The election is over, and Republicans have swept the White House and Congress

What are their likely policy moves, and how might this affect the political landscape as the new Trump administration takes shape?

Nov 14, 2024

2 min

Kevin Wagner, Ph.D.



The race for the White House is over, and the Republicans have been swept into power with

historic gains in Congress and control of the executive branch.


What will their policy priorities be and how will the new political landscape mold the direction of

the new Trump administration? What will the Democrats, now a minority opposition party, do?

Can they adapt to a winning strategy in time for the midterms in two years?


If you are covering American politics, how do you make sense of all the changes? How do you

know what issues are going to drive decisions in Washington, D.C.? What can polling tell us about

what happened? Where did the polls fall short? What will pollsters be looking at moving

forward?


We have an expert who can help.



Kevin Wagner, Ph.D., is Florida Atlantic University’s renowned political science expert and co-

executive director of Florida Atlantic University Political Communication and Public Opinion Research Lab (PolCom Lab) —the university’s extensive and nationally covered polling operation.


View profile




View some of Kevin Wagner's recent media here:


ABC News


Florida Atlantic University professor of political science Kevin Wagner says Florida’s shift started several years ago and it’s due to a variety of factors.

"Certainly, there was some pretty good evidence that we had people moving from states like California and New York looking for a more conservative environment, and they brought their politics with them when they came to Florida," Wagner said. "That influx of more conservative voters certainly mattered. It's not the only thing that mattered."




WINK


Some voters believe the 60% mark is too high to make constitutional changes. For the threshold to change, it has to be put on the ballot for voters to decide and would need at least 60% of the vote.

“Getting 60% of the voters to agree on anything is really hard and when it’s something that’s highly contested. It makes it even harder,” Florida Atlantic University Political Science Professor Kevin Wagner said.



THE PINNACLE GAZETTE


Political analysts point to various factors contributing to Florida’s Republican shift. Kathryn DePalo-Gould, a political scientist from Florida International University, aptly stated, “It’s now so solidly Republican it is crimson.” This sentiment was echoed by Kevin Wagner from Florida Atlantic University, highlighting how previously competitive races have now become predictable Republican wins. Indeed, Trump’s haul of 61 out of 67 counties stands as a testifier to this changing political tide.




Looking to connect? He is here to answer all your questions and is available for interviews.



Simply click on his icon now to arrange an interview today.

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Kevin Wagner, Ph.D.

Kevin Wagner, Ph.D.

Professor and Department Chair

Kevin Wagner's research and teaching interests include judicial politics, political behavior and legislative behavior

Florida PoliticsPolitics in Film and FictionResearch MethodsPublic Opinion and American PoliticsPolitical Party and Interest Groups

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