In Virginia, New Jersey and beyond, Democratic voters powered their candidates to victory and sent a warning sign to President Trump and his Republican Party.

Nov. 5, 2025Updated 10:21 a.m. ET
It was the wave election of 2025.
Democrats, furious about President Trump’s remaking of American government and society, turned out in extraordinary numbers for an off-year election to sweep virtually every competitive election on the map.
The results served as a rebuke of Mr. Trump and his Republican Party and a salve for Democrats who have not had many good nights in the last year. Next will come a fierce, yearlong fight, first in redistricting battles and then the midterm elections, for control of the House of Representatives and the fate of Mr. Trump’s agenda during the final two years of his term.
Here are six takeaways from the first major elections of the second Trump era.
Democrats finally showed some fight.
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Democrats have spent the last year locked out of power in Washington, searching furiously but mostly in vain for ways to stop President Trump from expanding his power.
They held protests, spoke all night in the Senate and organized “No Kings” rallies that drew millions across the country.
On Tuesday, they finally hit back in a more concrete way.
Democrats won statewide elections in Virginia, New Jersey, California and Pennsylvania. They flipped seats on Georgia’s Public Service Commission. And they were on the verge of winning a near two-thirds majority in the Virginia House of Delegates, an extraordinary sweep of battleground districts in races that serve as a plausible stand-in for how voters view both parties given the anonymous nature of most of the candidates.
In New York City, Zohran Mamdani was hovering just over 50 percent of the vote in the mayoral race as he coasted past former Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo, who won support from Mr. Trump and other Republicans.
When Democrats roared to victory in 2017, during Mr. Trump’s first term, it foreshadowed a blue wave in the midterms a year later. On Tuesday night, House Democratic officials were crowing that this year’s results would help them recruit strong candidates to challenge Republicans next year.
It was a bad night for Donald Trump.
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In Virginia, Abigail Spanberger won the governor’s race by focusing on Mr. Trump’s firing of federal workers and the impact of the government shutdown on her state.
In New Jersey, Representative Mikie Sherrill finished her successful campaign by railing against Mr. Trump’s demand that a key Hudson River tunnel be “terminated.”
In New York City, Mr. Trump’s Election Eve endorsement of Mr. Cuomo caused Republicans to swing toward the former governor, but failed to thwart Mr. Mamdani.
And in California, voters responded to calls to save the nation from Mr. Trump by approving a ballot measure to redraw the state’s congressional districts to shift five of them to Democrats from Republicans.
The president was not on the ballot in any of these places, but in each one, Democrats ran against his policies and yoked their opponents to him.
After similar results in New Jersey and Virginia eight years ago, Democrats nearly ran the table in the 2018 midterm elections. Democrats are already arguing that Tuesday was a harbinger for the 2026 midterms, while Republicans claim it was a blue-state blip.
Mamdani gives Democrats a new leader.
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In a year’s time, Zohran Mamdani has gone from searching for random New Yorkers to talk to him to becoming one of the biggest stars in American politics.
Now the New York City mayor-elect at 34 years old, he represents the vanguard of Democratic politics. He is an unabashed progressive and a self-described democratic socialist who is sympathetic to the Palestinian cause.
He also offers a new strategic blueprint to a Democratic Party that has for a decade been defined primarily by its opposition to Mr. Trump.
Mr. Mamdani, in defeating Mr. Cuomo in both the primary and general elections, gave New York voters a clear alternative with a defined vision. He focused relentlessly on the cost of living, spoke endlessly about the prices of nearly everything and expressed an adoration for New York City that few other politicians show for the places they call home.
And he did it by blazing a creative, compelling path online, both through his own social media channels and his appearances with scores of influencers and podcasters.
Mr. Mamdani’s progressive politics may not play as well outside New York City, and Republicans have already signaled they will seek to tie the party’s candidates to a Muslim immigrant, but Democrats running in the midterm elections are likely to copy his tactics and message discipline.
Even Democrats will shrug at a scandal.
In the final weeks of Virginia’s campaign for attorney general, it was revealed that Jay Jones, the Democratic nominee, had sent violent text messages about a political rival and had been caught driving 116 miles per hour.
But no prominent Virginia Democrat called for him to quit the race. Mr. Jones apologized, withstood a torrent of attack ads and rode huge Democratic turnout to victory.
The post-shame era continues apace.
Such was the antipathy toward Republican candidates in Virginia that Mr. Jones, even saddled with controversy, performed better than Vice President Kamala Harris did last year in Loudoun County, a key exurb of Washington.
Mr. Jones’s political future might have a ceiling because of his scandals in this election, but for tonight, at least, he is as happy as can be.
No Trump on the ballot? Advantage, Democrats.
Mr. Trump drives Republican voters to the polls — but only when he is on the ballot.
Democrats have overperformed in every nonpresidential election year since 2017. Their voters are now the ones who turn out for off-year and midterm elections, while Mr. Trump’s loyal Republican base turns out in big numbers only in presidential years.
This played out this year in Wisconsin’s Supreme Court race, when the liberal candidate prevailed by double digits, and in a series of special elections. It was again evident on Tuesday as Democrats prevailed easily in Virginia and New Jersey.
Mr. Trump will not be on the ballot in next year’s midterm elections, but it is a safe bet that Democrats will again try to make him the centerpiece of their campaigns.
Newsom helped House Democrats, and himself.
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Gov. Gavin Newsom of California has been on a not-very-secret mission for national attention since before the 2024 presidential election.
And with a blowout victory in a ballot measure to redraw the state’s congressional map in Democrats’ favor, Mr. Newsom helped his party’s midterm chances and proved that he could turn out voters in a critical election.
In the short term, the nearly two-to-one margin for “yes” on California’s ballot measure may serve as fuel for Democrats in other blue states weighing their own redistricting plans. In his victory remarks, Mr. Newsom made an explicit call for other states — including ones with ambitious Democratic governors, like Colorado, Illinois and Maryland — to follow California’s lead on redistricting before the midterm elections.
Ahead of the next presidential contest, it provides Mr. Newsom with concrete evidence of what he did to combat Mr. Trump in an era when Democratic voters are hungry for fighters.
How he uses that platform remains to be seen, but it is not much of a mystery where his ambition lies.
Reid J. Epstein is a Times reporter covering campaigns and elections from Washington.

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