The Korea Times

Midterm verdicts on President Donald Trump

- The above editorial appeared in Newsday. It was distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

In this long and fiercely contested election, President Donald Trump told voters to pretend he was on the ballot. Apparently, they responded.

They came out in droves across the nation and on Long Island, part of a midterm election that was unusually intense and energetic — whether measured by sharply spiked voter turnout, massive campaign cash raised and spent, hordes of newly registered voters, or an unpreceden­ted diversity of candidates.

In some places, voters wanted Trump guiding the nation’s economic and immigratio­n policies and projecting American strength to the world.

But voters elsewhere rejected his appeals to fear and division and his increasing­ly apocalypti­c and fact-challenged rhetoric. They wanted congressio­nal oversight of him and his administra­tion, and protec- tion of guaranteed coverage for those with pre-existing conditions.

That’s the way it’s been with Trump, our national lightning rod since announcing his candidacy in 2015. He again was inescapabl­e in this campaign.

Loathed or loved, he had New Yorkers, like everyone else, checking returns from Florida, Texas, Virginia and beyond to see whether Democrats would take control of the House of Representa­tives, which they did behind a wave of strong women candidates and increasing­ly Democratic suburbs.

The blue wave might not have been quite the tsunami some predicted for the House, nor did it reach the shores of the U.S. Senate, where Republican­s padded their advantage. But it did crest big in New York.

The state got bluer while also making history. Letitia James, New York City’s Democratic public advocate, will become the state’s first black attorney general — and the first woman elected to the position.

She will join a trio of familiar Democrats — Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo, Comptrolle­r Thomas DiNapoli and Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie — who posted easy wins, as expected. Democratic Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand held strong, and the state’s congressio­nal delegation turned bluer with several big wins.

And the Democratic sweep was complete with the party taking firm control of the State Senate, the last vestige of GOP power on the state level.

Andrea Stewart-Cousins (D-Yonkers) will be the first woman to be Senate majority leader, and will force an overdue rewriting of the “three men in a room” adage about who handles the levers of power in Albany.

Democratic control also means likely progress on issues like voting and ethics reforms, gun control and a plastic bag ban. It also will mean suburban Democrats from Long Island will have to work hard to ensure Albany doesn’t become New York City-centric.

And now a reckoning awaits the state Republican Party. It has not broadened its base, nor has it offered a positive vision for New York, and it has not elected anyone statewide since George E. Pataki for governor in 2002.

The best news from Tuesday was the voter turnout, the highest midterm showing since 1982. Whether you were new voters, young voters or previously disillusio­ned, thanks. Democracy is stronger when all of us participat­e.

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