The Sun (Malaysia)

Democrats hold back ‘red wave’

O Republican­s on track to reclaim House of Representa­tives but Senate still in play

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WASHINGTON: Republican hopes of a “red wave” carrying them to power in the US Congress faded yesterday as Joe Biden’s Democrats put up a stronger-than-expected defence in a midterm contest headed for a cliff-hanger finish.

With a majority of Tuesday’s races called, Republican­s seemed on track to reclaim the House of Representa­tives for the first time since 2018, but the Senate was still in play, with forecasts tentativel­y leaning Democratic.

The midterms delivered a mixed bag for Donald Trump, who was not on the ballot but loomed large over the contest, teasing a 2024 run and airing election fraud allegation­s.

While the night saw wins by more than 100 Republican­s embracing Trump’s “Big Lie” that Biden stole the 2020 election, several high-profile, election-denying acolytes of the former president came up short.

Aiming to deliver a rebuke of Biden’s presidency, against a backdrop of sky-high inflation and bitter culture wars, Republican­s needed one extra seat to wrest control of the evenly-divided Senate.

But by yesterday morning, the only seat to change party hands went to the Democrats, with John Fetterman, a burly champion of progressiv­e economic policies, triumphing in Pennsylvan­ia.

In the House, early results suggested Republican­s were on track for a majority – but only by a handful of seats, a far cry from their prediction­s.

Top Republican Kevin McCarthy – who hopes to be the lower chamber’s next speaker – struck an upbeat note, telling supporters in the early hours: “It is clear that we are going to take the House back.”

But Senator Lindsey Graham, a top Trump ally, bluntly conceded to NBC that the election is “definitely not a Republican wave, that’s for sure”.

The president’s party has traditiona­lly lost seats in midterm elections, and with Biden’s ratings stuck in the low 40s and Republican­s pounding him over inflation and crime, pundits had predicted a drubbing.

That would have raised tough questions on whether America’s oldest-ever commander in chief, who turns 80 this month, should run again.

Instead Biden stands to emerge in much better shape than either of his Democratic predecesso­rs, Barack Obama or Bill Clinton, who both took a hammering at the midterms.

Control of the Senate hinged early yesterday on four key races that were still on a knife-edge.

Democrats need two more wins to successful­ly hold the chamber, while Republican­s need three to flip it.

In Arizona, Nevada and Wisconsin, counting the remaining votes for Senate could take days.

Georgia may well go to a runoff scheduled for Dec 6.

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