Democrats falling short in bid for control of U.S. Senate
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[November 04, 2020]
By David Morgan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A Democratic drive
to win control of the U.S. Senate appeared to fall short, with Democrats
picking up only one Republican-held seat while six other races remained
undecided early on Wednesday.
Democrats defeated Republican Senators Cory Gardner of Colorado and
Martha McSally of Arizona but lost the Alabama seat held by Democratic
Senator Doug Jones.
To win the majority in the Senate, Democrats would need to pick up three
Republican seats if Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden is elected
president and Senator Kamala Harris wields the tie-breaking vote as vice
president.
But the Democratic path to victory narrowed sharply as results poured in
and the final outcome may not be known for days, and in some cases,
months.
Four Republican incumbents - Joni Ernst of Iowa, Steve Daines of
Montana, Lindsey Graham of South Carolina and John Cornyn of Texas -
fended off Democratic challenges, according to networks and Edison
Research.
Republicans also held onto an open seat in Kansas, where Republican
Roger Marshall was declared the winner over Democrat Barbara Bollier.
Republican Senator Susan Collins of Maine, a moderate long viewed as
vulnerable to upset, led Democrat Sara Gideon by several percentage
points in a race that Gideon predicted would not be called soon.
Republican Senator Thom Tillis of North Carolina declared victory over
his Democratic challenger, Cal Cunningham, while leading by about 95,000
votes. But the race had not been called.
Republicans now hold a 53-47 seat Senate majority. Democrats were
projected to maintain control of the 435-seat House of Representatives.
Gardner, a first-term Republican long seen as his party's most
vulnerable Senate incumbent, lost to Hickenlooper in a formerly
Republican state where demographic changes have increasingly favored
Democrats in recent years, according to projections by television
networks and Edison Research.
Democrat Mark Kelly, a former U.S. astronaut who had long dominated the
Arizona race, was declared winner while leading McSally by nearly 7
percentage points in the one-time Republican stronghold.
Jones, the most vulnerable Democrat, lost as expected to challenger
Tommy Tuberville in the Republican stronghold of Alabama.
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Republican Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell won re-election on
Tuesday, though his party's majority in the chamber remains
imperiled as it defends 12 hotly contested seats while Democrats are
on the defense in just two races.
Graham, the Senate Judiciary Committee chairman, rode to victory
after presiding over the Senate confirmation of U.S. Supreme Court
Justice Amy Coney Barrett.
Cornyn was declared the winner against challenger M.J. Hegar in a
state that had appeared to be drifting toward Democrats. Republican
Senator Majority Leader Mitch McConnell won re-election in Kentucky,
as expected.
All told, 35 of the Senate's 100 seats were up for election.
First-term Republican incumbents also faced challenges in Alaska and
in a second Georgia Senate race. Democrat Gary Peters was on the
defensive in Michigan.
DELAYS EXPECTED IN RESULTS
One of two Georgia Senate races was projected to go to a Jan. 5
runoff between Republican Senator Kelly Loeffler and Democrat
Raphael Warnock.
Final results from a four-way Maine contest among Collins, Gideon
and two independent candidates could be delayed for 10 days to two
weeks if no candidate wins an outright majority and the race is
forced into an automatic runoff under the state's ranked-choice
voting system, according to a state election official.
Maine voters can rank candidates in order of preference. With no
clear winner on election night, the contest would enter a series of
elimination rounds in which lower-ranked candidates drop out until a
victor emerges.
In Michigan, where Peters could be vulnerable to an upset by
Republican John James, state election officials warned final results
may not be available until Friday.
(Reporting by David Morgan; Additional reporting by Sarah N. Lynch
and Chris Bing and Susan Cornwell; Editing by Scott Malone, Sonya
Hepinstall, Peter Cooney and Lincoln Feast.)
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