First Read's Morning Clips: What we learned from the primaries

This version of First Read S Morning Clips What We Learned Primaries N909566 - Politics and Government | NBC News Clone was adapted by NBC News Clone to help readers digest key facts more efficiently.

A roundup of the most important political news stories of the day
Image: Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
A banner for progressive challenger Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez hangs across chairs at her victory party in the Bronx after an upset against incumbent Democratic Representative Joseph Crowly on June 26, 2018 in New York City.Scott Heins / Getty Images file

MIDTERM MADNESS: Here’s what we learned from the 2018 primaries

Now that primary season is over, what have we learned? Alex Seitz-Wald offers some takeaways.

Trump's slipping approval numbers are very bad news for House Republicans, NBC's Jonathan Allen writes.

FL-SEN: Rick Scott is breaking with Trump over his Puerto Rico comments.

IL-GOV: Bruce Rauner is apologizing for missteps and promising to be less confrontational if reelected.

MT-SEN: Did Matt Rosendale illegally coordinate with the NRA?

ND-SEN: Kevin Cramer is hitting back at Heitkamp's health care ads.

NY-GOV: After all the hype (though not from us), Andrew Cuomo easily won his primary over Cynthia Nixon.

Democratic insurgents unseated six state senators who had collaborated with Republicans.

And Tish James won the attorney general nod over Zephyr Teachout and Sean Patrick Maloney.

OH-GOV: Campaigning for Richard Cordray, Barack Obama decried "demagogues" in politics.

TX: Republicans in Texas might lose their Senate supermajority this cycle.

TRUMP AGENDA: How to create your own political storm

Trump injected himself into hurricane coverage with his claims that the Hurricane Maria death toll was deliberately inflated by his political foes.

Paul Manafort is getting close to a plea deal with prosecutors.

Trump is looking for a new legal counsel, POLITICO writes— but does loyalty trump credentials?

The Kavanaugh fight is in chaos over a mysterious new letter involving allegations of sexual misconduct when Kavanaugh was in high school.

John Bolton's critique of the International Criminal Court puts him on the same side as some of the world's dictators, the New York Times notes.

March for Life Action released a statement opposing the House appropriations bill, because it reportedly continues funding Planned Parenthood. Here’s the group’s statement.

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