U.S. House control hinges on tight races after Democrats take Senate
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[November 14, 2022]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Control
of the U.S. House of Representatives hinged on Monday on several tight
races that could secure a majority for Republicans following midterm
elections that saw President Joe Biden's Democrats beat expectations and
retain the Senate.
Republicans were closer to taking the House, having won 211 seats
compared to Democrats' 206, with 218 needed for a majority. But the
final outcome might not be known for days as officials continue counting
ballots nearly a week after Americans went to the polls.
After clinching the Senate over the weekend and dispelling Republican
hopes for a "red wave" of gains, Democrats portrayed their performance
as vindication of their agenda and a rebuke of Republican efforts to
undermine the validity of election results.
Other high-profile uncalled races include the Arizona governor contest,
in which Republican Kari Lake, who promoted former President Donald
Trump's baseless 2020 election fraud claims, was trailing her Democratic
opponent.
There are still some 18 outstanding House races, including 13 considered
closely competitive, according to a Reuters compilation of the leading
nonpartisan forecasters. Ten of the remaining contests were in
liberal-leaning California.
A Republican victory in the House would set the stage for two years of
divided government while giving Biden's opponents the power to limit his
political agenda and launch potentially damaging probes into his
administration and family.
Jim Banks, a Republican congressman from Indiana, said he expects his
party to win a slim majority in the 435-seat chamber and serve as "the
last line of defense to block the Biden agenda," while launching probes
into the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan, the origin of COVID and
pandemic lockdowns.
"That has to be a focal point of every single committee in the Congress,
especially in the House under Republican control," Banks told Fox News
on Sunday.
The Democratic speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi, said on Sunday she
would not make any announcements about whether she planned to remain in
leadership until after control of the chamber was decided.
There had been speculation Pelosi would resign if Democrats lost their
majority, especially after her husband was attacked by an intruder at
their San Francisco home last month.
"It's very close," Pelosi, 82, told ABC News on Sunday of the House
race. "We haven't given up."
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Staff process ballots for the U.S.
midterm elections at the Maricopa County Tabulation and Election
Center in Phoenix, Arizona, U.S., November 13, 2022. REUTERS/Jim
Urquhart
GEORGIA RUN-OFF, ARIZONA GOVERNOR RACE
Democrats, having secured Senate control with a win by Nevada
Senator Catherine Cortez Masto on Saturday, are shifting focus to a
Georgia run-off contest that could strengthen their hand in
Congress.
A Democratic victory in the Dec. 6 run-off between Senator Raphael
Warnock and Republican challenger Herschel Walker would give the
party outright majority control, bolstering its sway over
committees, bills, and judicial picks.
The Nevada win put Democrats in charge of a 50-50 Senate, with Vice
President Kamala Harris holding the tie-breaking vote.
Even if Republicans win a narrow majority in the House, Democrats'
performance suggests they had success in portraying their opponents
as extremists, pointing in part to the Supreme Court's decision to
eliminate a nationwide right to abortion following conservative
appointments to the bench.
But the results have also have led to increased scrutiny on Trump,
who used his popularity among hard-right conservatives to influence
the candidates Republicans nominated for congressional,
gubernatorial and local races.
A Republican loss in Georgia could further dampen Trump's popularity
as advisers say he considers announcing this week a third run for
the presidency in 2024. He has been blamed for boosting candidates
unable to appeal to a wide enough audience.
One candidate Trump has staunchly backed is Kari Lake, who is
trailing Democrat Katie Hobbs in the race for Arizona governor by
1.1 percentage points with an estimated 93% of votes counted,
according to Edison Research.
The election results appeared to draw introspection from top
Republican lawmakers. Lindsey Graham, a veteran Republican senator,
said planned Senate Republican leadership elections should be
postponed until after the Georgia race.
"All Republicans should be focused on winning in Georgia and trying
to understand the midterm elections before Senate leadership
elections or moving on to the 2024 presidential race," Graham wrote
on Twitter.
(Writing by Rami Ayyub; editing by Lincoln Feast and Toby Chopra)
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