President-elect Trump is enjoying a bump in favorability since winning a second White House term earlier this month, while figures for outgoing President Biden sank to a four-year-low, according to a new poll. An Emerson College poll found both men trending in opposite directions, with Trump's favorability jumping six points to 54% after the Nov. 5 election. Biden, on the other hand, has a 36% job approval rating. Disapproval of Biden remains steady at 52%, the poll found. "Trump's favorability varies significantly by gender, race and age," said Spencer Kimball, executive director of Emerson College Polling. "Trump's strongest age cohort is among voters 40-59, with 60% viewing him favorably, compared to 48% among those over 70. Notably, his favorability has risen among younger voters, with 55% of those under 30 expressing a favorable opinion." read more
Rep. Ilhan Omar stuck close to the Democratic ticket through the turbulent election year, never calling on President Joe Biden to step aside but quickly getting behind Vice President Kamala Harris when he did. It was a show of unity from a progressive Democrat not always in tune with her party's center, and it came amid signs that Harris and Gov. Tim Walz were shifting focus from progressive priorities in the leadup to Election Day. Now, as the Minnesota congresswoman and her allies prepare for a second Trump administration and all it could bring, she is lamenting some of her party's missed opportunities and missteps. Republicans "are clear about who they are fighting and who they are fighting for," Omar said in an interview in her Capitol Hill office. "And as Democrats, we are not clear about that." "For me, I've always been clear about that. I don't want to fight and risk losing the White House, but I also am very clear about who I fight for," she said. read more
Last Thursday, workers with the Democratic National Committee (DNC) were told they would be laid off without severance and with little notice, according to the DNC's union. read more
The District of Columbia's attorney general is suing a Defund the Police activist for misappropriating $75,000 in charity funds for mansion rentals, a Cancn trip, and designer clothes. Brandon Anderson, the leader of an anti-police D.C. nonprofit called Raheem AI, "misused charitable donations to fund lavish vacations and shopping sprees, and the Raheem AI board of directors let him get away with it," Attorney General Brian Schwalb (D.), whose office regulates nonprofits in the district, said in a Monday statement. Schwalb also sued Raheem AI, seeking to shut down the nonprofit entirely. The attorney general called for Anderson to be barred from leading any other D.C. nonprofit and demanded that Anderson or Raheem AI repay the $75,000, according to the New York Times. "My office will not allow people to masquerade behind noble causes while violating the law," Schwalb said. read more
An entire police force resigned leaving a South Carolina town in a public safety crisis. McColl Police Chief Bob Hale and the town's four officers all resigned. read more
From another article - "The union representing members of the Democratic National Committee launched a GoFundMe to raise money for staffers who were abruptly laid off last week " prompting backlash from those still on the DNC payroll who have described the cuts as a "betrayal" of party values."