Why Democrats suddenly feel they might defy history, hold Senate
Not long ago, Democrats seemed resigned to historical precedent – that the president’s party almost always loses House and Senate seats in midterm elections, sometimes a lot.
The telltale signs were there: An unpopular president. An economy out of whack, with soaring gas prices and high overall inflation. The public in a sour mood. Given Democrats’ extremely narrow control of each chamber, a Republican sweep seemed all but certain.
But a funny thing has happened on the way to the “shellacking” of 2022: It might not materialize.
The closely divided House still seems likely to go Republican on Nov. 8, albeit by a slimmer margin than once expected. But the Senate – currently at 50-50, with the Democratic vice president breaking tie votes – has turned into a nail-biter.
Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell , predicting an “extremely close” result,
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