Two, Ron DeSantis won a second term as Florida governor by a landslide. That paves the way for him to challenge Trump for the candidacy. Indeed, that wry smile in response to the “two more years” chants at his campaign event spoke volumes.

Trump recognized the threat and has launched a warning shot to his rival: “If he runs, he could hurt himself very badly,” Trump said in an interview Monday with Fox News and other outlets. “I would tell you things about him that won’t be very flattering.”

Economic Woes
Voters in both parties seemed clear-eyed about the impact of inflation on the economy. It was the top issue in exit polls, with 79% saying it had caused a hardship for their family, according to network exit polls. One in five said it was a severe hardship.

Inflation—which, along with the economy in general, regularly tops the lists of voter concerns—is the highest in a generation, eating into paychecks. And yet many of those voters didn’t seem to hold Biden or the Democrats responsible: 42% said they still trusted the Democratic party to handle the issue better. 

Republicans and Democrats have each painted dramatically different pictures of the economy’s health. The GOP put the soaring cost of living at the center of their campaigns, blaming Biden and his party. Meanwhile Biden and his party have focused on an unemployment figure that is at its lowest in decades and an ongoing hiring boom that has kept-up consumer spending.

For markets, a divided government has traditionally proved a boon because it blocks any major legislation that risks roiling the outlook for the economy. Investors have already been crushed this year by the Federal Reserve’s campaign to curb inflation. Gridlock that hobbles Democrats’ ability to pass major fiscal measures would remove one potential reason for Fed Chair Jerome Powell to raise interest rates even further.

Support for Abortion Rights
Abortion rights were on the mind of many voters, particularly women. People from Michigan to California overwhelmingly voiced their support for abortion rights at the state level after the Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision to roll back federal protections.

Heather Bastian, a 42 year-old living in Garrison, New York, said her number one issue is abortion. “I do not want our state government to slip into controlling my body,” she said.

Michigan and California will now amend their constitutions to add the right to choose to have an abortion and use contraceptives. In Vermont, voters added an even broader right to “personal reproductive autonomy.” 

The success of the state-level abortion protections demonstrate the widespread disconnect between the public and the Supreme Court, which erased 50 years of precedent in its June decision to leave abortion rights decisions to the states. The support for these ballot measures in a wide variety of states is likely to spur similar efforts in coming years in additional jurisdictions.

--With assistance from Carly Wanna and Gregory Korte.

This article was provided by Bloomberg News.

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