Thursday, November 6, 2025
Trusted News Since 2020
American News Network
Truth. Integrity. Journalism.
General

The Anti-MAGA Majority Reemerges

By Eric November 6, 2025

In the latest edition of *The Atlantic Daily*, the focus turns to the implications of recent off-year elections, which have revealed a significant backlash against former President Donald Trump among voters. The results from key contests, including the New York City mayoral race and gubernatorial elections in New Jersey and Virginia, suggest that many Americans are dissatisfied with Trump’s influence on the political landscape. Notably, Democratic candidates across the spectrum—ranging from moderate to progressive—secured decisive victories, challenging Trump’s narrative of a political realignment favoring his agenda. The elections also highlight the complexities of opposing Trump, as different candidates adopted various strategies to resonate with their constituents.

A standout victory came from Zohran Mamdani, a fresh face in New York politics, who won the mayoral race despite Trump’s endorsement of rival Andrew Cuomo. Mamdani’s campaign focused on local issues, yet his contrast with Trump—embodying a youthful, optimistic perspective against Trump’s divisive rhetoric—was apparent and likely contributed to his success. Similarly, in Virginia, Abigail Spanberger, a former CIA officer, emerged victorious by a substantial margin, reinforcing her status as a leader of the Democratic Party’s moderate wing. Her win, along with the victories of other Democratic candidates in the state, indicates a robust Democratic presence in Virginia, despite some controversies that arose during the campaign.

The results in New Jersey and California further underscore the Democrats’ momentum. Mikie Sherrill’s campaign, which explicitly targeted Trump, ended in a comfortable victory, while California’s Proposition 50, aimed at redistricting to benefit Democrats, garnered overwhelming support. These outcomes reflect a broader trend of Democratic candidates effectively mobilizing voters against Trump and his policies. However, while these victories may boost Democratic morale ahead of the 2026 elections, they also highlight the ongoing struggle to unify the party and address voter concerns about its direction. The key takeaway from these elections is that while the anti-Trump sentiment remains strong, the path forward for Democrats may require a more nuanced approach that prioritizes local issues and diverse candidate representation rather than a singular ideological stance.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WfLkV6xbVAs

This is an edition of The
Atlantic
Daily, a newsletter that guides you through the biggest stories of the day, helps you discover new ideas, and recommends the best in culture.
Sign up for it here.
They dislike him—they really dislike him.
Off-year elections are never quite the crystal ball for midterms that political junkies want, but one thing that last night’s results seem to convey clearly is that many voters are unhappy with President Donald Trump.
Elections for New York City mayor, governors of New Jersey and Virginia, and
gerrymandering in California
had their own local dynamics, but voters in these
heavily nationalized contests
were united in their rejection of Trump and his priorities. The results give some reason to doubt Trump’s
claim
that his 2024 victory was “a historic realignment” of American politics. But although the success of Democrats running the spectrum from moderate to progressive may soothe the pre-2026 nerves of Trump’s opposition, it also means there are no pat answers to the question of how best to run against him.
Zohran Mamdani, a charismatic Democratic newcomer, won the New York mayoralty by a wide margin. Mamdani captured roughly 50 percent of the vote in a three-way race, despite the president’s endorsement of his chief rival, Andrew Cuomo, and threats to cut off most federal funding to the city. Or was it in part
because
of Trump? The president is detested in his hometown, and although Mamdani relentlessly pivoted away from national politics toward issues of affordability in the city, the contrast between the young, cheerful immigrant and aging, cranky nativist president was unmissable. Mamdani was only too delighted to call attention to Trump’s late backing of Cuomo as a way of energizing his own voters. His victory immediately makes him one of the leaders of the Democratic Party’s left wing, alongside Bernie Sanders and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.
In Virginia, meanwhile, Abigail Spanberger staked a claim to leadership of the party’s moderate wing. The former U.S. representative and CIA officer trounced the Republican Winsome Earle-Sears by 15 points to become the commonwealth’s governor, replacing the term-limited GOP incumbent Glenn Youngkin. Spanberger’s victory was widely anticipated, but the margin is on the higher end of expectations. She carried to victory not only the lieutenant-governor candidate, Ghazala Hashmi, but also Jay Jones, the nominee for attorney general. Democrats gained at least 13 seats and maintained control in the House of Delegates as well.
Jones’s campaign was shaken late by the publication of
text messages
from 2022 in which he wrote that if he had two bullets and had a chance to shoot Hitler, Pol Pot, or the then-Republican speaker of the House of Delegates, he’d shoot the Republican twice. In the aftermath of Charlie Kirk’s assassination, the messages caused a firestorm, but although Democrats condemned the messages, they did not seek to force Jones out of the race. On Election Day, the blue wave carried him over the incumbent Republican, Jason Miyares.
Also winning was the New Jersey Democrat Mikie Sherrill, a current U.S. representative who ran a campaign focused squarely on Trump. The race gave Democrats jitters: Four years ago, the Republican Jack Ciattarelli came within three points of unseating Governor Phil Murphy, and polls in recent weeks showed Ciattarelli—once again on the ballot—close behind Sherrill. In the end, though, Sherrill won by some 13 points.
Proposition 50, California’s referendum on redrawing U.S. House districts, scored an even larger win, with more than 60 percent of voters favoring it in incomplete results. The ballot initiative sought to bypass the state’s independent redistricting commission and create maps that would give Democrats a chance to pick up five more seats in Congress. Governor Gavin Newsom was the face of the gerrymander, arguing it was essential as a
counterweight
to several states, including Texas, Missouri, and North Carolina, adding Republican districts at Trump’s behest. The vote not only aids Democrats’ midterm hopes but raises Newsom’s profile as a Trump adversary—and 2028 presidential hopeful.
It was that kind of night for Democrats: Up and down the ballot, races not only went their way but did so by wide margins. (In Pennsylvania, three Democratic justices on the state supreme court won elections to keep their seats.) That follows a
run of successes in special elections
. But drawing simple conclusions from these results is challenging, given the very different personalities, campaigns, and platforms that brought Democrats to victory. Perhaps the only unifying thread was former President Barack Obama, who campaigned for Spanberger and Sherrill, endorsed Prop 50, and
reached out to Mamdani
even as other national Democrats kept their distance. The big lesson may be that Democrats’ best bet is to run candidates who effectively represent and speak to the places they’re running, rather than pursuing a
single ideology
.
These results have only limited ability to restrain Trump’s
abuses of power
right now, and although they are the best that Democrats could hope for, they also don’t guarantee success in 2026. What the returns do show clearly is that Democratic voters are highly motivated to vote against Trump, despite
polls
finding that they are disgusted with their own party. This may sound familiar. Trump has never been popular with Americans as a whole: He won a minority of the popular vote in 2016, led his party to defeat in 2018, and lost in 2020. In the 2022 midterms, his unpopularity was a major reason Republicans underperformed.
But Trump’s victory in 2024 called that into question. Trump and his allies treated it as an “
unprecedented and powerful mandate
” for radical right-wing governance. A year later, this election suggests a different interpretation: that Trump’s victory was driven by high inflation, Joe Biden’s disastrous decision to try to run for reelection, an underwhelming Kamala Harris campaign, and an anti-incumbent mood. Americans still aren’t sold on the Democratic Party, but the
anti-MAGA majority
has reemerged.
Related
:

No politics is local.

Donald Trump’s plan to subvert the midterms is already under way.

E

Eric

Eric is a seasoned journalist covering General news.

Related Articles

No, Women Aren’t the Problem
General

No, Women Aren’t the Problem

Read More →
America on the Brink of War With Venezuela
General

America on the Brink of War With Venezuela

Read More →
No, Women Aren’t the Problem
General

No, Women Aren’t the Problem

Read More →

Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *