
Incumbent Democratic Senator Mark Warner was scheduled to retake his seat, but polls now show a virtual dead heat with Republican challenger Ed Gillespie. "A surprise is still possible for Republicans in the Senate race in Virginia. Republican Cory Gardner unseats incumbent Democratic Senator Mark Udall, meaning the Republicans need to take one more Senate spot while holding their own at-risk post in Kansas.Ġ3:15: Our transatlantic analyst Michael Knigge has turned his eye to Virginia in the early hours of the morning here in Bonn: Unless they are mistaken, which seems highly unlikely given the seven-percent margin with three-quarters of the votes counted, it's a fifth swing in the Republicans' favor.
#Midterm senate results tv
The joy (misery?) of politics: as the election ends, the politicking restarts.Ġ4:50: Here's a reminder from Richard Walker about our DW TV feature on what a Republican Senate could mean for the already-strained political atmosphere in Washington.Ġ3:29: The Associated Press and CNN have called another tight Senate race in Colorado. "I look forward to working with Senator McConnell to get things done for the middle class." "The message from voters is clear: they want us to work together," Reid said in his statement. Right from the outset, Reid appears to be appealing to the GOP to be more cooperative in control than they were when in the minority. Reminder: all 435 House seats were up for grabs in Tuesday's vote, unlike in the Senate.Ġ4:55: The Democrats' Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid has issued congratulations to his vanquishers in a statement. The party's high-water mark of 246 House seats (held between 19 under Democrat President Harry Truman), is even an attainable goal. The next time the United States goes to the polls as a nation, around this time in 2016, it will not just be to elect senators, congressional representatives and governors - but also Obama's successor as president.Ġ5:12: In the House of Representatives, controlled by the GOP since 2010, the Republicans appear poised to extend their already sizeable majority. The Republicans will hope to carry this momentum into the presidential elections of 2016 - as the Democrats did at the end of Bush's tenure. Bush before him, President Barack Obama has started his presidency in control of both chambers of Congress, only to finish it with neither. Incoming Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell said the results showed that US voters were "hungry for new leadership."Ġ5:19: Like George W. Niko Kommenda, Seán Clarke, Josh Holder, Sam Morris, Antonio Voce and Peter Andringa updated Wed 7 Nov 00.05:29: House Speaker John Boehner has issued a statement saying the Republicans are "humbled" by the midterm results, but also cautioning that "it's not time for celebration." The lower chamber's top politician said it was time for government to start "implementing solutions to the challenges facing our country," and what he called a "still-struggling economy." The Guardian race ratings are derived from other polling organisations and our own research.

Some other information comes from the US Congress. These live results come from the Associated Press. The opposition Democrats - in blue above - were hoping for a "blue wave" that would put them in a position to moderate and sometimes block Trump's agenda. Being in the middle of the presidential term, they are usually understood to be at least partially a reaction to the president's performance so far, and usually see the president's party losing seats.ĭonald Trump's Republicans - red in the maps and charts, and often called the GOP, or "grand old party" - went into the election campaign controlling both houses of Congress.


These elections are known as midterms when they fall outside the four-year presidential election cycle. The representatives thus serve a two-year term, and the senators six years. At each election the whole of the House of Representatives and one third of the 100-member Senate are elected. The US holds congressional elections every two years. The 2018 US midterm elections are most Americans' first opportunity to pass judgment on Donald Trump since his election two years ago.
