From National Review, 12 takeaways from the election.
From FrontpageMag, the real losers have been identified, and they're the pollsters.
From The Washington Free Beacon, more items from the election.
From the Washington Examiner, Republicans appear to be on the way to holding the Senate.
From The Federalist, some interesting developments in Wisconsin and Michigan.
From American Thinker, swing states run by Democrats suddenly have to pause their vote-counting.
From LifeZette, Madison Cawthorne (R-NC) will become will become the U.S.'s youngest congresscritter.
From NewsBusters, CBS This Morning admits that last night was not that good for Democrats.
From Canada Free Press, the election has left the U.S. "in a deadly state of flux".
From CBC News, according to a truck driver, a self-isolation hotel in Yellowknife, Northwest Territories, Canada is a "free for all".
From Global News, the fate of an old Anglican church in Saint-Lambert, Quebec, Canada is still undecided.
From CTV News, Canada relaxes its border restrictions for Hyder, Alaska, USA.
From Morocco World News, Spain approves a €5 million loan to Morocco for building desalinization plants.
From Hürriyet Daily News, rescues in İzmir, Turkey are declared complete, with the death toll from the recent earthquake at 114.
From Turkish Minute, after their sentences are overturned by Turkey's Supreme Court of Appeals, eight journalists go on retrial for alleged Gülen links.
From Rûdaw, "palm climbers" in Iraq struggle for survival.
From ArmenPress, Azeri commandos reportedly conduct a false flag operation against an Armenian ambulance.
From In-Cyprus, parts of the Cypriot cities of Nicosia, Limassol and Paphos are without electricity.
From The Syrian Observer, the International Coalition arrests an ISIS leader believed responsible for assassinations in the Syrian governorate of Deir ez-Zor.
From Arutz Sheva, according to Prime Minister Netanyahu, street stores in Israel will open next Sunday.
From The Times Of Israel, according to an op-ed, whether its 1996 Israel or the U.S. today, every legitimate vote counts.
From The Jerusalem Post, IDF troops stop an attempted terror attack near Nablus, West Bank.
From YNetNews, southern Israel experiences widespread flooding.
From the Egypt Independent, photos from the development on Egypt's Giza Plateau.
From Egypt Today, Egyptian Prime Minister Mostafa Madbouli takes the right to issue construction licenses from municipal authorities and gives it to universities.
From the Ethiopian Monitor, the Ethiopian government declares a state of emergency in the region of Tigray.
From the Saudi Gazette, 1.2 million bottles of water from the Zamzam well are distributed at the Grand Mosque in Mecca.
From The New Arab, the airline Flydubai will launch commercial flights to Tel Aviv, Israel later this month.
From Radio Farda, according to Minister of Industry, Mines and Trade Alireza Razm Hosseini, prices of essential goods in Iran "will change significantly next week".
From IranWire, will Tehran's coronavirus "fiasco" become a "catastrophe"?
From Dawn, Pakistan looks forward to working with the U.S. president, no matter which of the two it is.
From The Express Tribune, according to Pakistan Peoples Party Chairman Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, Prime Minister Imran Khan gives relief to the rich and makes the poor poorer.
From Pakistan Today, a 14-year-old girl in the Pakistani province of Sindh seeks court protection after being married to her 18-year-old teacher.
From Khaama Press, 13 Afghan security officials are "detained for bungling" in their response to a terror attack at Kabul University.
From The Hans India, nine people are killed in an explosion and fire at a cotton mill in Ahmedabad, India.
From the Hindustan Times, according to the CEO of the Serum Institute of India, a coronavirus vaccine will likely be available by January of 2021.
From India Today, India successfully tests an advanced variant of the Pinaka rocket system.
From the Dhaka Tribune, the Bangladeshi government plans to import 1.3 million metric tons of crude oil and 105,000 metric tons of fertilizer.
From the Daily Mirror, 41 more police officers in Borella, Sri Lanka test positive for the coronavirus, bringing their department's total to 56.
From the Colombo Page, according to President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, Sri Lanka will not be locked down.
From Maldives Insider, Gulf Air will resume flights to the Maldive Islands starting on December 12th.
From The Jakarta Post, an Indonesian military officer in the province of West Java is discharged after being convicted of committing adultery.
From The Straits Times, according to Health Minister Gan Kim Yong, phase three of Singapore's reopening from its coronavirus measures could last a year.
From the Borneo Post, Malaysia's health ministry proposes that all lawmakers and their staffs undergo coronavirus testing every two weeks.
From Free Malaysia Today, all Malaysian parliamentcritters are told to avoid functions and gatherings.
From Vietnam Plus, Vietnam's deputies discuss reducing poverty in the country's ethnic and mountainous regions.
From Gatestone Institute, a report warns of Islamist radicalization in France.
From The Stream, Republican women and minority candidates have a big night.
From The Daily Signal, the House Freedom Caucus might add seven new members.
From HistoryNet, the U.S. Marines who died at Belleau Wood in France.
From Space War, the U.S. agrees to sell four MQ-9 Reaper drones to Taiwan.
From The Daily Wire, the Trump campaign claims "victory" in Pennsylvania, but media outlets don't agree.
From WPVI-TV, the Trump campaign files lawsuits in Pennsylvania and Michigan and asks for a recount in Wisconsin.
And from WLWT, Rabbit Hash, Kentucky elects a new four-legged mayor. (If you want to see more of Rabbit Hash, go to this blog's archives for June 2017. The story comes via the New York Post.)
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