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ADVANCE FOR USE TUESDAY, JAN. 17, 2017 AND THEREAFTER-Former Nebraska Lt. Gov. Kim Robak, a Democrat, and her husband, Bill Mueller, a Republican, stand in their office in Lincoln, Neb., on Wednesday, Jan. 4, 2017. The couple, who run a lobbying and government relations firm, says they hope President-elect Donald Trump can break the ideological gridlock in Washington. Though neither was a Trump supporter, they are trying to remain positive about his presidency and even hope it might make hyper-partisan Washington, D.C., a bit more like Lincoln. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

ADVANCE FOR USE TUESDAY, JAN. 17, 2017 AND THEREAFTER-Former Nebraska Lt. Gov. Kim Robak, a Democrat, and her husband, Bill Mueller, a Republican, stand in their office in Lincoln, Neb., on Wednesday, Jan. 4, 2017. The couple, who run a lobbying and government relations firm, says they hope President-elect Donald Trump can break the ideological gridlock in Washington. Though neither was a Trump supporter, they are trying to remain positive about his presidency and even hope it might make hyper-partisan Washington, D.C., a bit more like Lincoln. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

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