The Morning: Our election guide
Plus, an earthquake in Afghanistan, the New York City Marathon and Martha Stewart
The Morning
November 3, 2025

Good morning and a happy Monday to all who celebrate.

Since I last wrote, President Trump said the U.S. was not planning to go to war with Venezuela. The British police arrested a man after a stabbing rampage on a train injured 11 people. And last night, a strong earthquake shook northern Afghanistan.

In New York City’s race for mayor, about 750,000 people — including many young voters — have already cast their ballots. Tomorrow is an off-year Election Day across the United States. I’d like to focus on that before we get to the rest of the news.

A woman walking passed a sign that says, “Vote here," in several languages.
Early voting in Brooklyn, New York, yesterday. Dave Sanders for The New York Times

An election guide

Off-year elections aren’t as consequential as presidential or midterm elections. But governors’ races and ballot measures still matter plenty.

“They allow us to get a sense of where voter attitudes and energy are moving,” said Carolyn Ryan, a managing editor of The Times who used to run our Politics desk.

We were talking in her office in the center of the newsroom, with editors and reporters lined up outside to get her counsel. “They’ll deliver the best view yet of how voters are feeling and reacting to the first year of the second Trump administration,” she told me.

There are two possibilities for that view, and they could both end up being true.

  • Republicans want to see whether the gains Trump picked up among both young and nonwhite voters have cemented. That is particularly true of the contests in California, New Jersey, Virginia and Pennsylvania.
  • Democrats hope the results show that they are not still reeling from their loss of the White House in 2024, and that they can point to a path forward for 2028.

Here’s what to watch for tomorrow.

California

A view from the audience of Gov. Gavin Newsom standing on a stage and speaking while holding a microphone
Gov. Gavin Newsom of California Gabriela Bhaskar/The New York Times

For 15 years, California has used a nonpartisan commission to draw the map of congressional districts. That meant neither side got an advantage, even if it controlled the State House. It proved popular, and a number of states created similar commissions. But Trump has pushed red states to make new districts that favor Republicans so they can hold onto the majority in Congress.

In response, California’s leaders are asking voters to set aside the existing maps and replace them with ones drawn by Democratic lawmakers. The result could flip as many as five seats in next year’s midterm elections.

Republicans call it a power grab. Democrats call it part of a national effort to establish a check on the power of the Trump administration.

Carolyn and Jess Bidgood, who hosts the On Politics newsletter (sign up!), call it a test measuring the desire of voters in states run by Democrats to take on the president. “In this hyperpartisan moment,” Jess said, “the real question is, Are voters willing to be hyperpartisan?”

See what the gerrymandered districts could look like.

New York City

Andrew Cuomo, Zohran Mamdani and Curtis Sliwa, who wear suits, standing on a debate stage against a dark background.
A debate in the New York City mayoral race. Hiroko Masuike/The New York Times

It’s the new against the familiar in the mayoral race here, with Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani well ahead in the polls against former Gov. Andrew Cuomo and the activist, radio personality and former subway guardian Curtis Sliwa. Mamdani has promised to make the city affordable — and drawn fire from his rivals, as well as some Democrats, for left-wing views and criticism of Israel. Watch for a changing of the guard or a repudiation of an upstart. Trump has vowed to punish the city if Mamdani wins.

New Jersey

A split screen of Mikie Sherrill, who has blond hair, and Jack Ciattarelli, who has gray hair and wears a red tie and a dark blazer.
Mikie Sherrill, left, and Jack Ciattarelli Kriston Jae Bethel for The New York Times

The governor’s race between Mikie Sherrill, a Democrat who has served in the House since 2019, and Jack Ciattarelli, a Republican businessman and former state legislator, is the one both Jess and Carolyn are watching most closely. It’s a nail-biter, with recent polls showing Sherrill’s lead slipping amid a lot of negative advertising. (Ciattarelli has accused Sherrill of misconduct during her time at the Naval Academy. Sherrill has accused Ciattarelli of spreading misinformation about opioids.) “The race has been a lot closer than many experts would have expected,” Carolyn said.

The state’s majority-Hispanic townships all swung for Trump. Tomorrow’s vote will test the durability of that rightward shift, our reporters write.

Virginia

Abigail Spanberger, who wears a blue jacket, standing in front of campaign posters and speaking in a microphone.
Abigail Spanberger Kirsten Luce for The New York Times

The people of Virginia typically vote for governors who are members of the party that’s not in the White House. No wonder the Democrat in this year’s race, Abigail Spanberger, a moderate former House representative, holds a significant polling lead over her Republican rival, Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears.

Spanberger has built her campaign not on national issues, but on how much it costs to live and thrive in Virginia, which she argues has been disproportionately hurt by the government shutdown. But she’s also known to compromise. Earle-Sears, for her part, has secured only a lukewarm endorsement from Trump, who usually keeps his distance from Republicans he thinks will lose. “I haven’t been too much involved in Virginia,” Trump said.

So why watch this one? Two reasons. Whoever wins will be a barrier breaker: No woman has ever served as governor of Virginia. Second, as Jess pointed out, if Spanberger wins, some Democrats will say her campaign could provide a road map for Democrats in the midterms — and beyond.

Here are the latest polls on the race.

Pennsylvania

Portraits of Justices Kevin Dougherty, Christine Donohue and David Wecht, who are standing against a backdrop of leaves and smiling.
From left, Justices Kevin Dougherty, Christine Donohue and David Wecht Michelle Gustafson for The New York Times

Justices are elected to 10-year terms on the State Supreme Court here, and Democrats hold a five-seat majority. But three Democrats are up for “retention” elections, meaning voters can send them home. The election to replace them would take place in 2027.

That doesn’t sound very exciting. (“True,” Jess told me.) But the outcome of the election could determine whether the seven-member court has a liberal majority during the 2028 presidential election. Jess said this matters because the Pennsylvania State Supreme Court is the highest court in the most important swing state in the country.

Read more on why this election matters.

Maine

I’ve got family in Maine and will be watching the results there closely. A proposal the state’s voters will take up tomorrow would eliminate two days of early absentee voting, require photo identification in order to vote, ban prepaid return envelopes for absentee ballots and limit drop boxes.

“It’s pretty hard to convince voters to make the cumbersome process of voting harder,” Jess said. “So I think the vote will be a test of Trump’s rhetoric about rigging elections, about voter fraud, and how deeply that message has resonated with the electorate.”

You can follow all the election updates tomorrow on our website. Now, let’s get you caught up on the latest news.

THE LATEST NEWS

Trump Administration

Europe

  • British officials said that a stabbing attack this weekend that injured 11 people was not terrorism related, but offered no other potential motive.

More International News

  • The earthquake in northern Afghanistan killed at least 15 people. The quake struck near Mazar-i-Sharif, a city known for its magnificent Blue Mosque.
  • Xi Jinping, China’s leader, gave two cellphones to South Korea’s president, who asked how secure they were. His answer: “You can check if there’s a backdoor.”
  • A massacre is unfolding in Sudan, and the world is largely looking away, my colleague Declan Walsh writes in The World.

Other Big Stories

OPINIONS

Regardless what polling on single issues might suggest, Americans are moderate. They’re primed to vote no on almost any change, German Lopez writes.

Here’s a columns by M. Gessen on Israeli dissidents.

Watch today’s stories, free in the app.

The new Watch tab brings you closer to the story with videos across news and culture. Watch free in the app.

MORNING READS

An older Japanese man pushing a blue tricycle with baskets at the front and the back
In Tokyo. Chang W. Lee/The New York Times

Never retire? Some people over 100 in Japan say work keeps them thriving.

Painting furniture: See soothing, close-up videos of how to do it.

Your pick: The most-clicked link in The Morning yesterday was about Trump choosing to keep some ballroom donors incognito.

Metropolitan Diary: Don’t let the city eat you.

Personal assistant: In her 1993 biography, Maria Riva revealed the price she paid for the fame of her mother, the movie star Marlene Dietrich. Riva died at 100.

SPORTS

Women in blue uniforms that read, “India Champions,” cheering with their hands in the air in a packed stadium.
India’s national women’s cricket team Francis Mascarenhas/Reuters

Personal victory: After facing seemingly insurmountable odds, India’s national women’s cricket team won its first World Cup.

N.F.L.: The Los Angeles Chargers rallied around Daiyan Henley, who helped his team beat the Tennessee Titans. See what happened in Week 9.

N.B.A.: The Oklahoma City Thunder are the N.B.A.’s last undefeated team standing as Shai Gilgeous-Alexander led his team to a win over the New Orleans Pelicans.

WHAT MARTHA DID

Martha Stewart sits in a plush winged chair at a table set with elegant china, glassware and flowers.
Martha Stewart Michael Skott

It’s been 43 years since Martha Stewart published her first cookbook, “Entertaining,” and exploded the idea of the modest dinner party. Out was a roast chicken and green salad. Here came “A Light Summer Dinner for Eight to Ten” or “A Hawaiian Luau for Twenty,” all accompanied by beautiful antiques, copious candles, miles of jacquard.

The book was equal measure camp and goal-setting, as my old pal Julia Moskin writes today: “an odd hybrid of a professional catering manual, an aspirational but practical cookbook and celebrity lifestyle porn.”

It remains so today, as Martha’s publisher issues a reprint this week. Julia uses the new edition to take measure of what’s changed for Martha, for our cooking, for our kitchens and cookbooks and dining rooms. For more than four decades, Martha has been a hero — and, to some, a cartoon villain. She has always argued, Julia writes, “that domestic goddess is a role worth striving for — a creative and professional project akin to directing a movie or building an app.”

“I wanted to be a homemaker,” Martha told her in an interview. “I wasn’t a housewife or a housekeeper. I wanted to make a home.”