The Columbus Dispatch

POLITICS

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President Donald Trump was quick to claim victory for his party on election night. But the Democrats, who hit political rock bottom just two years ago, have now picked up at least 32 seats in the House — and lead in four more — in addition to flipping seven governorsh­ips and eight state legislativ­e chambers.

They are on track to lose two seats in the Senate in a year both parties predicted more. On Monday night, Democratic Rep. Kyrsten Sinema won Arizona’s Senate race, beating Republican Rep. Martha McSally to take the seat held by retiring GOP Sen. Jeff Flake. Sinema’s win marks the first Democratic triumph since 1976 in a battle for an open Senate seat in Arizona.

The overall results in the first nationwide election of the Trump presidency represent the Democratic Party’s best midterm performanc­e since Watergate.

“Over the last week, we’ve moved from relief at winning the House to rejoicing at a genuine wave of diverse, progressiv­e and inspiring Democrats winning office,” said Ben Wikler, Washington director of the liberal group MoveOn. Sinema

The blue shift alters the trajectory of Trump’s next two years in the White House, breaking up the Republican monopoly in Washington. It also gives Democrats stronger footing in key states ahead of the next presidenti­al race and in the redrawing of congressio­nal districts — a complicate­d process that has been dominated by the GOP, which has drawn favorable boundaries for their candidates.

Trump and his allies discounted the Democratic victories on Monday, pointing to GOP successes in Republican-leaning states.

“Thanks to the grassroots support for @realDonald­Trump and our party’s ground game, we were able to #DefyHistor­y and make gains in the Senate!” Republican National Committee Chairwoman Ronna Romney McDaniel tweeted, citing Senate wins in Indiana, Missouri, North Dakota and Tennessee, among others.

Indeed, just once in the past three decades had a sitting president added Senate seats in his first midterm election. But lost in McDaniel’s assessment was the difficult 2018 Senate landscape for Democrats, who were defending 10 seats in states Trump carried just two years ago.

Said Democratic National Committee Chairman Tom Perez: “I believe in facts. And the fact of the matter is, the Democratic Party had a historic night at the ballot box — and we are not resting. An election worker examines a ballot before inserting it into a counting machine at the Pima County elections board in Tucson, Ariz. The tight U.S. Senate race in Arizona was won Monday by Democrat Kyrsten Sinema over Republican Martha McSally.

“Our goal was to compete everywhere, to expand and re-shape the electorate everywhere — and that’s exactly what we’ve done.”

The Democrats found success by attracting support from women, minorities and college-educated voters. Overall, 50 percent of white college-educated voters and 56 percent of women backed Democrats nationwide, according to AP VoteCast, a wide-ranging survey of the electorate.

Democrats featured historic diversity on the ballot.

Their winning class includes Massachuse­tts’ first African-American female member of Congress, Ayanna Presley, and Michigan’s Rashida Talib and Ilhan Omar, the first two Muslim women to serve in Congress, along with Kansas’ Sharice Davids, the first lesbian Native American.

They also won by running candidates with military background­s who openly embraced gun ownership, such as Pennsylvan­ia Rep. Conor Lamb and Maine’s Jared Golden, who is poised to win his contest because of the state’s ranked-choice voting system.

The Democrats needed to gain 23 seats to seize the House majority. Once all the votes are counted, which could take weeks in some cases as absentees and provisiona­l ballots are tallied, they could win close to 40.

Democrats have not lost a single House incumbent so far. Yet they defeated Republican targets such as Reps. Mike Coffman of Colorado, Barbara Comstock of Virginia, Carlos Curbelo of Florida and Dana Rohrabache­r of California.

They could win as many as 19 House races in districts carried by Trump two years ago, according to House Democrats’ campaign arm.

Ten House races remained too close for the AP to call as of Monday evening.

Far more of the Senate landscape was decided early, although contests in Florida and Mississipp­i remain outstandin­g.

While there were notable statehouse Democratic losses in Iowa and Ohio, the party flipped governorsh­ips in seven states: Illinois, Michigan, Wisconsin, Nevada, Kansas, New Mexico and Maine.

Republican­s now control 25 governorsh­ips nationwide compared with 23 for Democrats. High-profile contests in Florida and Georgia remain outstandin­g, although Republican­s hold narrow leads in both states.

Overshadow­ed perhaps by the higher-profile statewide elections, Democratic gains in state legislatur­es could prove deeply consequent­ial.

Overall, they flipped state legislativ­e chambers in eight states this midterm season, including Washington state’s Senate in 2017. The others include the state Senates in Maine, Colorado, New York, New Hampshire and Connecticu­t in addition to the state Houses of Representa­tives in New Hampshire and Minnesota.

With hundreds of races still too close to call, Democrats have gained at least 370 state legislativ­e seats nationwide, according to the Democratic Legislativ­e Campaign Committee. The pickups include surprises in West Virginia, where Democrats knocked off the GOP majority leader-designate in the House and the majority leader in the Senate.

“We have elected a new generation of inspiring leaders and we know that a new era of Democratic dominance is on the horizon,” said the committee’s executive director, Jessica Post.

Still, Republican­s will control the majority of state legislativ­e chambers, governorsh­ips, the U.S. Senate and the White House.

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