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How Latino support played a key role in Trump’s election victory
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Former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy on Trump’s projected election win
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DACA recipient wins New Mexico legislative seat and other historic 2024 election wins
As the 2024 election results continued rolling in Wednesday morning, the outcomes of federal and state races took shape across the United States. A handful of them marked historic victories, with Congress’ first transgender representative and Maryland’s first Black senator among them.
In New Mexico, voters elected Cindy Nava to join the state legislature, paving the way for a former undocumented person and Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA, recipient to hold a position in public office.
Nava, a Democrat, won New Mexico’s state Senate contest in District 9, which includes a region just north of Albuquerque. She bested Republican candidate Audrey Trujillo with 55% of the vote, according to results shared online by the New Mexico Secretary of State’s office.
Originally from Mexico, Nava came to the U.S. as a young child with her family. She was a Dreamer — a recipient of the DACA program — which was designed to protect undocumented people who arrived in the country as children from being deported. The Obama-era policy took effect in 2012.
Years later, after graduating from college in New Mexico, Nava was appointed to serve as a senior policy adviser at the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development under the Biden administration. She was the first former DACA recipient appointed by the White House, said Nava in a biography that appears on her campaign website.
“I am the first in my family to graduate college, and the first Dreamer (DACA recipient) in the country to be appointed by the White House,” the bio reads. “Now, I am among a small handful of Dreamers in the country who are running for public office.”
Nava’s victory in New Mexico’s state legislature was unprecedented because a former DACA recipient had never successfully become an elected official before this latest election. She could potentially share that milestone with Luis Mata, a Democratic candidate for Tennessee’s House of Representatives in 2024 who was also a Dreamer.
Historic election triumphs touched multiple states.
Delaware
Delaware made huge strides in the 2024 congressional elections. Sarah McBride, a Democrat who has served in the Delaware State Senate and worked in the Obama administration, won her U.S. House race and became the first openly transgender person elected to Congress.
U.S. Rep. Lisa Blunt Rochester, also a Democrat, also became the first woman and the first Black person elected to serve in the U.S. Senate from Delaware. She reached the same milestone for Delaware when she was elected to represent the state in the House in 2017.
The upcoming congressional term will mark the first time two Black women serve simultaneously in the Senate, owing to Rochester’s victory in Delaware and Angela Alsobrooks’ victory in Maryland.
Maryland
Alsobrooks, a Democrat, will become Maryland’s first Black senator after winning her congressional race. She currently serves as the county executive for Prince George’s County, near Washington, D.C.
New Jersey
Democrat Andy Kim won his congressional race in New Jersey, becoming the first Korean American person elected to the U.S. Senate.
North Dakota
Julie Fedorchak, a Republican who sits on North Dakota’s public service commission, will become the first woman from the state in Congress. She was elected to represent North Dakota in the U.S. House of Representatives.
Ohio
Republican Bernie Moreno, of Ohio, became the first Latino elected to the U.S. Senate in that state.
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Police seize record cocaine haul in banana shipment in Spain; woman arrested and 2 suspects at large
Spanish police said Wednesday that they had seized 13 tons of cocaine — the country’s largest-ever haul of the drug — and made one arrest.
Police and customs agents intercepted the cocaine in the southern port of Algeciras on October 14 from a container ship that had arrived from Ecuador’s largest city Guayaquil, a drug-trafficking hub.
The ship carried crates of bananas that concealed identically designed boxes containing the cocaine, and intelligence from Ecuadoran police tipped off the Spanish authorities, national police said in a news release.
A woman believed to be a partner of the importing company was arrested in the central Spanish city of Toledo and two other suspects are on the run, police said.
Spain is a main entry point for drugs into Europe because of its close ties with former colonies in Latin America and its proximity to Morocco, a top cannabis producer.
Massive hauls of drugs have been hidden in banana shipments throughout Europe before. In February, British authorities said they had found more than 12,500 pounds of cocaine hidden in a shipment of bananas, shattering the record for the biggest single seizure of hard drugs in the country. Last August, customs agents in the Netherlands seized 17,600 pounds of cocaine found hidden inside crates of bananas in Rotterdam’s port. Three months before that, a police dog sniffed out 3 tons of cocaine stashed in a case of bananas in the Italian port of Gioia Tauro.