Republicans recaptured control US Senate expanded their edge in the House of Representatives

Republicans recaptured control US Senate expanded their edge in the House of Representatives. The republicans recaptured control of the U.S. Senate.

And expanded their edge in the House of Representatives, giving them a majority in both houses of Congress for the final two years.

Democrats held 55 of the Senate’s 100 seats before Tuesday’s midterm elections, but Republicans gained at least seven seats.

With wins in Arkansas, Colorado, Iowa, Montana, North Carolina, South Dakota and West Virginia.

The results were a stinging rebuff to Obama, who was not on the ballot but said that his policies were.

He planned a mid-afternoon news conference to discuss the results and invited congressional leaders to the White House for a Friday meeting to discuss legislative priorities.

Republicans recaptured control of US Senate expanded their edge.

A third of the Senate was up for reelection Tuesday, including the Kentucky seat held by Senate Republican Mitch McConnell.

Republicans recaptured control US Senate expanded their edge in the House of Representatives.

He easily defeated his Democratic opponent, Alison Lundergan Grimes, earning a sixth term in office.

And setting him up to become Senate majority leader in January.

McConnell promised to seek agreement with Obama on some issues.

But, at an election night victory party, he also vowed to continue the Republican effort to diminish the size of the national government.

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“Friends, this experiment with big government has lasted long enough,” he said. “It’s time to go in a new direction.”

While taking over Senate control come January, Republicans added at least 13 seats in the 435-member House, where they already held 233 seats.

Republicans recaptured control of US Senate expanded their edge.

In Colorado’s Senate race, incumbent Democrat Mark Udall was defeated by Republican challenger Cory Gardner.

“Tonight we shook up the Senate. You shook up the Senate,” Gardner told supporters.

We go to work to fix a Washington that is out of step, out of touch and out of time.

A pledge to rein in the federal government helped propel Republican Senate candidate Joni Ernst to victory in Iowa.

She said it was about “getting [federal] spending under control, keeping taxes low, and cutting red tape so businesses can grow and invest.”

Tuesday was not a clean sweep for Republicans, as Democrats held onto Senate seats in states such as New Hampshire, where Jeanne Shaheen won another term in office.

“I will work with anyone in the Senate – Democrat, Republican, Independent – to get things done,” she said.

And in Louisiana, incumbent Democratic Senator Mary Landrieu will face Republican Bill Cassidy in a December runoff, since neither won a majority of the votes.

Landrieu challenged her rival to a series of debates on issues including education, jobs and the economy.

Republicans recaptured control US Senate expanded their edge in the House of Representatives.

Social Security and Medicare, health care, energy and the environment and, yes, international affairs and trade.”

Republicans also flexed their muscle in races for governor, even in Illinois, Maryland and Massachusetts – states that dependably have gone for Democrats.

With control of Congress, Republicans could raise new disputes with Obama over his signature legislative achievement, health care reform.

Which has allowed millions of people to secure insurance coverage they could not previously afford. Many

Republicans view the law as excessive government involvement, and have repeatedly called for its repeal.

Anger with Washington played heavily in the elections, according to Republican strategist Ford O’Connell.

“Two-thirds of America thought the country was going in the wrong direction.

They wanted a change in direction. And now it is up to Republicans to bring that change.”

Tuesday’s vote was a referendum on Obama’s leadership, according to American University professor Allan Lichtman.

“President Obama dragged down the Democrats,” the political historian said via Skype.

Republicans recaptured control US Senate expanded their edge in the House of Representatives.

“It is not as if Republicans in this election represented grand ideas, inspiring solutions to national problems.

They were simply pinning every Democrat [candidate] to an unpopular Democratic president.”

Reacting to a new political reality in Washington, Obama has invited congressional leaders of both houses and both political parties to the White House Friday.