Republicans were projected to retain control of the House and Senate
after fending off Democratic challenges across the country on Election
Day.
Democrats, despite having been optimistic about this
year’s chances of retaking the majority in the upper chamber, failed to
gain the five seats needed. The Democrats’ candidate beat GOP incumbent
Illinois Sen. Mark Kirk, as expected, but the party lost most other
tight races.
As of early Wednesday morning, Republicans were on
track to see their 54-46 majority erode only slightly. They could end up
with at least 52 seats, according to the AP.
Republican as expected also kept control of the
House. The GOP entered Election Day with a 59-seat House advantage, so
Democrats would have had to gain 30 seats to take control of the
chamber. They will instead likely pick up 10 to 20 seats, falling short
of majority control.
“House Republicans won tonight thanks to our members’
relentless focus on the issues important to voters in their districts,"
said Oregon Rep. Greg Walden, chairman of the National Republican
Congressional Committee.
In the bid to control the Senate, Fox News projected
the outcomes of several key races including victories for Republican
Sens. Marco Rubio of Florida, Rob Portman of Ohio, Richard Burr of North
Carolina, Ron Johnson of Wisconsin, and Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania, all
fending off tough challenges to win reelection.
Portman, Burr, Johnson and Toomey were among a
handful of incumbent Republicans whom Democrats had targeted early for
defeat -- in their bid to win the Senate majority.
"Both parties have to work together to find common
ground," Portman said in his victory speech. "The best way to do that is
to get things done. I’ll do everything in my powers to expand
opportunity for everybody.”
The race in Louisiana for the seat of retiring GOP Sen. David Vitter will as expected go to a run-off.
Democrat Foster Campbell and Republican John Kennedy
emerged as the top vote-getters in a field of nearly two-dozen
candidates. But neither could win more than 50 percent of the vote to
win the seat.
The only major race that remained too close to call
into Wednesday morning was the Senate contest in New Hampshire between
GOP incumbent Sen. Kelly Ayotte and Democratic challenger Gov. Maggie
Hassan.
Ayotte is trying to appeal to the state’s notoriously
independent electorate while staying loyal to her Washington Republican
base and supporters like the National Rifle Association and the
billionaire, libertarian-minded Koch Brothers.
Ayotte said early that she’d support Trump but did
not endorse him. She then called Trump a “role model,” only to retract
the statement after another offensive Trump comment, then totally
withdrew her support.
In North Carolina, Burr defeated Democratic
challenger Deborah Ross, to serve a third Senate term. And Johnson beat
former Wisconsin Sen. Russ Feingold in a rematch of their 2010 race.
In Pennsylvania, Toomey defeated Katie McGinty, a
former Clinton administration adviser who was handpicked by Washington
Democrats.
Rubio keeps a Senate seat for Republicans that
Democrats had hoped to win after he essentially abandoned the seat for
his ultimately-failed presidential bid.
However, Rubio re-entered the race in June and held off a tough challenge from Democratic Rep. Tim Murphy to win a second term.
Republicans also held onto the Senate seat of retiring Indiana GOP senator Dan Coats.
Rep. Todd Young kept the seat by fending off a
strong, surprise challenge from former Democratic Sen. Evan Bayh, who
muscled into the race in mid-July.
But in Illinois, incumbent GOP Sen. Mark Kirk was defeated by Democratic challenger Rep. Tammy Duckworth.
Kirk was considered the most vulnerable Republican
senator in the 2016 election cycle. Duckworth is a veteran who lost both
of her legs in the Iraq War.
Kirk, a first-term senator who served in Congress for
nearly 15 years, was seeking reelection in Democrat-leaning Illinois.
He dimmed his comeback chances last month by insulting Duckworth’s Thai
ancestry.
“I'm here because of the miracles that occurred 12
years ago ... … in a dusty field in Iraq,” Duckworth told supporters
afterward. “Some I can explain, like the bravery of my crew. And some I
cannot, like the shrapnel from the explosion passing through my
helicopter spinning rotor blades and not destroy it, allowing us to
land. … I live every day trying to honor you.”
Democrats liked their chances of retaking the Senate
practically within days of losing the majority in 2014 -- considering
they had to defend just 10 incumbents, compared to Republicans who would
have to spend far more money and other resources to protect 24 sitting
senators.
Republicans had a very short 2016 wish list -- take
the seat of arch-political rival Nevada Sen. Harry Reid, the retiring
top Senate Democrat.
Republicans had a top-tier competitor in Rep. Joe Heck.
But all of the resources they put into the race
couldn't defeat Democratic nominee Catherine Cortez Masto or change the
fact that Nevada is a liberal-leaning state anchored by the Las Vegas
area, home to a large Hispanic population, which overwhelmingly supports
Democratic candidates.
In Ohio, GOP Gov. John Kasich’s refusal to support Donald Trump made Portman’s task of winning a second term even tougher.
But the state’s older, solidly-white population and a
lackluster performance by Democrat challenger and former Gov. Ted
Strickland gave Portman the win, after having built a nearly 20-point
lead before polls opened Tuesday.
Republicans pulled out a win in Missouri, but it took
incumbent GOP Sen. Roy Blunt the political fight of his life. He
defeated Missouri Secretary of State Jason Kander, an upstart Democrat
with military experience who can assemble an AR-15 blindfolded.
In Indiana, Republicans had a solid candidate in Young, a three-term House member.
But Bayh’s surprise decision to enter the race -- with a $10 million war chest -- made it much more competitive and expensive.
The race remains surprisingly close until the end,
amid disclosures about Bayh’s profitable connections to K Street and
Wall Street.
"When I grew up here in Indiana, my dad told me
almost every day, 'If I worked really hard, good things would happen.'
Well dad, this is a good thing," Young, a former Marine, said after the
race. "Tonight was a great victory, not for me, but for the state of
Indiana."
Republicans didn’t expect such a hyper-competitive
race in North Carolina. But Ross, a former American Civil Liberties
Union lawyer and state representative, had little state-wide name
recognition.
Toomey's challeger in Pennsylvania was Katie McGinty,
among the handful of 2016 Democratic candidates whom political analysts
said ran an uninspiring race. The Pennsylvania race was essentially
deadlocked since the start of the election cycle.