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 POLITICS 
WASHINGTON - A year after Donald Trump swept to power, Republicans face their first major test at the polls, with voters in two of the most populous US states set to deliver their verdict on the president's return to the White House.
The high-profile mayoral contest in New York City may be grabbing the headlines, but the races for the governor's mansions in New Jersey and Virginia -- home to a combined 18 million people -- offer a sharper preview of next year's midterm elections.
Both pit centrist Democrats against Republicans aligned with Trump's Make America Great Again (MAGA) movement, and could signal whether middle-of-the-road voters have made peace with the president's radical cost-slashing agenda -- or plan to give his party a bloody nose in 2026.
Trump has sent a steamroller through government since returning to office in January, shuttering entire agencies and cutting an estimated 200,000 jobs even before the government shutdown.
"If Democrats sweep -- or even win -- Virginia and edge New Jersey, it signals the suburbs haven't forgiven MAGA," California-based financial and political analyst Michael Ashley Schulman told AFP.
The election in Virginia, which is second only to California in the size of its federal workforce, will be a historic showdown between two women vying to become the state's first female governor.
Democrat Abigail Spanberger, a former CIA officer and three-term congresswoman, faces Republican Lieutenant Governor Winsome Earle-Sears, a Marine veteran and staunch Trump ally.
Polls show Spanberger -- who has leaned on her national security credentials and cast herself as a bulwark against Trump's aggressive federal downsizing -- holding a steady lead of about seven points.
She has vowed in stump speeches to be "a governor who will stand up" for the thousands of federal workers laid off by Trump's Department of Government Efficiency.