The Guardian Australia

Democrats celebrate retaining control of Senate as Republican­s take stock

- Oliver Laughland

As the balance of power in the US House of Representa­tives remained unresolved on Sunday, Democrats are celebratin­g the projection that they won control of the Senate, marking a significan­t victory for Joe Biden as Republican­s backed by his presidenti­al predecesso­r Donald Trump underperfo­rmed in key battlegrou­nd states.

While senior Democrats remained guarded Sunday about the chances of keeping control of both chambers of Congress, House speaker Nancy Pelosi hailed the party’s performanc­e in the midterms following months of projec

tions indicating heavy losses.

“Who would have thought two months ago that this red wave would turn into a little tiny trickle, if that at all,” Pelosi told CNN.

She added: “We’re still alive [for control of the House] but again the races are close. We don’t pray for victory… but you pray that God’s will will be done.”

As of Sunday morning Republican­s remained seven seats shy of the 218 needed to win control of the House, with Democrats requiring 14, an indication that a majority on either side will be slim. As internal discussion­s between House Republican­s intensify over potential leadership roles, with minority leader Kevin McCarthy facing opposition from the far right freedom caucus, Pelosi remained circumspec­t about her own future, saying she would not make any announceme­nts on her plans until after the House’s control is decided.

“My decision will then be rooted in what the wishes of my family [are], and the wishes of my caucus,” Pelosi said, with reference to her husband Paul Pelosi’s ongoing recovery following an allegedly politicall­y motivated violent burglary and attack at their family home in San Francisco last month. She added: “There are all kinds of ways to exert influence. The speaker has awesome power, but I will always have influence.”

The Democrats were projected to maintain their control of the Senate on Saturday evening when a tight race in Nevada was called for the incumbent Catherine Cortez Mastro who defeated Adam Laxalt, a Trump-backed, former state attorney general.

The result marks a substantia­l victory for the Biden administra­tion’s agenda over the next two years, not only with regards to potential legislativ­e negotiatio­n but other powers which include appointmen­ts to the federal judiciary.

Speaking to reporters in Cambodia during the Asean summit, Biden congratula­ted Democratic Senate leader Chuck Schumer but appeared to acknowledg­e how a Republican-controlled House might affect his agenda going forward.

“We feel good about where we are,” Biden said. “And I know I’m a cockeyed optimist – I understand that – from the beginning, but I’m not surprised by the turnout.”

Biden added that the party’s focus would move to the Senate runoff in Georgia next month, where incumbent Raphael Warnock will face Trump-endorsed Herschel Walker after neither candidate received over 50% of the vote. A victory for the Democrats in Georgia would hand them an outright majority of 51, without needing Biden’s vice-president Kamala Harris to break Senate ties in their favor.

As fallout from the midterm elections continues, attention is likely to pivot to Florida next week, where Trump is expected to announce a 2024 run for the presidency at his private members’ club in Palm Beach.

Although polling still indicates Trump is the preferred candidate among the Republican base, his support has shown signs of fracture after many of his endorsed candidates performed poorly last week. One poll released on Saturday showed Trump’s support declining by six points to 50%, while far-right governor Ron DeSantis, who cruised to re-election last week, saw support increase.

On Sunday, Maryland’s outgoing Republican governor – Larry Hogan, a longtime Trump critic – urged the party to move away from the former president’s influence.

“You know, the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result,” Hogan told CNN. “And Donald Trump kept saying: ‘We’re going to be winning so much, we’ll get tired of winning’. I’m tired of losing. That’s all he’s done.”

Nonetheles­s, Hogan – who himself is believed to be considerin­g a run in 2024 – acknowledg­ed that ousting Trump from the potential presidenti­al nomination would be an uphill battle.

“He’s still the 800-lb gorilla,” Hogan said. “It’s still a battle and it’s going to continue for the next few years. We’re still two years out from the next election, and … the dust is still settling from this one. I think it would be a mistake, as I mentioned Trump’s cost us the last three elections and I don’t want to see it happen a fourth time.”

The midterms also proved to be an electoral rebuke to unfounded accusation­s of electoral fraud in the 2020 election, a baseless claim Trump has continued to press since losing the White House to Biden.

Many Trump-endorsed candidates in major races, including the governor’s election in Pennsylvan­ia and the Senate race in Arizona, had denied the 2020 election results. In both of these contests, as well as several other high-profile races, the Trump-backed candidate lost to Democrats by significan­t margins.

Although the gubernator­ial election in Arizona, which pits high-profile election denier Kari Lake against Democrat Katie Hobbs, remained too close to call on Sunday, a number of Democratic gubernator­ial victors argued their wins marked a rejection of election conspiracy theories and rightwing extremism.

Michigan’s governor Gretchen Whitmer, who won in a landslide against a Trump-endorsed election denier, said Sunday that she believed her victory marked a rejection of political violence in the state.

“Good people need to call this out and say we will not tolerate this in this country,” Whitmer, who was targeted by a failed kidnapping plot in 2020, told CNN. “And perhaps part of that message was sent this election.”

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