop to 43.8% in another referendum.

Overall, the poll found that support for leaving the EU has decreased the most in areas which delivered the largest Brexit votes in 2016, suggesting a significant shift in public opinion as Britain heads for the EU exit door.

The pollsters are "very confident" that the following local authorities have switched from Leave to Remain:

  • Nottingham (40.1% Leave now but was 50.8% Leave then)
  • Luton (43.8% Leave now but was 56.5% Leave then)
  • Slough (41.6% Leave now but was 54.3% Leave then)
  • Southampton (41.8% Leave now but was 53.8% Leave then)
  • High Peak (44.3% Leave now but was 50.5% Leave then)
  • Watford (43.6% Leave now but was 50.3% Leave then)
  • Canterbury (44.6% Leave now but was 51% Leave then)
  • Cherwell (44.5% Leave now but was 50.3% Leave then)
  • Reigate and Banstead (44.9% Leave now but was 50.5% Leave then)
  • Knowsley (39.7% Leave now but was 51.6% Leave then)
  • North Tyneside (45.5% Leave now but was 53.4% Leave then)
  • Birmingham (41.8% Leave now but was 50.4% Leave then)
  • Sutton (44.9% Leave now but was 53.7% Leave then)
  • Isle of Anglesey (44.2% Leave now but was 50.9% Leave then)
  • Swansea (43.2% Leave now but was 51.5% Leave then)
  • Rhondda Cynon Taf (43.5% Leave now but was 53.7% Leave then)

Theresa May

This major piece of research comes as Theresa May faces increasing pressure from MPs and business leaders to put the outcome of Brexit negotiations to another referendum, or what campaigners call a "People's Vote."

Over 70 business leaders including the head of Waterstones and former Sainsbury's boss Justin King have signed a letter calling for another referendum, while the number of MPs who support the campaign has increased in recent weeks.

A senior People's Vote source told Business Insider last week that up to three Conservative MPs were set to join the campaign for another referendum later this month.

Tom Brake MP — Brexit spokesperson for the Liberal Democrats and a supporter of the Best For Britain campaign against Brexit — told BI: "The will of the people is not set in aspic. This poll, the largest of its kind, shows that as Brexit unravels and the benefits of EU membership become clearer, the appetite for Remain grows.

"But there is only one way to test the scale of this change and that is through a People’s Vote."

Brake's Lib Dem colleague, Layla Moran MP, said the findings showed "unequivocally that the momentum behind a People’s Vote is now at breaking point" as negotiators try to make a breakthrough in Brexit talks.

"Theresa May needs to take responsibility for her botched Brexit. We need to give the People, who are clearly changing their minds, the final say," Moran told BI. 

May has consistently ruled out holding another referendum, while the position of Jeremy Corbyn's Labour party is to consider backing another referendum if a general election in early 2019 isn't possible.

Negotiators hope to finalise a deal by December at the latest with the UK's March departure just five months away.

The Survation research suggests that most people would be willing to compromise in Brexit talks the EU.

For example, a majority back a liberal UK-EU immigration policy after Brexit, in which EU and UK citizens would be able to live and work in each other's countries (76%). They'd also support a deal in which the UK would follow EU rules on certain goods (62%), meaning the UK would stay close to aspects of the single market.

However, a large majority of respondents want the UK to have an independent trade policy after Brexit (75%).

DON'T MISS: Theresa May forced to deny agreeing secret Brexit deal as Brexiteers fear UK surrender

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Megyn Kelly in 2017: 'I regret a lot' of the controversial stuff I've said on live television

Trump tweets triumphantly after Republicans are projected to retain the Senate but lose the House: 'Tremendous success'

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  • President Donald Trump weighed in on Tuesday's midterm elections via Twitter.
  • "Tremendous success tonight," Trump tweeted. "Thank you to all!"
  • Despite Trump's enthusiasm, it was a mixed night for the GOP. Democrats regained control of the House, while the GOP maintained control of the Senate.

President Donald Trump issued a triumphant tweet about Tuesday's midterm elections despite the mixed results for the president's party at the polls.

"Tremendous success tonight,"Trump said. "Thank you to all!"

While Trump's tone was upbeat, Democrats regained control of the House of Representatives with major pick ups in suburban areas where the president's approval rating is lower. Democrats were able to ride opposition to Trump to wins in more Democratic-leaning states like New York and deep-red states like Oklahoma. The victory for Democrats could open up the president to possible investigations and stymie the GOP's policy progress.

Read more: Democrats are projected to flip the House in a rebuke of Trump's presidency»

But Republicans made significant gains in the Senate, picking up key seats from incumbent Democrats in states where Trump won in 2016 and also turning back possible challenges in high-profile states like Texas. Holding the Senate gives Trump the opportunity to continue the historic pace of judicial nominations that have dominated the chamber's calendar in recent months.

Read more: Republicans projected to hold on to majority control of the Senate»

The GOP also got major wins in toss-up governors races in states like Florida and Ohio, though Democrats did manage to pick up wins in a number of states like Illinois and Michigan.

Whether or not the night constitutes a "blue wave" for Democrats is unclear given the mixed results overall and the typical losses for the president's party, but the split Congress will make life more difficult for the president.

Ronna McDaniel, the chairwoman of the Republican National Committee, also applauded the president's efforts to support GOP candidates in a statement.

"Grassroots enthusiasm for President Trump, who did more than any President in history to support Republican candidates, and the Republican Party’s expansive get-out-the-vote operation, turned the forecasted Democrat tsunami into a ripple," McDaniel said.

SEE ALSO: LIVE: See the House and Senate results of the highly anticipated 2018 midterm elections as they come in

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NOW WATCH: This top economist has a radical plan to change the way Americans vote


Republican Josh Hawley unseats incumbent Democratic Sen. Claire McCaskill in highly contested Missouri race

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Josh Hawley Missouri

  • Republican state attorney general Josh Hawley won a Senate seat in Missouri on Tuesday following a highly contested race against Democratic incumbent Claire McCaskill.
  • The race was one of the most closely watched contests of the 2018 midterm election season, and a RealClearPolitics average of the most recent polls had McCaskill and Hawley in a dead heat.
  • McCaskill campaigned by painting herself as independent from mainstream Democratic thinking and true to Missouri values, while Hawley aligned himself closely with President Donald Trump.

Republican attorney general Josh Hawley won a highly contested race for a Senate seat in Missouri following Tuesday’s midterm elections, unseating Democratic incumbent Claire McCaskill.

The race between Hawley and McCaskill was one of the most closely watched contests of the 2018 election season. A RealClearPolitics average of the most recent polls had the two candidates in a dead heat, at 46% each. And according to RealClearPolitics polling data, neither candidate has had a lead of more than four points in any poll over the whole year, which places the race within the margin of error.

During her concession speech Tuesday night, McCaskill thanked the people of Missouri for allowing her "to serve the public, to serve them, to be a public servant."

She added: "It has been such an honor, and this state drives me crazy, but I love every corner of it. I really do. I mean, I even love the reddest of the red counties."

President Donald Trump campaigned hard for Hawley in recent days — he held two rallies in Missouri to boost support for the Republican attorney general. While McCaskill has painted herself as independent from mainstream Democratic thinking in an effort to draw more undecided voters, Hawley has aligned himself closely with the president in order to draw more support from the Republican base.

Two key issues that Republicans are seizing on going into the midterms are the migrant caravan from Honduras headed toward the US’s southern border, and the confirmation of Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh. Hawley and Trump have focused, in particular, on McCaskill’s vote against Kavanaugh to portray her as a hardline Democrat.

McCaskill was first elected to the Senate in 2006, when she defeated Missouri Republican incumbent Jim Talent. In 2012, it looked like McCaskill may lose her seat to her Republican opponent, GOP Rep. Todd Akin, until he claimed in an interview that a woman could not get pregnant as a result of a “legitimate rape.”

This year, McCaskill faced more of an uphill battle, particularly in a state that Trump won by 20 points in the 2016 US presidential election.

SEE ALSO: 'It's like playing whack-a-mole': A string of recent revelations paints a stark picture of Russia's ongoing campaign to meddle in the 2018 midterms

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: This top economist has a radical plan to change the way Americans vote

Here are the results of the 25 most competitive House races in the 2018 midterm elections

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Texas Voting 2016

The 2018 midterm election results are coming in, and all eyes are on the battle playing out in the House of Representatives, which Democrats are forecasted to re-take.

FiveThirtyEight's deluxe House forecast, which includes everything from polls, district fundamentals, fundraising, candidate quality, gave the Democrats a 6 in 7 chance of taking back the House, predicting they would gain an average of 36 seats.

Their House model cast 13 contests as tossup, meaning both candidates had less than a 60% chance of winning, 14 as lean Democratic, and 7 as lean Republican.

Here's which parties and candidates are winning these highly competitive districts:

Kentucky's 6th district: Republican Andy Barr wins re-election with 50.9% of the vote compared to Democrat Amy McGrath 47.9%.

The candidates: Marine veteran Amy McGrath, the first woman to fly an F-18 fighter jet in the Marine Corps, launched a high-profile bid to unseat long-time Rep. Andy Barr.

Her race gained national attention after one of her campaign ads detailing the barriers she overcame as a woman in the Marines went viral, and she raised $6.9 million in individual donations compared to Barr's $2.5 million.

The district: The 6th occupies a large portion of central Kentucky, including the city and suburbs of Lexington. It's Cook Partisan Lean is R+9, and Trump carried the district by 15 points in 2016.

Predictions and polls: The race was rated as a pure toss-up by FiveThirtyEight on the day of the election. A Nov. 1-4 Siena College/NYT poll showed McGrath and Barr in a dead heat.

 



Virginia's 5th congressional district: Republican Denver Riggleman beats Democrat Leslie Cockburn 53% to 47%.

The candidates: Republican Denver Riggleman, a businessman and Air Force veteran, defeated Democratic candidate and former investigative journalist Leslie Cockburn in the open race for the fifth district.

The district: Virginia's 5th district occupies a large swatch of central Virginia, including the city of Charlottesville. Its Cook Political Rating is R+6. 

Predictions and polls: FiveThirtyEight rated the race in the 5th district lean Republican, giving Riggleman a 7 in 10 chance of winning. An Oct. 22-26 Siena College/NYT poll showed Cockburn leading Riggleman by one point.



Florida's 15th district: Republican Ross Spano defeats Democratic opponent Kristen Carlson 53% to 47%.

The candidates: After the district's Republican congressman decided not to run for re-election, State Representative Ross Spanowon the primary to challenge former prosecutor and attorney Kristen Carlson. While Spano defeated Carlson, she outraised himby more than a 3-to-1 margin.

The district: Florida's 15th district, created after a 2015 redistricting, includes several Tampa suburbs including Brandon and Lakeland, and stretches inland towards the city of Orlando.

Predictions and polls: FiveThirtyEight rated the race as lean Republican the day of the election, giving Spano a 5 in 8 chance of winning. An Oct. 16-19 Siena College/NYT poll showed Spano and Carlson in a dead heat, with 43% of voters expressing support for each.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Democrats just flipped the House of Representatives — here's how they plan to make Trump’s life a living hell

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donald trump

  • Democrats on Tuesday flipped the House of Representatives in a major rebuke of Donald Trump's presidency.
  • Now that they control the House, Democrats plan to launch an investigative blitz against the White House and Russian interests.
  • They also plan to focus significant resources on examining the administration's healthcare and economic agenda.

Democrats regained control of the House of Representatives on Tuesday night in the 2018 midterm elections in a major rebuke of Donald Trump's presidency.

The win sparked renewed speculation about whether the party will move to impeach Trump.

But few Democrats want to actively talk about impeaching Trump, whether it's on Capitol Hill or on the campaign trail. For many, the issue is a nuisance and a distraction from more serious matters. Senior leadership has also repeatedly cautioned against impeachment, warning that it would only deepen partisan squabbling in Congress.

Instead of impeachment, Democrats plan to tighten the screws by mounting an investigative blitz against the White House and Russian interests.

"I am not looking for headlines," Democratic Rep. Elijah Cummings of Maryland, the top Democrat on the powerful House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, told The New York Times earlier this year. "I am going to be defending the truth. We want to look at what is happening under this administration because all of us can agree this is not normal."

adam schiff

According to two sources close to the House Intelligence Committee, who requested anonymity to speak freely about post-election plans, Democrats plan to focus a significant amount of energy on reopening the panel's now-shuttered investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election, and whether members of the Trump campaign colluded with Moscow to tilt the race in his favor.

"On a whole host of investigative threads, our work is fundamentally incomplete, some issues partially investigated, others, like that involving credible allegations of Russian money laundering, remain barely touched," Rep. Adam Schiff, the panel's ranking member, said after chairman Devin Nunes, a Republican, shut down the investigation earlier this year.

"If the Russians do have leverage over the president of the United States, the majority has simply decided it would rather not know," Schiff said.

Democrats also plan to reintroduce legislation safeguarding the integrity of the FBI's ongoing Russia investigation by protecting key figures like special counsel Robert Mueller and Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein. Moreover, they want to bring legislation protecting future elections from foreign influence by countering nation-state sponsored cyberattacks and disinformation campaigns.

Read more:A string of recent revelations paints a stark picture of Russia's ongoing campaign to meddle in the 2018 midterms

Where the White House is concerned, one source close to the House Oversight Committee said Democrats want to pressure the president to beef up surveillance bodies that are tasked with overseeing the intelligence community, like the Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board.

The source said Democrats also plan to scrutinize the White House's process of granting security clearances. The issue took center stage this year after the White House raised red flags by granting high level clearances to White House staffers like former staff secretary Rob Porter. In February, the White House downgraded the clearances of more than 30 aides, revoking their top-secret level access.

The president also attracted sharp criticism when he revoked former CIA Director John Brennan's security clearance in August and announced he would be revoking the clearance of several other current and former law enforcement and intelligence officials. All the names on the list were people who have been critical of the president in the past and were involved in the Russia investigation.

Reviewing Trump's process in granting and revoking clearances will be a "top priority" for Democrats, the source close to the House Oversight Committee said, adding that lawmakers would also subpoena documents related to the revocation of Brennan's clearance.

Trump could face dozens of nightmare scenarios

Steny Hoyer

House Minority Whip Steny Hoyer outlined several other areas Democrats will prioritize, most of which involved the administration's economic and health care agendas.

The committees on the budget, ways and means, and financial services will likely probe Trump's handling of the US economy and budgetary process, while others would look into botched natural disaster responses.

Among the highest priorities for Democrats is the Trump administration's dismantling of former President Barack Obama's signature policy, the Affordable Care Act.

"In terms of oversight, we'll be looking at what they're doing administratively to undermine the operations of the Affordable Care Act and what consequences they may have caused to literally millions of people," Hoyer said in a meeting with reporters in September.

An area that could be particularly stressful for Trump is the probing of his personal finances and benefits his properties and companies may or may not be receiving during his presidency.

"I think we'll try to focus on issues which undermine the American people," Hoyer added. "Also I think we want to focus on the integrity of the interests of the president in terms of what interests he has and is he pursuing policies that are in the public's interest or in the Trump investment interest."

The pledge by Democrats to pursue countless investigations into the Trump administration could put a serious hindrance on Republicans' agenda — and create dozens of nightmare scenarios for the president.

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: This top economist has a radical plan to change the way Americans vote

Former US Treasury secretary Hank Paulson warns of an 'economic iron curtain' if the US and China can't find a way to get along

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  • Former US Treasury secretary Hank Paulson has warned of an "economic iron curtain" dividing the world if the US and China fail to resolve their burgeoning strategic differences.
  • Speaking from the Bloomberg New Economy Forum in Singapore, the 74th secretary of the US Treasury said the world is "arriving at a moment of change, challenge, and potentially even crisis."
  • Referring to the "unprecedented political pressure on cross-national supply chains" and "great power competition surges" across the Indo-Pacific, Paulson warned of a once-healthy strategic competition tipping into "a full-blown cold war."

Former US Treasury secretary Hank Paulson has told a forum in Singapore that if the US — consciously or otherwise — goes ahead and decouples from China, then it will likely isolate itself from the region and trigger a "full-blown" cold war.

Paulson spoke of an "economic iron curtain" cleaving the world into estranged spheres should the US and China fail to get their houses in order and resolve their burgeoning strategic differences.

Speaking from the Bloomberg New Economy Forum in Singapore, the 74th secretary of the US Treasury said the world is "arriving at a moment of change, challenge, and potentially even crisis."

Referring to the "unprecedented political pressure on cross-national supply chains" and "great power competition surges" across the Indo-Pacific, Paulson warned of a once-healthy strategic competition tipping into a "full-blown cold war" that could bring down the entire international system.

"As Treasury Secretary, I presided over the US response to the 2008 financial crisis, so I know a little something about systemic risk. And I simply cannot see how the international system can endure when the two countries that comprise some 40% of global GDP and over 50% of global growth are working at cross-purposes, attempting to de-integrate their two economies, and contesting the foundations of a rules-based order at every turn," Paulson said.

Sino-US ties have been getting icy over for some time now, with the headline-topping body-blows of a months-old trade war, just the tip of an iceberg weighed down by a shopping list of unresolved economic issues, from trade deficits to trademarks.

China's President Xi Jinping (习近平) took the latest potshots in an increasingly acrimonious relationship when on Monday he lambasted President Donald Trump's calling card "America First" policies.

Speaking from Hangzhou (杭州) where the Communist Party boss relished the chance to champion global free trade, Xi mocked the US administration's aggressive "beggar-thy-neighbor" (yi lin wei he 以邻为壑) approach to cross-border trade.

Chinese China Soldiers People's Liberation Army Navy

We need to talk ...

Wilting ties aside, Paulson said the US is in danger of falling victim to its own rhetoric on China's misdeeds.

A growing majority at home now see China not just as a strategic challenge to US interests but as a country whose rise has come pretty much at America's expense.

With this snowballing fear in the US that China has been using underhanded policies and sneaky strategies to build — most especially — an arsenal of indigenous high technologies, Paulson warned that the cold shoulder would not work in containing China.

"Some in the United States now advocate a Cold War-style technology denial regime," Paulson said. "No country, in my view, will 'divorce' a major nation that remains, even amid a slowdown, among the world’s fastest growing major economies."

He said China's habitual stealing of technology, its obligatory forced technology transfers for joint ventures and its totalitarian approach to internet governance and cross-border data flows were naturally raising serious alarm, but cautioned that both nations are now simply too tightly connected to just start cutting cords.

"Innovation and technology cannot be separated from business competitiveness."

"So, such a Balkanization of technology could further harm global innovation, not to mention the competitiveness of firms around the world."

Seemingly addressing the administration itself, Paulson warned that in its effort to isolate China, the US now "risks isolating itself."

Calling the US-China strategic interaction easily the most consequential of all, Paulson said its failure could put at risk "the very functioning" of the global system. "I am very sobered by the trajectory we are on now."

Chinese navy

On China's great iron curtain

The path to avoiding an "economic iron curtain" descending across the Indo-Pacific would begin with China's embrace of basic economic reforms that would continue to open up its markets in the same way as its global competitors and partners.

At the same time the former secretary said the US kind of needed to grow up, tone it down and trust a bit more in its own values.

"Dial down the rhetoric," he said

"Strategic competition is a fact. We have compelling differences of national interest between our two countries. And we clearly have clashing security concepts, not least in the South China Sea."

Paulson also lamented the president's slash-and-burn attitude to multilateral institutions and especially his decision to nix the Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP).

"To be blunt about this, I wish President Trump would reconsider his decision to withdraw from the Trans-Pacific Partnership. A TPP 2.0 would offer a ready-made vehicle to shape the trade environment in which Beijing operates," Paulson said.

But for all its fireworks and fury, Paulson insisted China does not pose an "existential threat" to American civilization.

"We should prepare for the obvious strategic challenges from China. But in doing so, let’s not sacrifice those values — or the commitment to openness — that has made us the strongest, most competitive, and most admired country in the world."

"In the 242nd year of our great democratic experiment, we should have more confidence in America and the resilience of our system."

donald trump xi jinping

The 'D' word

All couples face change, and the message out of Singapore was for China and the US to get over their differences and find a way forward, because there are no winners in a divorce.

"Frankly, deintegration is inevitable, and even necessary, in some areas — not least to protect our national security. But it is decidedly not in America’s interest to attempt this across the board."

And divorce doesn't really work well for global business.

"At this point, after 40 years, when we have had one kind of relationship but now, quite clearly, face the daunting task of transitioning to a new one – anchored in a realistic and more sustainable – strategic framework – divorce is a real risk.

"If China doesn’t move quickly, I suspect the calls for divorce will intensify. And it pains me to say that."

SEE ALSO: Xi Jinping caught everyone off guard while celebrating China's $20 billion, 35-mile sea bridge

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Nancy Pelosi celebrates Democratic House wins and bizarrely cheers pre-existing conditions

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Nancy Pelosi

  • House minority leader Nancy Pelosi was jubilant as she celebrated the Democratic Party's comeback in the House of Representatives following Tuesday's midterm elections.
  • Pelosi said Democrats would work to restore checks and balances and be a buffer against Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell's "assault" on Medicare, Medicaid, affordable healthcare, and on Americans with pre-existing conditions.
  • "Let's hear more for pre-existing medical conditions," she said, as the crowd broke into applause.

House minority leader Nancy Pelosi struck a jubilant tone late Tuesday night when she celebrated Democrats flipping the House of Representatives in the closely watched midterm elections.

"Today is more than about Democrats and Republicans," Pelosi said. "It's about restoring the Constitution and checks and balances to the Trump administration. It's about stopping the GOP and [Senate Majority Leader] Mitch McConnell's assault on Medicare, Medicaid, affordable health care, and millions of Americans living with pre-existing medical conditions."

Pelosi added, "Let's hear more for pre-existing medical conditions," as the crowd broke into applause.

Just after 10 p.m. ET, multiple media outlets projected that Democrats had flipped a dozen red seats in all corners of the country — including in Florida, New York, Pennsylvania, and Colorado.

Tuesday night's results mark a comeback for the Democratic Party, which last held control of the House in 2010, and will fundamentally shift the balance of power in Washington.

Flipping seats in every corner of the country, Democrats beat Republican incumbents with an energized and expanded voter base fueled by the anti-Trump resistance movement. A surge in millennial and black voters, coupled with a deep gender gap, helped propel Democrats to victory in dramatically different districts.

And Democrats ran the most diverse slate of candidates for the House in US history. Women and people of color made up nearly 60% of Democratic House candidates.

Enthusiasm for Tuesday's elections — exhibited in huge voter turnout — reached levels unprecedented in modern history with 28 states far exceeding (and some doubling) 2014 midterm turnout.

Read more:Democrats just flipped the House of Representatives — here's how they plan to make Trump’s life a living hell

"In stark contrast to the GOP Congress," Pelosi said Tuesday, "a Democratic Congress will be led with transparency and openness. So that the public can see what's happening and how it affects them and that they can weigh in with the members of Congress and with the President of the United States."

Pelosi added that Democrats would hold the president accountable and strive for bipartisanship when possible.

"We will have a responsibility to find our common ground where we can, stand our ground where we can't, but we must try," she said. "A Democratic Congress will work for solutions that bring us together because we have all had enough of division."

Earlier Tuesday, Pelosi cautioned against speculation that Democrats will impeach Trump now that they've regained control of the House.

Asked about the move, Pelosi said, "It depends on what happens in the [Special Counsel Robert] Mueller investigation, but that is not unifying and I get criticized in my own party for not being in support of it. But I'm not. If that happens, it would have to be bipartisan, and the evidence would have to be so conclusive."

Pelosi said she and other Democrats would instead focus on addressing the concerns of everyday voters.

"They want to see us working to get that done for them," Pelosi said. "They want resolve. They want peace, and that's what we'll bring them."

SEE ALSO: Nancy Pelosi just signaled Democrats won't move to impeach Trump if they retake the House

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Diversity wins: All of the people who made history in the 2018 midterm elections

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New York congressional candidate Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez

The 2018 midterm elections, which captured the attention of the nation perhaps as much as any presidential election, saw history made on multiple fronts.

A diverse set of candidates won big victories in states across the country on Tuesday night as people voted at recorded levels

Beyond the seismic shift in the makeup of Congress, here are people who made history on an individual level in this year's midterm elections. 

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, 29, is the youngest woman elected to Congress in US history.

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, 29, on Tuesday night officially became the youngest woman ever elected to Congress. 

Ocasio-Cortez, a Democrat, will represent New York's 14th Congressional District. 

She won a shocking victory over longtime Democratic Rep. Joe Crowley in New York's Democratic congressional primary back in June.

Ocasio-Cortez quickly became a recognizable figure for the party nationwide prior to an easy victory in her historically Democratic district on Tuesday. 



Rashida Tlaib is among the first two Muslim women elected to Congress is US history.

Rashida Tlaib and Ilhan Omar became the first Muslim women elected to Congress in US history on Tuesday night. 

Tlaib is set to represent Michigan's 13th Congressional District. 

The progressive Democrat is the daughter of Palestinian immigrants and was also the first Muslim female member of Michigan's state legislature.

 



Ilhan Omar joins Tlaib as one of the first two Muslim women in modern US history to be elected to Congress. She's also the first Somali-American woman to achieve the same.

Ilhan Omar, a progressive Democrat who is also the first Somali-American woman elected to Congress, came to the US as a refugee. 

She's set to represent Minnesota's 5th Congressional District. 

Tlaib and Omar campaigned together earlier this year. 



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Rick Scott claims victory in Florida Senate race over longtime Sen. Bill Nelson

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  • Florida Gov. Rick Scott claimed victory in the US Senate race in Florida.
  • The state had been recently ravaged by a hurricane, which put much of the campaign activities for both candidates on hold.
  • Scott would serve alongside Republican Marco Rubio in the Senate, who won reelection in 2016.

Florida Gov. Rick Scott claimed victory in the US Senate race in Florida, where he would unseat Democratic incumbent Sen. Bill Nelson.

Scott, the Republican candidate, had been serving as governor since 2011, but was barred from running for reelection again due to Florida's swift term limits. Nelson conceded after midnight, according to the Tampa Bay Times.

"Congratulations to Governor Rick Scott on his hard-fought victory tonight. During his time as Florida’s Governor, Rick Scott has worked tirelessly to turn around Florida’s economy and create good-paying jobs across the state. It’s clear his leadership has not gone unnoticed by Floridians," National Republican Senatorial Committee Chairman Cory Gardner said in a statement.

He added: "Tonight, voters have sent a strong message that they want a proven leader representing them in Washington, and we have no doubt that Governor Scott will continue to deliver for Floridians in the U.S. Senate."

During the course of the election cycle, Scott spent tens of millions of dollars from his vast personal fortune to bolster his own campaign. In the final two weeks, he spent nearly $12.5 million, bringing the total to over $64 million of his own money, according to the Tampa Bay Times.

Nelson, the incumbent Democrat, has been serving in the Senate since 2001. Though at the start of the 2018 campaign, Nelson still had a relatively low level of name recognition in his state.

Nelson regularly hit Scott for his environmental record, and enlisted the help of former President Barack Obama, who made a last-minute swing through the state on Friday for the several candidates on the ballot in Florida.

At the Miami rally, Obama bolstered Nelson keeping his Senate seat a key component of uniting Americans from the sharp racial and political divides plaguing the country.

"In four days you can choose a bigger, more prosperous, more generous vision of America — an America where love and hope conquer hate," he said.

Read more: A Democratic senator in a tight re-election race says Russians are interfering in his campaign — but some top officials say they don't know what he's talking about

Florida, one of the most crucial swing states, had been hit with a hurricane just several weeks before Election Day. During the cleanup effort, both candidates sparred with each other as they attempted to fulfill the duties to their constituents.

The state was a hotbed for highly contested races in 2018, with many swing districts battling it out for House seats. In addition, the gubernatorial race between Republican Rep. Ron DeSantis and Tallahassee Mayor Andrew Gillum became one of the most heated in the country.

Gillum sparred with DeSantis over campaign tactics and rhetoric, which he said made racists and white nationalists very fond of the Republican Trump ally.

"Now, I'm not calling Mr. DeSantis a racist, I'm simply saying the racists believe he's a racist," Gillum said during a heated debate.

DeSantis ultimately defeated Gillum, who conceded earlier Tuesday evening.

Trump won Florida in 2016, convincing Republicans to go all in on the swing state's Senate race

The Sunshine State went for President Donald Trump in the 2016 presidential election, handing him a key victory in his path to winning the presidency.

Trump traveled to Florida at the end of October during his final stint on the campaign trail to bolster Republicans. During a rally, Trump bashed Nelson as "a vote for Chuck Schumer."

"I am here a lot and I never see Sen. Nelson until six months before the election," Trump added. 

The fate of Nelson's seat was another key component in Republicans' ability to strengthen their majority in the Senate. Florida was among the high priority targets for the National Republican Senatorial Committee in their endeavor to flip several seats from blue to red.

In unseating Nelson, Scott has solidified Florida as a Republican stronghold in the Senate for several years to come. Scott is also primed to position himself as another crucial ally for Trump in the Senate, which will no doubt continue its breakneck speed of confirming judicial nominees, a top priority for the White House and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell.

SEE ALSO: Key Senate Republican calls Trump's proposal for new tax cuts 'highly unlikely' this year

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NOW WATCH: Megyn Kelly in 2017: 'I regret a lot' of the controversial stuff I've said on live television


'I'm so f--king proud of you guys': star Texas Democrat Beto O'Rourke concedes defeat to Ted Cruz in impassioned speech after his devastating loss

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Democratic Rep. Beto O'Rourke

  • Democratic US Senate candidate Beto O'Rourke conceded defeat to incumbent Republican Sen. Ted Cruz late on Tuesday evening.
  • O'Rourke, a 46-year-old from El Paso, Texas, was by far the best-funded and most competitive Democrat to run statewide in the red state in years, and would have become the first elected statewide in Texas in nearly a quarter century.
  • The progressive Democrat praised his supporters for beating the odds. "This campaign holds a very special place in the history of this country going forward," he said.

Democratic US Senate candidate Beto O'Rourke conceded defeat to incumbent Republican Sen. Ted Cruz late on Tuesday in one of the nation's tightest and most closely-watched midterm battles. 

O'Rourke, a 46-year-old from El Paso, Texas, was by far the best-funded and most competitive Democrat to run statewide in the red state in years, and would have become the first Democrat elected statewide in Texas in nearly a quarter century. 

"Tonight's loss does nothing to diminish the way that I feel about Texas or this country," O'Rourke said during his impassioned concession speech in his home city. "Getting to be with and see all of you tonight reminds me why we set out to do this in the first place. We're not about being against anybody. ... We're not going to define ourselves by who or what we are against or afraid of or scared of."

He pledged to support Cruz and work across the aisle despite deep polarization. 

"I'll work with him, I'll work with anyone any time, anywhere to make sure, in the same way you've been there for us, that now we can be there for you," O'Rourke said. 

And he praised his supporters for "doing something no one thought was possible." 

"This campaign holds a very special place in the history of this country going forward," he said. "I'm so f--king proud of you guys!" 

The progressive Democrat, who campaigned on Medicare for All and pathways to citizenship for undocumented immigrants, was fueled by over $60 million in campaign donations, a savvy social-media strategy, and a series of glowing national media profiles — and generous comparisons to President John F. Kennedy.

For months, he attracted widespread national attention with viral video clips of him defending the free speech rights of NFL players, live streams of his road trips across the vast state, and celebrity endorsements from the likes of country music star Willie Nelson and NBA legend LeBron James.

SEE ALSO: Ted Cruz fends off Beto O'Rourke to retain key Texas Senate seat

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NOW WATCH: Megyn Kelly in 2017: 'I regret a lot' of the controversial stuff I've said on live television

Voters in Alabama and West Virginia passed ballot initiatives to significantly limit abortion access at the state level if Roe v. Wade is overturned

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  • Voters in Alabama and West Virginia voted to approve ballot initatives to establish no constitutional right to public funding for abortions and to abortion access more broadly — even in the case of rape or threat to life of the mother.
  • The initiatives represent unusual instances where voters themselves and not legislatures voted to make significant changes to state abortion law.
  • These ballot referendums are part of an overall trend of states reducing access to abortion, sometimes conflicting with the federal right to abortion established in Roe v. Wade.

Most of the focus of the 2018 midterms elections concentrated on hotly-contested Congressional and gubernatorial races, but voters in three states also voted on ballot initatives deciding on whether to reduce access to abortion.

Voters in Alabama and West Virginia voted to approve similar ballot initiatives in the midterm elections to establish no right to publicly-funded abortions, and no guarantee of a right to abortion at all under their states' respective constitutions — even in cases of rape or danger to life of the mother.

Alabama's ballot initative, Amendment 2, passed with 60% of the vote. The amendment proclaims to "recognize and support the sanctity of unborn life and the rights of unborn children, including the right to life" in the state. Both Alabama and West Virginia's amendments codify no right to public funding or even access to abortion at the state level.

A similar measure that sought to ban public funding for abortion in Oregon failed to pass. The two initatives in Alabama and West Virginia represent increasing efforts at the state level to restrict abortion access across the country.

“What we're looking at is a potential rolling back of federal protections of abortion and the decreasing protections in the Alabama and West Virginia constitutions,” Elizabeth Nash, a senior state issues manager at the Guttmacher Institute, told The Washington Post about the initiatives. 

Read more: 23 creative ways states are keeping women from getting abortions in the US — that could erode Roe v. Wade without repealing it

These particular changes to state law are unique from other common state-level abortion restrictions, such as regulations on clinics and laws requiring women seeking abortion to attend counseling, in that voters and not legislatures enacted them.

"Usually you see candidates going back-and-forth on abortion or going back-and-forth on whatever the hot social issue is," Nash told the Post. "You don't see it playing out with voters and in ballot initiatives."

Currently, four states have "trigger laws" that automatically ban abortion at the state level in the unlikely event that the landmark Supreme Court decision Roe v. Wadeis overturned. Ten states have pre-Roe abortion bans or restrictions still on their books that are currently un-enforceable because they violate Roe. 

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The 10 most important things in the world right now

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Hello! Here's what's happening on Wednesday.

1. It's the Midterms 2018 and it's happening LIVE: Democrats were projected to take control of the House of Representatives, and Republicans are projected to hold onto their majority control of the US Senate in the new year. 

2. Former US Treasury secretary Hank Paulson warned of an "economic iron curtain" if the US and China can't find a way to get alongA growing majority at home now see China not just as a strategic challenge to US interests but as a country whose rise has come at America's expense.

3. China says it has new surveillance camera technology that can recognize you just from how you walk."Gait recognition" technology has reportedly already been rolled out and is an improvement over facial recognition.

4. US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo's trip with a senior North Korean envoy has been postponed. The State Department mentioned scheduling in a short statement but offered no reason for the delay.

5. French police have reportedly arrested six over a plot to attack President Emmanuel MacronThis is just days after he likened Europe's extreme right to Nazis.

6. More than 200 mass graves containing thousands of bodies have been found in areas of Iraq previously under ISIS control, according to the UN. The deaths occurred due to systemic violence which may amount to war crimes and genocide, the UN has said. 

7. Some Saudis are calling for a boycott of Amazon to hit back at Jeff Bezos in response to The Washington Post's coverage of Jamal Khashoggi's murderBezos owns the Washington Post, where murdered Khashoggi was previously a columnist. 

8. Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff asked Elon Musk if his Boring Company could come to San Francisco and dig some tunnelsMusk nonchalantly agreed to Benioff's request.

9. US President Donald Trump rushed more than 5,000 troops to the border to lay razor wire. The wire was laid in preparation for the arrival of migrant caravans consisting of potentially thousands of people from across Latin America.

10. Overwhelmed passengers abandoned an Indonesian flight crammed with two tons of a notoriously smelly tropical fruit. Passengers refused to share the flight to Jakarta with some two tons of durian squeezed into the cargo hold.

And finally...

One ticket, two days, 50+ insightful speakers, and 600+ executives. Business Insider's flagship IGNITION conference headliners include Mark Cuban, Janice Min, Sir Martin Sorrell and Barbara Corcoran. Join us for IGNITION, December 3-4, New York City.

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Boeing is said to be warning its 737 Max customers about erroneous cockpit readings that could make the passenger jet 'aggressively dive'

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  • Boeing is preparing to send a warning to all the operators that have taken delivery of its new 737 Max aircraft, according to an anonymous source cited by Bloomberg.
  • Exhibiting similar problems, a recently delivered Lion Air Boeing 737 Max 8 passenger plane crashed into the sea off Jakarta, Indonesia almost two weeks ago with 189 people onboard.
  • The warning comes as Indonesia’s transport ministry has scheduled a briefing to share the latest information on the Lion Air tragedy.

Boeing is reportedly preparing a bulletin to all operators of the new 737 model warning that erroneous readings from a flight-monitoring system can cause the planes to aggressively dive, Bloomberg quoted a person familiar with the matter.

Boeing will caution its customers of "erroneous readings" from a flight-monitoring system can cause the planes to abruptly dive, Bloomberg quoted an anonymous source as saying.

Boeing will also warn pilots to follow an existing procedure to handle the problem.

The bulletin is being prepared based on preliminary findings from the crash of one of the planes off the coast of Indonesia, said the person, who asked not to be named discussing the inquiry.

According to a company statement as of September 30, Boeing had 4,783 firm orders from 98 identified customers for the 737 Max.

According to Bloomberg there are over 200 737 Max jets already in use in commercial aviation.

Aviation expert Geoffrey Thomas told Business Insider that Boeing has around 9,000 737s in the sky at any given time.

Representatives of 737 Max operators, Singapore Airlines offshoot SilkAir, Garuda Indonesia and Canada's WestJet, said they had not yet received a bulletin from Boeing, Reuters reports.

Data from the black box of the Lion Air 737 Max that fell into the sea with 189 people onboard has confirmed there was an issue with the plane’s airspeed indicator.

Soerjanto Tjahjono, the head of Indonesia’s National Transportation Safety Committee, said on Monday that the flight data recorder from the crashed plane shows that the problem occurred in its last four flights, including the fatal flight on October 29.

Without an accurate airspeed reading, planes are at serious risk of crashing. Jets flying too slowly can stall, and ones accelerating too much can tear themselves apart from the force.

A faulty airspeed instrument was a factor in the loss of Air France Flight 447, which crashed into the Atlantic Ocean on its way from Brazil to Paris in 2009.

The Lion Air 737 Max 8 speared into the coastal waters off Java on Oct. 29, just 13 minutes after takeoff.

Bloomberg says the plane's velocity was uncharacteristically high, possibly touching speeds of 600 miles an hour as it hit the water.

Certainly, Indonesian search and rescue officials had trouble locating the wreck, despite encountering a large amount of wreckage in the four days leading up to the discovery of the fuselage.

Flight JT610 radioed a request to return to Jakarta to land, but never turned back toward the airport, according to Indonesia’s National Transportation Safety Committee.

The committee has said they were dealing with an "erroneous airspeed indication."

Indonesia’s transport ministry has scheduled a briefing at 12:30 p.m. in Jakarta on Wednesday to share updated information on the Lion Air accident, Bloomberg reports.

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NOW WATCH: The economist that predicted the housing crisis warns the Fed is engaging in behavior that's almost always caused a recession

Democrat Jacky Rosen wins key Nevada Senate seat

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Jacky Rosen

Democrat Jacky Rosen beat her Republican opponent Dean Heller in the Nevada Senate race — a swing state with a history of sending moderates to Washington. 

The race was a key target for Democrats in their uphill battle to take control of the Senate. Heller, a first-term senator and former congressman who has spent three decades in politics, was widely viewed as the GOP's most vulnerable incumbent in the chamber. 

Former Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton won the state in 2016 by 2.4 percentage points, while Democratic Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto was elected by a similar margin. Obama won the state by 6.7 points in 2012.

Heller angered the GOP's increasingly right-wing base when he refused to endorse Trump's version of a border wall, criticized the president's pardon of former Maricopa county Sheriff Joe Arpaio, and said he had "no problem" funding Planned Parenthood (despite his record of voting to end federal reimbursements to the healthcare provider).

Heller also changed his position on the Affordable Care Act, initially opposing the GOP's Obamacare repeal efforts citing cuts to Medicaid. But during a tough primary challenge from the right and attacks from Trump, he supported a Republican Obamacare replacement that would have dramatically reduced federal funding for Medicaid in the long term.

Rosen, the former president of one of the largest synagogues in Nevada, was recruited to run for office by former Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid, who in 2016 convinced Rosen run for an open House seat in a southern Nevada district that simultaneously went for Trump. Rosen won the seat by just 1.2 points, or 4,000 votes. 

The congresswoman framed herself as a moderate, touting her membership in the House Problem Solvers Caucus – a group of centrists seeking bipartisan agreement — and has voted with Trump 41 percent of the time, placing her among the dozen or so most conservative Democrats in the chamber.

Nevada has grown increasingly diverse in recent years and immigrants move into the state, and more left-leaning as major companies like Tesla and Google set up offices there, balancing out the state's conservative base in the rural north of the state. 

Trump, whose approval rating in Nevada is seven points under water according to recent polling, had campaigned for Heller and targeted Rosen with the nickname "Wacky Jacky." (Trump's approval rating in Nevada dropped about five points between January 2017 and October 2018, and his disapproval numbers jumped from 39 percent to 51 percent in the same period.)

The state saw enormous turnout — double the number of early voters got to the polls this year than did in the 2014 midterm elections, which also dwarfed the total voters in 2014. Three days before Election Day, 40 percent of the state's registered voters had already cast their ballots, compared to just 25.4 percent in 2014. And Democrats turned out in bigger numbers than Republicans. 

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NOW WATCH: Megyn Kelly in 2017: 'I regret a lot' of the controversial stuff I've said on live television

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