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Republicans capture control of US House, Democrats retain Senate | President Barack Obama was given a stern message by
the American people on Tuesday when the Republicans, riding a wave of voter discontent, captured control of the House of Representatives, but fell short of capturing control of the US Senate. A Republican resurgence, propelled by deep
economic worries and a forceful opposition to the Democratic agenda of health care
and government spending, delivered defeats to House Democrats from the Northeast
to the South and across the Midwest. According to the New York Times, the tide
swept aside dozens of lawmakers, regardless of their seniority or their voting
records, upending the balance of power for the second half of Obama's term.
Experts said the telling message to Obama was that he needed to do much more to
get the American economy back on track during the remaining two years of his first
term in the White House. President Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama are
heading for a four-day visit to India three days after the polls. The Democrats,
however, have hung onto control of the Senate by winning hard-fought contests in
California , Delaware, Connecticut and West Virginia. The Republicans picked up at
least six Democratic seats, including the one formerly held by Obama, and the party
will welcome Marco Rubio of Florida and Rand Paul of Kentucky to their ranks, two
candidates who were initially shunned by the establishment but beloved by the Tea
Party movement. "The American people's voice was heard at the ballot box," said
Representative John A. Boehner of Ohio, who is positioned to become the next
Speaker of the House. He added: "We have real work to do, and this is not the time
for celebration." The Republicans won at least 56 seats, not including those from
some Western states where ballots were still being counted, surpassing the 52 seats
the party won in the sweep of 1994. The most expensive mid-term election campaign
in the nation's history, played out across a wide battleground that stretched from
Alaska to Maine. The Republican tide swept into statehouse races, too, with
Democrats poised to lose the majority of governorships, particularly those in key
presidential swing states, like Ohio, where Gov. Ted Strickland was defeated.
"Voters sent a message that change has not happened fast enough," said Tim Kaine,
chairman of the Democratic National Committee. Republicans did not achieve a
perfect evening, losing races in several states they had once hoped to win, including
the Senate contests in Delaware and Connecticut, because some candidates
supported by the Tea Party movement knocked out establishment candidates to win
their nominations. But they did score notable victories in some tight races, like Pat
Toomey's Senate run in Pennsylvania. The outcome on Tuesday was nothing short of
a remarkable comeback for Republicans two years after they suffered a crushing
defeat in the White House and four years after Democrats swept control of the
House and Senate. It places the party back in the driver's seat in terms of policy,
posing new challenges to Obama as he faces a tough two years in his term, but also
for Republicans - led by Boehner - as he suddenly finds himself in a position of
responsibility, rather than being simply the outsider.
At stake in nationwide balloting were all 435 seats in the House of Representatives,
more than one-third of the Senate, and more than half of America's governorships.
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