Politics
How Abigail Spanberger’s Stunning Win Ended the GOP Era in Virginia — and Why Donald Trump Was the Invisible Opponent
Democrat Abigail Spanberger made history as Virginia’s first female governor, defeating Winsome Earle-Sears by uniting moderates and federal workers — while riding a wave of anti-Trump sentiment.
In a political twist few saw coming, Abigail Spanberger, a former CIA officer and three-term U.S. Congresswoman, has broken a century-old barrier to become Virginia’s first woman governor — a victory that also signals the end of Glenn Youngkin’s Republican dominance in the state.
Her win over Republican Winsome Earle-Sears wasn’t just about party lines; it was about the pulse of a changing Virginia — one driven by economic anxiety, an exhausted electorate, and a deep-seated rejection of Donald Trump.
According to the Fox News Voter Poll, nearly six in ten voters in the state disapproved of Trump’s leadership, and a majority said their vote for Spanberger was “a message of opposition” to the former president.
“This wasn’t just a race for governor — it was a referendum on who we want to be as Virginians,” Spanberger said during her victory speech in Richmond.

The Trump Factor That Wasn’t on the Ballot
Though Trump’s name wasn’t printed anywhere, his presence loomed over every rally and ad. Two-thirds of Spanberger’s voters said their choice was directly motivated by opposition to him.
In contrast, only a third of Earle-Sears’ supporters said their vote was meant to “support Trump’s vision.”
Political analysts, including Larry Sabato of the University of Virginia Center for Politics, noted that Trump’s shadow “may have cost Republicans the suburbs for another decade.”
Youngkin’s Legacy and the End of an Era
Governor Glenn Youngkin, who was elected in 2021 as the first GOP governor in 12 years, had become the face of pragmatic conservatism. Yet his tenure also revealed the limits of Republican appeal in a post-Trump world.
Spanberger’s victory margin exceeded that of Vice President Kamala Harris, who beat Trump in Virginia by just six points in 2024. This time, the Democrat won by a far more comfortable gap — proof that disapproval of the former president continues to shape state politics.
The Numbers Behind the Win
The Fox News poll surveyed over 4,000 registered voters across Virginia and found Spanberger dominating among key demographics:
- 65% of women voted for Spanberger versus 35% for Earle-Sears, a massive 30-point gender gap.
- Black voters backed Spanberger by an overwhelming 9-to-1 margin.
- College-educated and young voters helped push her campaign over the finish line, particularly in Northern Virginia and the Richmond suburbs.
While Earle-Sears performed strongly among White evangelical men and non-college voters, it wasn’t enough to overcome Spanberger’s coalition of moderates, federal workers, and independents.
Economy, Healthcare, and the Federal Workforce
Spanberger’s campaign leaned heavily on economic messaging, especially criticizing the Trump administration’s approach to federal budgeting — a theme that resonated in Virginia, where thousands of families depend on government jobs.
More than six in ten federal employees voted for her, according to the data.
Healthcare emerged as the second-most important issue, with voters worried about benefits and federal shutdown impacts. Those who prioritized healthcare broke for Spanberger by four to one.
“People aren’t asking for perfection; they’re asking for stability,” said campaign advisor Ellen Carmichael, noting how Spanberger’s tone contrasted sharply with her opponent’s cultural messaging.
Gender, Trust, and Values
Interestingly, the most sought-after quality among voters wasn’t partisanship but honesty. Poll data shows that voters who prioritized “trustworthiness” overwhelmingly favored Spanberger, while those driven by “shared values” leaned Republican.
Her calm, disciplined campaign stood in contrast to the controversies surrounding the GOP — including Earle-Sears’ focus on transgender policies and a late-breaking scandal involving Democratic attorney general candidate Jay Jones’ text messages.
While the texts briefly dominated headlines, most voters dismissed them as “concerning but not disqualifying,” and Jones still managed to win.

A New Face of Southern Progressivism
Spanberger’s rise — from former CIA case officer to congresswoman to now governor — mirrors Virginia’s evolution from a conservative stronghold to a modern, suburban-driven swing state.
Her pragmatic style and willingness to cross party lines have earned her comparisons to Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer and Minnesota’s Tim Walz — Democrats who’ve thrived by blending economic populism with moderate social values.
What’s Next for Virginia
Earle-Sears’ defeat underscores the challenge facing Republicans as they navigate between Trump loyalty and moderate outreach. Despite strong rural turnout, she failed to make inroads with suburban voters.
“This is not a blue wave — it’s a purple recalibration,” said political analyst David Wasserman of the Cook Political Report. “Spanberger’s win shows Democrats can win on competence, not just charisma.”
A Historic First
With this victory, Abigail Spanberger becomes the first woman to govern Virginia in its 400-year history — a symbolic milestone for the Old Dominion State.
She has pledged to “restore civility” and focus on issues that unite Virginians, from infrastructure and healthcare to protecting democratic institutions.
As her supporters chanted “Madam Governor!” in Richmond, Spanberger smiled and said:
“Virginia has always been a place where history is written — tonight, we wrote another page.”
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Politics
“Egg on Their Face”: DOJ’s Failed Trump Revenge Prosecutions Trigger Legal Embarrassment
From dismissed indictments to grand jury rejections, the Justice Department’s attempts to prosecute Trump critics have unraveled in dramatic fashion
The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) is facing growing scrutiny and embarrassment after a string of high-profile failures tied to attempts to prosecute critics of President Donald Trump. What was meant to project strength and accountability has instead exposed deep cracks in federal prosecution strategy, according to legal experts and former prosecutors.
In a sequence of setbacks rarely seen in modern federal law enforcement, the DOJ has suffered dismissed indictments, blocked evidence, and, most strikingly, two federal grand juries refusing to indict one of its key targets — New York Attorney General Letitia James.
The most damaging blow came on December 11, when a second grand jury declined to issue charges against James, just days after another grand jury rejected the same effort. Her attorney, Abbe Lowell, called the outcome “unprecedented,” a sentiment echoed by multiple former federal prosecutors.

Earlier indictments against both James and former FBI Director James Comey were thrown out after a federal judge ruled that the special prosecutor who brought the cases, Lindsey Halligan, had been unlawfully appointed. Adding to the DOJ’s woes, a judge also blocked prosecutors from using key evidence against Comey, citing possible constitutional violations.
“This is an embarrassment,” said Neama Rahmani, a former federal prosecutor. “The last thing you want to be as a prosecutor is to be on the defensive — and that’s exactly what’s happening here.”
Trump’s Longstanding Vendettas
Trump’s hostility toward both Comey and James dates back years. He fired Comey in 2017 while the FBI was investigating potential links between Trump’s 2016 campaign and Russia. James later sued Trump in 2022 for civil fraud related to his real estate business, a case that deeply angered the former president.
In a September 20 social media post, Trump openly called for the prosecution of Comey, James, and Sen. Adam Schiff of California. While investigations were launched, results have been deeply underwhelming.
An NBC News report revealed that the DOJ’s investigation into Schiff has stalled entirely, with internal probes reportedly underway to examine how the case was mishandled. The DOJ has declined to comment on its performance in these matters.
Loyalty Over Experience
According to multiple reports, career prosecutors — including the interim U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia — had previously concluded the evidence against James and Comey was too weak to sustain charges. Trump publicly criticized and fired the U.S. attorney, later urging Attorney General Pam Bondi to appoint Lindsey Halligan, his former personal lawyer, despite her lack of prosecutorial experience.
Bondi acted swiftly, and Halligan secured indictments against both Comey and James. But the cases quickly collapsed.
In Comey’s case, Magistrate Judge William Fitzpatrick described a “disturbing pattern of profound investigative missteps,” including possible violations of the Fourth Amendment. Judge Cameron McGowan Currie, a Clinton appointee, ultimately dismissed all charges after ruling Halligan’s appointment unlawful.
“The prosecutions haven’t amounted to much in court,” said Carl Tobias, a law professor at the University of Richmond. “Except to harass them — which may have been the point.”
Grand Jury Rejections: A Rare Humiliation
Perhaps the most humiliating moment for the DOJ came when two separate grand juries rejected efforts to re-indict Letitia James. Legal experts stress how extraordinary this is.
Former federal prosecutor Mitchell Epner said he sought hundreds of indictments in his career and failed only once. “To go before two grand juries in a week and fail both times is humiliating and a repudiation of the prosecution,” he said.
Barbara McQuade, former U.S. attorney under President Barack Obama, was even more blunt:
“When prosecutors are selected based on loyalty rather than experience and integrity, this is the sort of garbage we can expect.”

Comey Case Still on Shaky Ground
The DOJ has suggested it may try to re-indict Comey, but significant hurdles remain. A federal judge has temporarily blocked prosecutors from using key evidence obtained during a separate 2017 investigation, ruling it may have been seized unconstitutionally.
Even if that hurdle is cleared, prosecutors face another problem: time. The original indictment was issued just days before the statute of limitations expired. Comey’s defense team argues that because the indictment was void, the government cannot rely on the usual six-month extension for refiling charges.
“The DOJ — and Halligan in particular — have egg on their face,” Rahmani said. “These are massive failures by the Justice Department.”
A Pattern of Collapse
What emerges from this saga is not just a legal defeat, but a broader institutional reckoning. From judicial rebukes to grand jury resistance, the DOJ’s efforts against Trump’s perceived enemies have collapsed under scrutiny.
Instead of delivering accountability, the prosecutions have raised uncomfortable questions about politicization, competence, and abuse of power — questions that now hang heavily over the Justice Department itself.
Politics
Bill Maher Sparks Fiery Clash With Ana Kasparian on Israel as Question About ‘That Dress’ Escalates Debate
“Where would you live in the Middle East… in that dress?” Bill Maher’s question turns tense as Ana Kasparian pushes back on his assumptions.
A casual, free-flowing podcast conversation quickly morphed into a heated geopolitical debate when comedian and commentator Bill Maher clashed with Ana Kasparian of The Young Turks during her recent appearance on his show, Club Random.
What began as a typical Maher-style discussion — part politics, part humor, part provocation — took a sharper turn when the topic shifted to the Middle East and whether a Western woman would feel comfortable living there.
Maher, who often stresses that he is not formally aligned with any political organization, posed a hypothetical question to Kasparian:
“Ana, you’ve got to go live in the Middle East… where would you live?”
He began listing countries one by one — Pakistan, Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Syria — adding commentary that blended sarcasm with dark humor. Kasparian immediately challenged his characterization of Syria, pointing out that parts of the country are still controlled by extremist groups.
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But Maher barreled on, even referencing Yemen “under Houthi rule,” before pivoting to Israel.
“Tel Aviv or the West Bank — Ramallah is wonderful in the fall, it gets lovely,” Maher said. What followed, however, pushed the discussion into far more personal territory.
Looking directly at Kasparian’s outfit, Maher asked:
“What city would you live in? What do you think you’d be comfortable in that dress?”
The remark noticeably shifted the tone of the conversation. Kasparian, known for her direct style on The Young Turks, pushed back firmly, suggesting Maher was oversimplifying deeply complex cultures and ignoring regional differences in laws, norms and women’s rights.
Maher defended his approach, insisting he was speaking about general realities in the region, not making personal judgments. But by this point, the exchange had clearly escalated beyond a casual hypothetical.

A Debate That Mirrors a Larger Global Divide
The tense moment reflected a broader, ongoing debate playing out across social media and political circles: How does the West talk about the Middle East without flattening its complexity?
Kasparian argued that sweeping generalizations — especially about women’s freedoms — feed into stereotypes that oversimplify lived experiences. Maher countered that refusing to acknowledge differences in legal and cultural realities is equally misleading.
As clips of the exchange circulated online, reactions were predictably polarized. Supporters of Maher praised him for “saying the uncomfortable truth,” while fans of Kasparian applauded her for challenging what they viewed as reductive framing.
Why This Exchange Matters
Both Maher and Kasparian command large online audiences. Maher hosts the long-running HBO show Real Time with Bill Maher, while Kasparian reaches millions through TYT’s digital platforms. Their confrontation — part humor, part philosophy, part geopolitics — reflects how discussions about Israel, women’s rights, and Middle Eastern politics have become flashpoints in Western media.
It also highlights something deeper: When conversations about geopolitics intersect with identity and personal appearance, the tension is almost inevitable.
And on Club Random, tension is something Maher rarely shies away from.
Politics
“If I Can’t Beat Jimmy Kimmel, I Shouldn’t Be President…” Trump Drops Bold Claim Ahead of Hosting Kennedy Center Honors
At a pre-event gathering, President Donald Trump predicted record-breaking ratings — and took a sharp swipe at late-night host Jimmy Kimmel.
On the eve of hosting the prestigious Kennedy Center Honors, Donald Trump did what he often does best — make headlines before the event even begins. Speaking confidently at a pre-show gathering, Trump made several bold predictions about the upcoming ceremony, including one that instantly went viral.
“I believe this will be the highest-rated show they’ve ever done,” he told attendees, referring to the televised broadcast that will air later this month on CBS and Paramount+. With characteristic bravado, Trump added that while the awards have seen strong viewership in the past, “there’s nothing like what’s gonna happen tomorrow night.”
But it wasn’t his ratings prediction that raised eyebrows — it was his jab at late-night host Jimmy Kimmel.
“I’ve watched some of the people that host,” Trump said with a smirk. “Jimmy Kimmel was horrible. And if I can’t beat out Jimmy Kimmel in terms of talent, then I don’t think I should be president.”
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Those in the room reacted with a mixture of laughter and surprise. Trump, who has a long-running feud with several late-night comedians, seemed to relish the moment. Though Kimmel has never actually hosted the Kennedy Center Honors, he did appear in the 2012 ceremony during a tribute to David Letterman — a detail Trump apparently glossed over.
Kimmel, meanwhile, has hosted the Academy Awards, the Primetime Emmys, and fronts his long-running late-night show Jimmy Kimmel Live! Yet Trump’s comment implied he expected comparisons to be inevitable — and not necessarily favorable from the mainstream press.

“We never had a president hosting the awards before,” Trump reminded the audience. “This is a first. I’m sure they’ll give me great reviews, right? They’ll say, ‘He was horrible. He was terrible.’ No, we’ll do fine.”
His tone shifted briefly toward sincerity as he thanked the attendees and spoke about the emotional weight of the upcoming evening.
“This is a special night,” he said. “By the end of these two days, you’re gonna say this is one of the most special days in your life.”
But even in the sentimentality, Trump couldn’t resist one more prediction — that several guests had already told him the day felt life-changing.
With Trump’s boldness, the anticipation around the Honors ceremony is higher than ever — not only for the performances, but to see just how the president’s first hosting attempt will unfold on stage. One thing is certain: the broadcast won’t lack drama, humor, or spectacle.
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