The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Democrats retain control of Senate

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DEMOCRATS have kept control of the United States Senate after the crucial race in Nevada was announced in their favour, cementing a midterm election performanc­e for the party that widely beat expectatio­ns.

Democratic US senator Catherine Cortez Masto has now beaten Republican challenger Adam Laxalt, a former state attorney general who was endorsed by former president Donald Trump, according to the Associated Press.

With Masto’s victory coming on the heels of Democratic senator Mark Kelly winning re-election in Arizona late last Friday, the win takes the Democrats to the crucial number of 50 seats in the Senate, with the Republican­s at 49.

The race in Georgia is set to go to a run-off in December, but even if Republican­s win there, a 50-50 split means the Senate would effectivel­y be controlled by the Democrats because the tying vote falls to the vice-president, Kamala Harris.

For the Republican­s, it was another blow after they steeply underperfo­rmed in many races. The party had touted hopes of a “red wave” that could sweep across the US and deliver the upper chamber of Congress into their hands. Instead — with a few exceptions, such as Florida — the wave was more of a trickle.

The Democrat win in the Senate is likely to prompt further recriminat­ion in Republican circles over who is to blame for the poor showing.

Much attention has so far focused on Trump after he backed right-wing or celebrity candidates in several key races who lost, such as Dr Mehmet Oz in Pennsylvan­ia.

The victory is also another boost for president Joe Biden after his party defied immediate fears that his low popularity ratings and an electorate battered by high inflation would translate to punishment at the polls.

The Democrats also defied historical precedent, as the party holding the White House often loses heavily in midterm elections.

The election performanc­e is likely to quiet speculatio­n that Biden may duck out of the 2024 presidenti­al race and leave office after a single term. Now he can point to solid pieces of domestic legislatio­n in his first years as president, as well as a strong midterms performanc­e, in order to bolster internal support in his party.

Biden said he was “incredibly pleased” with the turnout in the US election and that the Republican party would now need to decide “who they are”. Speaking to reporters in Cambodia ahead of an East Asia summit, Biden said his attention was on the Georgia Senate race.

“We’re focusing now on Georgia. We feel good about where we are,” Biden said. “And I know I’m a cockeyed optimist. I understand that.

“I’m not surprised by the turnout. I’m incredibly pleased. And I think it’s a reflection of the quality of our candidates.”

Control of the House of Representa­tives has still not been decided. Biden acknowledg­ed such a victory would be “a stretch” for the Democrats, but Republican­s have fallen well short of prediction­s they would sweep to power in Washington.

Meanwhile, the loss of the Senate will focus minds sharply on Trump’s ongoing dominance of the Republican party.

Fissures have opened up, with some prominent Republican figures openly appealing to Trump not to announce a 2024 run, as he is widely expected to do next week.

Trump himself has lashed out at popular Republican figures who may rival him, such as the Florida governor, Ron DeSantis, who was a rare Republican success in the midterms as he easily won re-election and flipped several once strong Democrat districts, especially in Miami. — The Guardian

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