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Miami Turns Red

The U.S. is beginning to see a red wave sweep through the nation as Americans wake up to realize the Democrat's failed policies have destroyed the country— and will only get worse if they continue to elect Leftist politicians. 

On Tuesday, residents elected a Republican mayor in the traditionally Blue-Miami county.

In a landslide victory, Steven Meiner defeated Democrat Michael Gongora by an eight-point margin. The Republican secured 54 percent of the vote, flipping the mostly liberal city conservative. 

"Reducing crime, a safer city, mitigating traffic, responsible development, not overdevelopment, resiliency issues that we need to address," Meiner said as part of his campaign. "I just kept talking about it and talking about it, and I really believe we have great residents, we have great voters, and I believe that would resonate, and the proof is in the pudding; we are standing here right now celebrating."

Meiner is replacing Democrat Dan Gelber, who has held the position since 2017 but was prevented from running again by term limits.

Gelber described Meiner as a "law and order guy," touting the Republican's goal of making the city more "livable." 

This is another example of the conservative movement taking the nation by storm. 

Earlier this month, Long Island Republicans painted the town red after a landslide victory in the deep blue state. 

GOP candidate Ed Romaine outshined his Democrat opponent David Calone in the Suffolk County Executive election, securing 56 percent of the vote and beating Calone by more than 26,000 votes.

It took just three years into President Joe Biden's failed America for die-hard Democrats to change their ways and vote red in the upcoming elections. 

According to a recent CNN poll, there is a massive "enthusiasm advantage" for Republican candidates ahead of the 2024 election. 

Seventy-one percent of likely Republican voters are "extremely motivated" to vote in 2024, while just 61 percent of likely Democrat voters said the same, giving the GOP a ten-point advantage.

Regarding the well-being of the United States and the direction the country is going, only 28 percent of respondents said things were going "well." In contrast, the majority, 72 percent, acknowledged that the nation was doing poorly.