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Andrew Yang files paperwork for New York City mayoral bid

Andrew Yang files paperwork for New York City mayoral bid
nbcnews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from nbcnews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Bipartisan group s success on COVID-19 relief could be just the beginning - U S

. WASHINGTON (Tribune News Service) Everybody’s talking about bipartisanship in the Senate, but the cross-party cooperation that led to Congress on Monday passing nearly $900 billion in coronavirus relief started in the House. Any bipartisan deals formed next session could start there too, members of the House Problem Solvers Caucus say. “This in many ways could be the model for how we govern in the next Congress,” New Jersey Rep. Josh Gottheimer, the Democratic co-chair of the Problem Solvers Caucus, said in an interview. “Democrats, Republicans didn’t come together just for this moment, but have been working together for years, which obviously helps you build more trust.”

Thomas L Friedman: Will Trump force principled conservatives to start their own party? I hope so

Thomas L. Friedman: Will Trump force principled conservatives to start their own party? I hope so. Even if just a few principled conservatives came together and created a kind of third party in Congress, they could be kingmakers. (Samuel Corum | The New York Times) President Donald Trump during the Army-Navy football game at the U.S. Military Academy in West Point, N.Y., Dec. 12, 2020. “If Trump keeps delegitimizing Joe Biden’s presidency and demanding loyalty for his extreme behavior,” writes The New York Times columnist Thomas L. Friedman, “the GOP could fully fracture splitting between principled Republicans and unprincipled Republicans.”

Opinion | Will Trump Force Principled Conservatives to Start Their Own Party? I Hope So

 Credit.Samuel Corum for The New York Times As the Trump presidency heads into the sunset, kicking and screaming, one of the most important questions that will shape American politics at the local, state and national levels is this: Can Donald Trump maintain his iron grip over the Republican Party when he is out of office? This is what we know for sure: He damn well intends to try and is amassing a pile of cash to do so. And here is what I predict: If Trump keeps delegitimizing Joe Biden’s presidency and demanding loyalty for his extreme behavior, the G.O.P. could fully fracture splitting between principled Republicans and unprincipled Republicans. Trump then might have done America the greatest favor possible: stimulating the birth of a new principled conservative party.

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