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2010 Midterms Put Democratic Control On The Line

CALVIN WOODWARD   11/ 2/10 01:25 PM ET   AP

Election Results 2010 Midterms
Election results from the 2010 midterms could change Democratic control of Washington.

WASHINGTON — The fate of the Democratic Congress was put before voters Tuesday in midterm elections that drew Americans to balloting stations starting before dawn, some clamoring for change, others digging in their heels against resurgent Republicans. Expectations took hold in both camps that the political order was in for a makeover in these anxious times.

In the middle-class Cleveland suburb of Parma Heights, Ohio, Fred Peck, 48, explained his vote for Republicans – and by extension against President Barack Obama's agenda – by pointing to a 20 percent increase in his health care premiums and the declining value of his retirement fund. "I see nothing changing for the better," said Peck, who works in university campus maintenance.

In Miami's liberal Coconut Grove neighborhood, teacher Steve Wise, 28, voted for independent Charlie Crist for the Senate and Democrats for other offices. Mostly, he welcomed the end of a national campaign so often toxic in its tone. "I just want this day to be over," he said. "Because it's been too much – political ads, newscasts, too much talking heads. I just want to move on and get this country back."

In Pelham, N.Y., Raymond Garofano, 66, who works in packaging for Revlon, voted a straight Democratic ticket and allowed that Obama "is doing an adequate job. Nobody's perfect."

The president gave a series of radio interviews, geared in part to urban black audiences, encouraging traditional Democratic supporters not to sit on the sidelines. "Even though my name is not on the ballot, my agenda is going to be dependent – our agenda is going to be dependent – on whether folks turn out and vote today," he told the "Radio Big Boy" show on KPWR in Los Angeles.

"Across the board, things have gotten better over the last two years," he said. "We can only keep it up if I've got some friends and allies in Congress and in statehouses." He planned a postelection news conference Wednesday afternoon.

Republicans buoyantly forecast that they would win the House and usher in a new era of shared governance, two years after Democrats sealed victory in the presidency, the House and the Senate and set about reshaping the agenda in a time of severe recession and war. Democrats did not seriously dispute expectations that they would lose the House this time, even while campaigning through the final hours to stem losses.

"This is going to be a big day," House Republican Leader John Boehner, likely to become speaker if the GOP wins the House, said after voting at a church near his West Chester, Ohio, suburban home. He said that for those who think the government is spending too much and bailing out too many, "this is their opportunity to be heard."

Democrats tend to be strong closers, with a vaunted operation by the party, Obama's organizers and unions to get supporters to voting sites on Election Day. This time, they faced a ground game infused by the tea party, less polished than the other side but full of energy.

The midterm elections are a prime-time test for that loosely knit and largely leaderless coalition, a force unheard of just two years ago. Tea party supporters rattled the Republican establishment in the primaries, booting out several veteran lawmakers and installing more than 70 candidates, nearly three dozen of whom are in competitive races Tuesday.

If successful, that conservative movement could come to Washington as a firewall against expansive federal spending, immigration liberalization and more, as well as a further threat to the historic health care law that Republicans hope somehow to roll back.

Engineer Jordan Howlett, 44, of Toms River, N.J., split his vote between both parties even though "I don't trust either side." But he has no use for the tea party. "I still have faith in Obama and his vision," he said, "though I think he's strayed a little too far to the left. But the tea party types scare me."

Democrats have had to struggle against apathy by their supporters and many who motivated themselves to vote Tuesday sounded lukewarm about Obama even as they cast ballots for his party.

"I think he's doing OK, I wouldn't say great, I wouldn't say horrible," said Heather Walczuk, 26, a social worker in Manhattan. She moved from Virginia a few years ago and used to vote Republican but has changed. She reported that her mother recently joined the tea party. "I don't think she fully, really, knows what exactly she's involved in or everything that they stand for," she said.

At a precinct in Windsor Heights, a western suburb of Des Moines, Iowa, several voters said it might be a good thing to have Democrats and Republicans sharing power, and Obama's reach curbed.

"I voted mostly Republican," said Jodi Alberts, 47, an insurance company worker. "I think some of his policies are a little bit too social. We need to rein him in."

Kelly Travis, 46, a homemaker, said of her votes: "I kind of mixed it up. I don't like it when they talk about growing government. I guess I did want to send a signal."

In Bayville, N.J., retiree John Powers voted Republican because he thought Democrats rammed through Obama's health care law even when it was clear, at least to him, that most people did not want it. "I've never felt as much despair as I do now," Powers said. "I think we are at the lowest point in our country we have ever been at."

But in Cleveland, Tim Crews, 42, said he measures Obama's performance and the state of the economy by the number of paying miles he drives in his delivery van. His miles have tripled to 9,000 a month. He said of the economy: "It's moving. I know, because I'm moving it." He voted accordingly.

Boehner promised Monday to hold weekly votes to cut federal spending, make jobs the top GOP priority and fight to repeal the health law. Former President Bill Clinton, campaigning for Democrats as if his own future were on the line, stumped late into the night in New York, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Kentucky and Florida.

Republicans need 40 more seats to win the House, a goal that polls indicated they might achieve. Races for more than 100 of the 435 seats are competitive.

Republicans need a net gain of 10 to take the Senate, a tougher road that requires them to win every tight race. The GOP also made strong bids to add governors to their ranks and expand in state legislatures.

Voter mobilization efforts have been unfolding for weeks as more than 14 million Americans cast early ballots.

In Nevada, home of the hot Senate contest between Democratic Majority Leader Harry Reid and tea-party pick Sharron Angle, registered Democrats and Republicans came out early in similar numbers. In Pennsylvania, another battleground, more than half the early voters were Republican, by the latest count.

Some races could go days or more without a winner, thanks to the multitude of expected close contests – in Colorado, Nevada, Illinois, West Virginia, Ohio, Alaska and more – and the persistence of shaky voting systems in some places a decade after the presidential-election counting disaster in Florida.

Hundreds of lawyers from both sides are ready to roll. This was a campaign marked by the ragged anger of partisans and caustic ads by candidates, now spilling into an Election Day that's likely to lead to complaints of voting irregularities, fraud or machine meltdowns – and hair-trigger legal challenges.

One of the most unpredictable races was unfolding in Alaska, where Sen. Lisa Murkowski, upset in the GOP primaries by the tea party's pick, Joe Miller, is trying to win by having voters write her name on the ballot. Democrats injected cash late in the campaign to try to lift their candidate, Scott McAdams, over the other two.

Voters in 37 states are electing governors. Among the most competitive: the contest in Ohio between Democratic Gov. Ted Strickland and former Republican Rep. John Kasich.

___

AP writers Thomas J. Sheeran in Cleveland; Rasha Madkour in Miami; Wayne Parry in Bayville, N.J.; Bruce Shipkowski in Trenton, N.J.; Mike Glover in Des Moines, Iowa; Thomas J. Sheeran in Parma Heights, Ohio; Deepti Hajela in New York; and Mark S. Smith in Washington contributed to this report.

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WASHINGTON — The fate of the Democratic Congress was put before voters Tuesday in midterm elections that drew Americans to balloting stations starting before dawn, some clamoring for change, others ...
WASHINGTON — The fate of the Democratic Congress was put before voters Tuesday in midterm elections that drew Americans to balloting stations starting before dawn, some clamoring for change, others ...
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COMMUNITY PUNDITS
Dan Stewart 07:46 AM on 11/02/2010
Maybe the reason the Dems are about to get drubbed can be found in the answers to these questions!

Where's the break up of TBTF banks?

Where's the return of Glass-Stegall?

Where's the closing of Guantanamo?

Where the end of the use of the secrecy privilege?

Where Giethner's replacement?

Where's the moratorium on foreclosures?
 Read More...
06:10 PM on 11/02/2010
If Republicans win, "he told a public rally, they spend the next two years fighting for the same policies that led to recession in the first place. We cannot this one! "
But Obama's rating was 44 percent on Election Day - not over the magic 50 percent resulting in Basque decent. Nor were other well-known Democrats in a position to help other Democrats on the ballot. Early Election Results 2010
http://usspost.com/early-election-results-2010-21387/
06:07 PM on 11/02/2010
Had 15 bus loads of people delivered to the polls, seems the conservatives can get on the band wagon with trumping up rides and votes just like the dems! This means that Scott Murphy will be out of a job after the final tally this evening, and I feel SO GOOD!! OB or Obama you are next in 2012 and thank GOD. Bush bashers can toot their horns for years but this guy is a real slug! Seeing Nancy getting her butt thrown off her throne and Prince Harry fighting for his life in NV gives me a feeling of Joy and Hope. I cannot wait until this whole election is over so I can hear the liberal media quack and cry because your stooges are not in office any longer. It's rags like this along with CNN,. MSNBC and the three major outlets that will soon be nothing more then outdated,. not that anyone takes them seriously. Libers you were right when you said change was good and as Chris Matthews said I have a tingle down my leg with this election and half out now and the other half in 2012. One good thing is that Unions and ACORN are not getting their way this election. Take notice that the back room deals are gone and so is this Stupid health reform that Obama thinks he's going into the history books for is over, just give it time and maybe,. just maybe this Country will come back.
12:54 PM on 11/02/2010
A little election history.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y_zTN4BXvYI&feature=player_embedded
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comicpro
Stupid Should Be Painful
10:17 AM on 11/02/2010
I hate American politics with the win at all costs mentality. Two parties are not enough so the lesser of the two evils got my vote. Straight Democrats in CT!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
outsidethemainstream
06:24 PM on 11/02/2010
I'm doing the same thing in LA. Hopefully, enough of us will do the same thing and mitigate some of the damage.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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09:38 AM on 11/02/2010
Just got back from doing my duty.

A few of us from all walks of life engaged in a very broad discussion
about what brought us there.

Everyone is sick of the wars.
Everyone agreed PATH must be stopped here in Loudoun County.
Everyone agreed it's going to take 20 years to wean ourselves
off of fossil fuels, but we damn well better start because all the
other smart nations are also playing to win.

We all thought it would be smart to put DARPA on making a self contained
fuel cell work.

We also talked about what happens in Northern VA when the Homeland Security Bubble Breaks.

What happens when the fighting stops?

What happens to all the jobs that depend on government spending?

It was a really good talk.

People should do it more often and we might find
plenty of common ground to work on.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
redd35
Intelligent Hoodlum
08:55 AM on 11/02/2010
Black Radio is doing a great job!!!!!! They're giving info on the contest that needs high black turnout.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
outsidethemainstream
06:24 PM on 11/02/2010
glad to hear it
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dawg1000
ⒹⓇ. ⓇⓄⓃ ⓅⒶⓊⓁ
08:52 AM on 11/02/2010
The Summer Of Recovery Obama Tour,LOL
08:49 AM on 11/02/2010
Good morning America. I just wanted to briefly express my hope that there are still enough of you who are able to see through the fog, and defy the pre-designed media narrative of this cycle.

Here in Europe, most media have jumped on that same bandwagon. Believing the pollsters, many are predicting a landslide. One newspaper I read today spoke of a possible Republican triumph unseen in 80 years.

We know that time and again the pollsters did get it wrong. In America, in Europe. My hope is that they have underestimated the will of sometimes too silent majority once more. A majority that I perceive as in its heart and core forward-looking, future-oriented and progressive, and unwilling to settle for a fate interested others had chosen for them.

You can do it one more time. For all the shortcomings and known disfunctionalities of the political system, I am sure there are brighter days ahead. If people continue to fight for it.

Best regards from Europe!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Uggg
08:34 AM on 11/02/2010
well my chore is done anti incumbent all the way
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
ncmom54
10:24 AM on 11/02/2010
just curious.. did you split your ticket or was it a partyline vote?
08:24 AM on 11/02/2010
No more Grayson, Reid, Feingold, and possibly Barney. It doesnt get any better
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
redd35
Intelligent Hoodlum
08:44 AM on 11/02/2010
What do people like you get out of blogging on sites like hp, when your totally for destroying the country. How can you consider yourself a real american. I equate people like you, to the extremist in arab countries, who rally against equal rights for all!!! I think they call them ter****. Don't forget to take ur sheet out of the dryer.
12:24 PM on 11/02/2010
> What do people like you get out of blogging on sites like hp, when your [you're] totally for destroying the country

What a steaming pile of hyperbole. Just because someone has a different viewpoint than you does not mean they are out to destroy the country. That kind of immature mentality is the very reason your party is losing. I am an independent who believes in limited government. I love my country and served it as an Army officer. Don't tell me I am out to destroy the country, just because I believe out-of-control government spending is not the right way to go.

-Paradigm
http://www.belatedtruth.com
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comicpro
Stupid Should Be Painful
10:19 AM on 11/02/2010
And the GOP are so going to make things better (loud wretched vomiting in background)
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
dwright
Religion is man-created.
08:15 AM on 11/02/2010
GOP = The Party of NO
TP = The Party of Know Nothing
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VOTER
Freedom from fear - the philosophy of human rights
08:19 AM on 11/02/2010
BINGO!
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
ncmom54
10:30 AM on 11/02/2010
HEY! just know... YOUR work is organic, nourishing and sustaining.
have an awesome day my friend ;)
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
08:14 AM on 11/02/2010
The ChamberPot Money Candidates have sure wasted a huge amount of cash!
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08:14 AM on 11/02/2010
Stolen & Bought elections do not produce leaders.
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08:13 AM on 11/02/2010
This elections is
the Utterly Stupid
voting for
the Utterly Corrupt.
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08:12 AM on 11/02/2010
No Republican is Legitimate.