The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

In first election after Trump win, the nation speaks

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The echoes are still reverberat­ing from the Hills of Virginia.

And out of the statehouse in Trenton.

And across the Philadelph­ia suburbs, where voters made history in Delaware and Chester counties.

The echoes are voices of voters who used their constituti­onal franchise to send a message — to the White House, to Congress and even their local county and municipal government­s.

Enough.

Enough of the ugly politics that has been in overdrive since Republican Donald Trump ascended to the White House one year ago.

Voters across the country went to their polling places and elected Democrats in startling numbers, a clear repudiatio­n of the ugly tenor set by Trump during his campaign and first nine months in the White House.

The first election since Trump took the oath of office can only be seen as a stinging repudiatio­n of Trump World.

In Virginia, Republican Ed Gillespie, who adopted Trump’s hardline rhetoric on immigratio­n and other issues, was rejected by voters. Democrat Ralph Northam was elected the state’s new governor.

Outgoing Gov. Terry McAuliffe, the former head of the Democratic National Committee, did not shy away from taking aim at the president.

It wasn’t just the governor’s race. Democrats also erased a GOP majority in the Virginia House of Delegates.

And it was not just Virginia. In New Jersey, Democrat Phil Murphy swamped Republican Kim Guadagno, who had served as lieutenant governor under Chris Christie. It’s hard to tell who voters liked less, Christie or Trump.

Murphy, who had never run for public office, called it a repudiatio­n of Trump policies on health care and immigratio­n.

Across the river in the Philly suburbs, local races were capturing national headlines.

In both Delaware and Chester counties, Democrats made history by doing something they had never been able to do.

Now all eyes are turning to the 2018 mid-term elections.

Once again the Philadelph­ia suburbs will be part of the national spotlight. Moderate Republican U.S. Reps. Pat Meehan, R-7 of Chadds Ford, and Ryan Costello, R-6 of West Goshen, will face the minefield that has become Trump politics.

Bet on Dems linking them to the president at every turn, no doubt starting with reminders that while they eventually rejected the GOP health care plan, both initially passed it out of their committees.

It will be a huge election in Pennsylvan­ia, where incumbent Gov. Tom Wolf and U.S. Sen. Bob Casey, both Democrats, will be seeking new terms.

Franklin and Marshall College pollster and public affairs professor Terry Madonna summed up the dilemma for GOP candidates in the wake of Tuesday’s onslaught of Democratic voters at the polls.

“The Republican­s have a major challenge in front of them,” Madonna said. “What do they do with President Trump?”

And what do they do with those echoes from every corner of the country that have been ringing in their ears since last Tuesday.

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