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GOP maintains influence over most legislatures, state policy

Eight years ago, a fairly inexperienced president-elect promised a new, post-partisan era and sweeping change. The protracted debate among democrats on the 2010 Affordable Care Act shows that coming to a policy compromise within a single party can be tough enough.

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The two party leaders met for the first time since this summer’s Republican National Convention on Capitol Hill on Thursday for a conversation that Ryan described as “fantastic” and “productive”. What’s taking its place isn’t even fully formed yet, but it’s dominant. Judge died last weekend and was replaced by his wife as the Democratic nominee. Walker said permitting Democrats to obstruct GOP legislative goals because of an “inside-the-ballpark Washington procedural reason. would really upset the electorate of the people who not only elected Donald Trump and Mike Pence but the people who elected Ron (Johnson)”.

Many Republicans in Congress only backed Trump after he became the candidate. Of the traditional swing states, North Carolina, Iowa, Ohio, Michigan, Florida all voted for Mr. Trump. He owes them nothing. They were sorely disappointed.

Repealing Obamacare would shake the US healthcare and insurance industries, which have broadly called for measured reforms, although not for its full-scale elimination. Some Democratic senators could also be drawn to Trump’s efforts to revamp portions of President Barack Obama’s health care law and tighten curbs on immigrants in the USA illegally.

“As a result of yesterday’s election, the healthcare sector in NY will face a significantly different landscape”, Healthcare Association President Bea Grause said Wednesday.

Power at the state level is crucial.

“We have only one option and that is sitting down together, looking at this landscape, looking at the things we have to get done for the state of ME, for their well being, for people’s safety, and that work has to happen immediately and it has to happen together”, she says. It’s the families of the workers who have the most to fear.

On Wednesday, party leaders were quick to back the victor, and they are expected to find more common ground than differences once he takes office. I don’t expect it, though.

Trump had taken 47.5 percent by Wednesday evening-and Clinton looks likely to have won a small majority of the overall vote. This election was clearly for all the marbles, too.

Diorio says in 21 of the past 29 presidential elections, the party of the winning candidate picked up statehouse seats. Mr Trump spent his campaign deriding numerous cornerstone principles of his party: free trade, changes in social security and the United States posture towards Russian Federation. The normally reserved McConnell even seemed to adopt Trump’s hyperbolic rhetorical style, declaring their encounter “a first-class meeting”. He must prove his policies work and can achieve the goals he has set: economic growth, more private-sector jobs, bringing corporations home from overseas with a lower corporate tax rate, and defeating the Islamic State. But he seized upon two great truths. It’s clear that many people are sick of a system that fails them. Blue game. They want their elected officials to do something for someone besides their donors. “We owe him an open mind and the chance to lead”. One Democrat ousted was Greg Stumbo, the House speaker and former state attorney general who was a major force in Kentucky politics for decades. James Comey’s back-and-forth routine did not help Hillary, but he did not sway every battleground state Trump won, which gave the mogul a 30 vote cushion in the Electoral College. The people in this country – most voters in the states that decided the election wanted change. At the same time, the party’s marquee names are far older than the core Democratic coalition.

There will be one independent: Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT). Board member at Our Revolution. “I still believe in America and I always will”. “This is something that we’re going to have to plan with our president-elect”.

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Democrats could regroup under the influence of Vermont Sen. Eventually, they were right.

Congressional partisanship to blame