America
US polls close; Rubio, DeSantis among early projected winners

Washington, Nov 9
US voters have spoken, but it may be a while before its fully known what they said. Pollsters and poll watchers have said the early trends and projections showed there was no Republican wave in the 2022 midterm elections contrary to pre-poll predictions, and Democrats were performing better than expected.
Among early and projected winners in Tuesday elections were Republican Senators Marco Rubio and Rand Paul and Republican Governor of Florida Ron DeSantis, who is also expected to run for the White House in 2024.
Also among the winners were Sarah Sanders Huckabee, spokesperson for former President Donald Trump, who became the first woman governor of Arkansas; and Wes Moore, a Democrat who has become the first African-American elected as Maryland's Governor.
At stake is control of the US Congress -- all 435 seats in the House of Representatives are up for grabs, 35 of the 100 in the Senate and 36 governorships.
Republicans are widely expected to wrest control of the House from Democrats, a party in control of the White House is historically known to lose the first midterm election in the incumbent President's first term.
The critical races that could determine the outcome of the race for control of the House and the Senate remained open or too close to call.
Senate races in Pennsylvania, Georgia and Ohio, for instance, were too close to call as polls closed around the US across three time zones.
Counting in some constituencies could typically take days, specially in the ones with close races.
But broad outlines will begin to emerge in a few hours based on projections by media outfits, which are fairly accurate.
President Joe Biden is not on the ballot but midterm elections are a referendum on the sitting president and he is likely to be hit hard, mostly on account of an obstinate inflation that has dogged his presidency for months now.
But an adverse midterm outcome does not necessarily diminish re-election chances -- Democrats lost 54 seats in 1984 but Bill Clinton was re-elected, and the party lost 63 in 2010, but Barack Obama was re-elected two years later in 2012.
If Republicans pick up the House as expected, President Biden's legislative agenda over the remaining two years of his term will be severely impacted.
And, as the Republicans have already threatened, there will be a host of inquiries and investigations against Biden officials.

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