Gulf Times

Democrats await Nevada result that could seal their Senate majority

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Democrats yesterday were one seat away from majority control of the US Senate next year, as votecounti­ng in deeply divided Nevada continued following Tuesday’s midterm elections and campaignin­g kicked off for a December 6 runoff in Georgia.

If incumbent Democratic Senator Catherine Cortez Masto manages to fend off Republican Adam Laxalt in Nevada, her party would then control 50 of the Senate’s 100 seats.

A Democratic victory in Georgia next month would then give the party outright majority control of a 51-49 Senate. A Democratic loss in Georgia and a win in Nevada would still put Democrats in charge of a 50-50 Senate, as Democratic VicePresid­ent Kamala Harris can break tie votes.

The Senate currently is split 50-50 between Democrats and Republican­s. The newly-elected Senate will be sworn in on Jan 3.

With nearly 97% of the vote counted in the Nevada Senate race, Laxalt was leading by around 800 votes. However, uncounted votes from Cortez Masto stronghold­s could vault her to victory.

Suspense over control of the Senate came as it also was still unknown which party will hold the majority in the US House of Representa­tives for the next two years. Republican­s continued to have an edge, but returns were still flowing in for several races, including many in liberal-leaning California.

It could take at least a few more days before the outcome of enough House races are known to determine party control of that 435-seat chamber.

Democrats got an important boost late on Friday when Democratic Senator Mark Kelly was projected to hold onto his seat in Arizona, defeating Republican Blake Masters, who has not yet conceded the race.

Kelly, a former Navy combat pilot and astronaut, delivered a short victory speech to his supporters in Phoenix yesterday with his wife, former Democratic Representa­tive Gabby Giffords, at his side. His remarks focused on working in Congress in a bipartisan manner.

Kelly did not mention Masters, but said: “We’ve seen the consequenc­es that come when leaders refuse to accept the truth and focus more on conspiraci­es of the past than solving the challenges that we face today.”

Tuesday’s midterm elections saw many Republican candidates, including Masters, echo former president Donald Trump’s false contention that he lost the 2020 election to Biden because of massive voter fraud.

No winner was projected yet in the race for Arizona governor, where Democrat Katie Hobbs holds a narrow lead over Republican Kari Lake.

A Democratic-controlled Senate would provide insurance to President Joe Biden that his nominees to fill dozens of federal judgeships would win confirmati­on under the guidance of Majority Leader Chuck Schumer.

That would be particular­ly crucial to Democrats if a seat on the US Supreme Court, which now has a 6-3 conservati­ve bent, were to open up in the final two years of BIden’s term.

When the outgoing Senate returns tomorrow for a postelecti­on work session that could run through late December, Schumer aims to immediatel­y confirm two more federal judges awaiting final votes.

However, if Cortez Masto fails to outpace Laxalt and Democrats also lose in Georgia, Schumer will have to spend far more time pushing through judicial nomination­s before relinquish­ing power on January 3, after which Senate Republican­s would have the ability either to reject or slow-walk confirmati­on of Biden nominees.

Hovering over the 2022 midterm elections all year has been Trump, who used his continued popularity among hard-right conservati­ves to influence the candidates the Republican Party nominated for congressio­nal, gubernator­ial and local races.

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