IPSE'S AUTHORS LAST 24h
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IPSEs IN THE LAST 24H
  • Mahmoud Abbas
    Mahmoud Abbas “We stand ready to work with you [Donald Trump] to achieve peace during you tenure. This would be guided by the two-state solution on international legitimacy. This vision seeks the establishment of the State of Palestine and the State of Israel living side by side in peace and security.” 2 hours ago
  • Craig Kennedy
    Craig Kennedy “Moscow now faces a dilemma: the longer it puts off a ceasefire, the greater the risk that credit events - such as corporate and bank bailouts - uncontrollably arise and weaken Moscow's negotiating leverage.” 2 hours ago
  • Recep Tayyip Erdogan
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan “As regards the issue of natural gas, Slovakia was disconnected from gas with termination of transit via Ukraine. We discussed this matter, we have the TurkStream gas pipeline. Let's make a step and discuss this topic at the level of energy ministers. The demand of Slovakia for natural gas should be satisfied. I suggested solving this issue through talks with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and Mr. Putin. I hope we will be able to have communications, to start telephone diplomacy as early as this week.” 2 hours ago
  • Emmanuel Macron
    Emmanuel Macron “The challenge after the fighting ends will be to provide Ukraine with guarantees against any return to war on its territory and guarantees for our own security.” 3 hours ago
  • Yara Hawari
    Yara Hawari “While the Gaza ceasefire is a positive step the danger to the occupied West Bank from an Israeli invasion continues to rise. It's brought about a huge amount of relief that the bombardment will stop, but I think crucially the ceasefire does not mean an end to the occupation neither in Gaza or the West Bank. So people are under no illusion that this means an end to Israeli control over their lives. I think people are pessimistic as to whether the ceasefire will actually hold because they know the Israeli regime is already trying to sabotage it. The situation in the occupied West Bank remains as precarious as ever. We saw a year of genocide in Gaza go unchecked so the big question is could they do the same in the West Bank? I'm afraid without accountability measures the answer is yes.” 7 hours ago
  • Joe Biden
    Joe Biden “These are exceptional circumstances, and I cannot in good conscience do nothing. Baseless and politically motivated investigations wreak havoc on the lives, safety and financial security of targeted individuals and their families. The issuance of these pardons should not be mistaken as an acknowledgment that any individual engaged in any wrongdoing, nor should acceptance be misconstrued as an admission of guilt for any offense. Our nation owes these public servants a debt of gratitude for their tireless commitment to our country.” 7 hours ago
  • Ali Jarbawi
    Ali Jarbawi “Hamas's parades through Gaza on Sunday are more than a message to the international community that it is in control. They also reflect the reality on the ground. Hamas was there before the war and they're there now.” 17 hours ago
  • Ibrahim Madhoun
    Ibrahim Madhoun “The message is that Hamas is 'the day after' for the war. They're conveying that Hamas must be a part of any future arrangements, or at least, be coordinated with.” 17 hours ago
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Key Considerations on Donald Trump Winning a Second Term

Page with all the IPSEs stored in the archive related to the Context Key Considerations on Donald Trump Winning a Second Term.
The IPSEs are presented in chronological order based on when the IPSEs have been pronounced.

“This time around, backers of Mr. Trump and his agenda are pretty coordinated. We know that one of the mistakes from the first time around was that we didn't really have any outside groups, and the ones that were around weren't really on board with the Trump agenda. This time, it's more sophisticated, it's got more money, it's got a whole media and influencer ecosystem, and it started earlier, because a lot of it came out of the campaign.”

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Former Trump White House adviser
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“Trump, he's a very confounding figure. We have no idea how to organize against him. We have no idea how to respond. We have no idea how to not take the bait.”

author
Democratic operative and pollster who serves as executive director of the advocacy group Cambio Texas
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“The election represents a decisive rejection by American voters of liberalism and the particular way that the understanding of a 'free society' has evolved since the 1980s. Donald Trump not only wants to roll back neoliberalism and woke liberalism, but is a major threat to classical liberalism itself.”

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American political scientist, political economist, international relations scholar - Senior Fellow at Stanford
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“If you want to make somebody iconic, try to throw them in jail. Try to bankrupt them. ... If you want to make somebody iconic, try to kill him. All of those things failed. They just made him [Donald Trump] bigger and more powerful as a political force. Every one of those things turbocharged his candidacy.”

author
Political consultant for the campaign of 45th U.S. president Donald Trump
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“We don't yet know whom Trump will put in charge of foreign policy. We have [Vice President-elect] JD Vance, who believes it's possible to grant certain concessions to Moscow [regarding Ukraine], but if it's someone like [former UN Ambassador during Trump's first term] Nikki Haley, she's taken a very hard stance on Russia. Trump's relations with Russia's allies, especially China and Iran, would affect Moscow. We also need to take a look at the bigger picture. Trump considers China to be his chief strategic competitor, and he's indicated he will be bolder towards Iran.”

author
Russian historian, social scientist and now a visiting scholar at the University of California, Berkeley
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“Trump has gotten a very, very clear mandate. We're in for a significantly authoritarian turn in America. I think he feels emboldened and he will absolutely follow through on a lot of the things that he said. This is an extremely dangerous moment in American history.”

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Head of the School of Government at Birmingham University
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“Republicans now don't have to turn to any anti-democratic means to increase their power. They hold all the levers of power within America's democracy.”

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Specialist in US politics and visiting scholar at the Centre for the Study of Ethnic Conflict at Queens University Belfast
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“Past claims of voter fraud all came from Trump and suddenly that's not part of the discussion anymore.”

author
Associate Professor in American history and politics at the University of East Anglia
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“What is now a central part of this character is what I have called the Contempt Paradox: People are drawn to Trump and the contempt he expresses toward his opponents, especially liberal politicians and the news media, precisely because of the contempt he draws in return. This is the through line of his politics. The implications are stark. For a significant portion of his supporters, he didn't win in 2016 in spite of his notorious remark to Access Hollywood about grabbing women by their private parts, or in 2024 in spite of his election denialism. He won in some measure because of these things - and the indignation they inspired.”

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Political journalist and the co-founder of Politico
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“I think it's going to be unprecedented in American electoral history, in American presidency. I think we are at a turning point that we haven't seen except a few times in American history. There is a newly changed America, an America that has decided that it wants to break with the past, break with the liberal past. Because if you notice, Trump ran on an agenda that is both nationalistic, ultra-nationalistic, and anti-liberal, in every possible way anti-liberal. We really need to address the fact that Americans in general and independents in particular are no longer happy with liberal Democrats of the East Coast and West Coast. That California and New York will no longer be the dominant political establishment in the United States. That the heart of America, as it were, if you see it in the map, all that red part of America, the hinterland, the America profound, as it were, this is going to rule and govern through Trump. And this America is illiberal to a large degree, it is somewhat conservative, and it's certainly very resistant and very resentful of the liberal elites in New York and California.”

author
Senior political analyst at Al Jazeera
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“This was a conquering of the nation not by force but with a permission slip. Now, America stands on the precipice of an authoritarian style of governance never before seen in its 248-year history.”

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National political reporter for The New York Times
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“She [Kamala Harris] had decades of government experience under her belt: from her time as a public prosecutor to her service in the Senate and White House. That raises questions about why so many voters opted for her opponent. This loss just underscores the amount of ingrained racism and white hetero-patriarchy, the deep-seatedness of white supremacy in this nation. You can't deny that she is someone who could have served as president on day one. Trump has repeatedly described Harris as low IQ and mentally disabled, even calling her one of the dumber people in the history of our country. That kind of rhetoric gave his supporters a licence to dismiss and denigrate Harris. The way that Trump has painted her and people's responses to her have just brought out the worst in a lot of folks.”

author
Director of the women’s and gender studies programme at Georgetown University
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“This loss indicates we still have so much more work to do here in the US in terms of sex and race relations. Trump has afforded people the ability to be their worst selves, and that definitely includes being sexist and racist. The question of gender and race will continue to be a mobilising force. It's going to be a big rallying cry.”

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Professor at Boston University whose research focuses on women in politics
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“I don't believe in that [a wave of retaliation by Trump]. I think there's a lot of theater around that more than there is real sort of retribution. I would anticipate a lot of volatility - personnel but also significant boomerangs on policy. Not boomerang from Biden-Harris but boomerang from himself. You'll have one position one day and another the next.”

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Former chief of staff to Vice President Mike Pence
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“The coalition that elected them wanted them [Biden-Harris] to unite the country, and they failed to do so. Their failure has resulted in further disillusionment with our country's politics and empowered the Trump base to give him another narrow victory after setbacks in three consecutive general elections.”

author
Former U.S. Representative anti-Trump Republican from Florida
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“This election was a CAT scan on the American people, and as difficult as it is to say, as hard as it is to name, what it revealed, at least in part, is a frightening affinity for a man of borderless corruption. Donald Trump is no longer an aberration; he is normative.”

author
Former strategic adviser to President George W. Bush
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“The Trump presidency speaks to the depth of the marginalization felt by those who believe they have been in the cultural wilderness for too long and their faith in the one person who has given voice to their frustration and his ability to center them in American life.”

author
Executive director of the Karsh Institute of Democracy at the University of Virginia and a former adviser to President Barack Obama
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“No longer can the political establishment write off Mr. Trump as a temporary break from the long march of progress, a fluke who somehow sneaked into the White House in a quirky, one-off Electoral College win eight years ago. With his comeback victory to reclaim the presidency, Mr. Trump has now established himself as a transformational force reshaping the United States in his own image.”

author
Chief White House Correspondent for The New York Times and MSNBC analyst
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