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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Republicans have taken control of U.S. Senate

By David Espo and Robert Furlow Associated Press
Update: 8:27 p.m.
WASHINGTON (AP) — Republicans cinch control of US Senate.

Update: 7:36 p.m.
WASHINGTON (AP) — Democratic losses continue to pile up, with the loss of a fifth Senate seat to Republicans — who need to gain six seats, in all, to have a Senate majority. Rep. Cory Gardner defeated incumbent Democrat Mark Udall in Colorado. And the victory may give Republicans a path forward in states in which they have been unable to gain ground during the Obama administration. Another Senate race, in Louisiana, is headed for a runoff. Republicans captured a key gubernatorial race in Florida, as Gov. Rick Scott turned back a challenge from Democrat Charlie Crist. Crist had been a Republican when he was elected to the office in 2006. The election in the nation’s top battleground state included more than $100 million worth of ads from the campaigns and their allies.

Update: 7:06 p.m.
WASHINGTON (AP) — Republicans continue to capture additional Senate seats as they move toward a majority. Republican Steve Daines won in Montana in the race for the Senate seat that had been held by Democrat John Walsh. Walsh had to drop his re-election bid over a plagiarism scandal. That’s the fourth Republican gain. They need two more in order to have a majority in the new Senate. The Senate race in Louisiana won’t be decided until a runoff on Dec. 6. Neither the Democratic incumbent, Mary Landrieu, nor Republican Bill Cassidy was able to get more than 50 percent of the vote. In House races, Republicans hold a commanding edge. They are on track to pad their majority at near historic levels and claim Southern seats that have long been held by Democrats.

Previous story
WASHINGTON (AP) — Resurgent Republicans captured Democratic seats Tuesday night in Arkansas, South Dakota and West Virginia, reaching out for control of the Senate and a tighter grip on the House in elections certain to complicate President Barack Obama’s final two years in office. The Republican Senate leader, Mitch McConnell, dispatched Democratic challenger Alison Lundergan Grimes in Kentucky after a $78 million campaign of unrelieved negativity. Voters are “hungry for new leadership. They want a reason to be hopeful,” said the man in line to become majority leader of the Senate if his party captures control. Obama was at the White House as voters remade Congress for the final two years of his tenure. With lawmakers set to convene next week for a postelection session, he invited the leadership to a meeting on Friday. There were 36 gubernatorial elections on the ballot, and several incumbents struggled against challengers. Tom Wolf captured the Pennsylvania statehouse for the democrats, defeating Republican Gov. Tom Corbett. In a footnote to one of the year’s biggest political surprises, college professor Dave Brat was elected to the House from Virginia, several months after he defeated Majority Leader Eric Cantor in a Republican primary. In the battle for control of the Senate, two-term incumbent Mark Pryor of Arkansas was the first Democrat to fall, defeated by freshman Rep. Tom Cotton. Rep. Shelley Moore Capito was the GOP winner for a Senate seat in West Virginia, the first of her party to make that claim since 1956. Former Gov. Mike Rounds triumphed in South Dakota for still another seat currently in Democratic hands. The Republicans needed to gain six seats in all to oust a Democratic majority in place since 2006. After years of a sluggish economic recovery and foreign crises aplenty, the voters’ mood was sour. Nearly two-thirds of voters interviewed after casting ballots said the country was seriously on the wrong track. Only about 30 percent said it was generally going in the right direction. More than four in ten voters disapproved of both Obama and Congress, according to the exit polls conducted for The Associated Press and the television networks. Still, a majority of those polled supported several positions associated with Democrats or Obama rather than Republicans — saying immigrants in the country illegally should be able to work, backing U.S. military involvement against Islamic State fighters, and agreeing that climate change is a serious problem. No matter which party emerged with control of the Senate, a new chapter in divided government was inevitable in a nation marked by profound unease over the future and dissatisfaction with its political leaders. In statehouse races, Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo of New York won a second term. Former Republican Rep. Asa Hutchinson was elected governor of Arkansas more than a decade after playing a prominent role in President Bill Clinton’s impeachment and trial. Also winning a new term was Ohio Gov. John Kasich, one of several presidential candidates on the ballot across several states. A shift in control of the Senate would likely result in a strong GOP assault on deficits, additional pressure to accept sweeping changes to the health care law that stands as his signal domestic accomplishment and a bid to reduce federal regulations. The large number of highly competitive races, combined with the likelihood of runoffs in Louisiana and Georgia, raised the possibility that neither party would be able to claim victory by the day after Election Day. There were 36 Senate races on the ballot, although most of the attention went to fewer than a dozen. They drew hundreds of millions of dollars in attack ads in a campaign season estimated to cost more than $4 billion — just for the races for Congress. Among incumbents, Kay Hagan faced a stiff challenge in North Carolina and Mark Begich in Alaska, all states that Obama lost in 2012. The same applied in Louisiana, where Sen., Mary Landrieu and Rep. Bill Cassidy were in a three-way race, with a Dec. 6 runoff ahead if no candidate gained a majority. Democrats Jeanne Shaheen in New Hampshire and Mark Udall in Colorado also had difficult races in states Obama won two years ago. Sen. Tom Harkin’s decision to step down in Iowa gave rise to a fierce battle between Democratic Rep. Bruce Braley and Republican Joni Ernst. Her campaign took off earlier in the year when she made a television advertisement saying she had learned how to castrate hogs as a girl growing up on a farm. Georgia chose a replacement for retiring Republican Sen. Saxby Chambliss in a three-way race that included Republican David Perdue and Democrat Michelle Nunn, whose father held the seat for a quarter century. State law set a runoff for Jan. 6, 2015, if no candidate gained a majority. The year’s most unlikely race belonged to Kansas, where Republican Sen. Pat Roberts faced a challenge from independent Greg Orman. In the House, Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, was on the ballot for a 13th term, and the Democratic leader, Rep. Nancy Pelosi of California, for a 14th. Not even Democrats claimed a chance to topple the Republican House majority. They spent the campaign’s final days dispatching money to districts where incumbents suddenly found themselves in danger. Republicans sought to downplay any expectation of large gains. A pickup of 13 would give them more seats in the House than at any time since 1946. The elections’ $4 billion price tag spending was unprecedented for a non-presidential year.