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Sunday, November 17, 2024

Tough times for Trump as Democrats seize lower house of Congress

News Desk |

Democrats seized control of the lower house of Congress in midterm elections, dealing a stern rebuke to Donald Trump almost two years into his polarizing, rollercoaster presidency. Media channels called the result in the US House of Representatives while confirming expectations that Trump´s Republicans will retain control of the Senate.

The result upends the balance of power in Washington, where Trump has enjoyed an easy ride from Republican dominance of both houses of Congress since his shock election in 2016. Democrats will now be able to block legislation and light a fire under Trump´s feet with investigations of his opaque finances and Russian interference in his 2016 election, and possibly push for impeachment.

Even so, Democrats were highly confident, with Nancy Pelosi, the party´s top leader in the House, saying “it´s just a question of the size of the victory.”

The verdicts in the House and Senate were based on incomplete results as vote counting continued across the country and some states were still voting in a congressional election cast as an unofficial referendum on Trump. Giddy predictions by Democrats of a so-called “blue wave” landslide in the House were still premature, even if a majority appeared guaranteed.

Trump was watching the results roll in from the White House, where he spent the day holed up with friends and family. Americans voted enthusiastically, with long lines quickly forming at polling stations from New York to California and from Missouri to Georgia. All 435 seats in the House of Representatives, 35 seats in the 100-member Senate and 36 governorships were up for grabs.

Read more: Trump calls midterm elections ‘tremendous success’

Democrats quickly made important gains in the House, but Republicans defended in crucial races, like incumbent Andy Barr of Kentucky, whose House seat had seemed at risk. In the Senate, Republican Mike Braun snatched the seat from Democratic Senator Joe Donnelly, but corruption scandal-tainted Senator Bob Menendez saved his seat for the Democrats in New Jersey.

Pollsters, gun shy after getting their 2016 presidential prediction wrong, urged caution. Trump had fought hard before polling day, crisscrossing the country to claim that Democrats would introduce socialism and making incendiary attacks on illegal immigration that opponents denounced as racist.

“The midterm elections used to be, like, boring,” Trump told a crowd in Cleveland, Ohio, on Monday. “Now it´s like the hottest thing.”

Even so, Democrats were highly confident, with Nancy Pelosi, the party´s top leader in the House, saying “it´s just a question of the size of the victory.” Former vice president Joe Biden often touted as a possible Democratic candidate to take on Trump in 2020, said he´d has been “dumbfounded” not to win the House.

Results were to continue trickling in through the night, with the last polls closing in Alaska at 0600 GMT Wednesday. According to Michael McDonald of the US Elections Project, 38.4 million Americans cast their ballots early ahead of this election, compared with 27.4 million in the 2014 midterm.

Read more: End of Trump’s Empire?

And on the streets, there was a palpable buzz all day.

“We have already seen a huge turnout, people out and about knocking on doors, making sure everybody gets out there, but I think turnout will be very, very high,” Democratic candidate Katie Porter, who is running in Irvine, California, against two-term Republican incumbent Mimi Walters, told media.

On the other side of the country, in Atlanta, Georgia, voters waited in line for nearly two hours to cast ballots, according to local media reports.

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Trump himself noted the energy as he wrapped up a punishing schedule of rallies around the country that were intended to boost Republican candidates and his own brand heading towards reelection in 2020. “The midterm elections used to be, like, boring,” Trump told a crowd in Cleveland, Ohio, on Monday. “Now it´s like the hottest thing.”