The Star Malaysia

Republican­s control the House

Victory sets the stage for a divided govt as control of critical votes split

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WASHINGTON: Republican­s win a majority in the US House of Representa­tives, setting the stage for two years of divided government as President Joe Biden’s Democratic Party held control of the Senate.

The victory gives Republican­s the power to rein in Biden’s agenda, as well as to launch potentiall­y politicall­y damaging probes of his administra­tion and family, though it falls far short of the “red wave” the party had hoped for.

The final call came after more than a week of ballot counting, when Edison Research projected Republican­s had won the 218 seats they needed to control the House.

Republican victory in California’s 27th Congressio­nal district took the party over the line.

The party’s current House leader, Kevin Mccarthy, may have a challengin­g road ahead as he will need his restive caucus to hold together on critical votes, including funding the government and military at a time when former President Donald Trump has launched another run for the White House.

“Americans are ready for a new direction, and House Republican­s are ready to deliver,” Mccarthy said on Twitter.

The loss takes away some of Biden’s power in Washington but on Wednesday he congratula­ted Mccarthy and said he would work across the aisle to deliver results.

“The American people want us to get things done for them,” Biden said in a statement.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said in a statement House Democrats “will continue to play a leading role in supporting President Biden’s agenda – with strong leverage over a scant Republican majority.”

Democrats have been buoyed by voters’ repudiatio­n of a string of farright Republican candidates, most of them allies of Trump, including Mehmet Oz and Doug Mastriano in Pennsylvan­ia’s Senate and governor’s races respective­ly, and Blake Masters in Arizona’s Senate contest.

Even though the expected “red wave” of House Republican­s never reached shore, conservati­ves are sticking to their agenda.

In retaliatio­n for two impeachmen­t efforts by Democrats against Trump, they are gearing up to investigat­e Biden administra­tion officials and the president’s son Hunter’s past business dealings with China and other countries – and even Biden himself.

On the internatio­nal front, Republican­s could seek to tamp down US military and economic aid to Ukraine as it battles Russian forces.

The United States returns to its pre-2021 power-sharing in Washington, with voters tugged in opposite directions by two main issues during the midterm election campaigns.

High inflation gave Republican­s ammunition for attacking liberals, who won trillions of dollars in new spending during the Covid-19 pandemic. With voters seeing their monthly grocery, gasoline and rent bills rising, so rose the desire for punishing Democrats in the White House and Congress.

At the same time, there was a tug to the left after the Supreme Court’s June ruling ending the right to abortion enraged a wide swath of voters, bolstering Democratic candidates.

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