Midterm Election Thread 2018

jsmith6919

Honored Member - RIP
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If you turn on CNN they are celebrating Democrats retaking the House like their revolution has succeeded.

Look, I get it, it's nice that since you hate Trump so much you now have a check you didn't have before.

But to gloss over the fact that Republicans are gaining seats in the Senate (CNN explanation: It was a bad map for Dems) is to really misinterpret tonight.

Yeah, it was a bad map for Dems, but they lost every toss up in the Senate.

They are winning most toss ups in the House.... where it was a bad map for Republicans.

This isn't anywhere close to the massive defeats for the in-power party of 1994, 2006, 2010, and 2016.
Dems lost 67 house seats in 2010, looking like we will lose around 30. Their blue wave turned out to be a drip.

Plus Mitch is going to keep packing the courts
 

skidadl

El Presidente'
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Dems lost 67 house seats in 2010, looking like we will lose around 30. Their blue wave turned out to be a drip.

Plus Mitch is going to keep packing the courts
This is what makes me happy.
 

Sheik

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I think Tester is going to ultimately lose in Montana.

I think Arizona is slightly more of a shot to go Dem just by looking county by county.
 

Sheik

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I think GOP wins both Montana and Arizona, just to be clear.
 

Sheik

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I also loved seeing Claire McCaskell getting beaten down.

There’s a cunt for you, Bipo.

Fuckin bitch.
 

Sheik

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The Oprah couldn’t get Abrams over the finish line? Darn.
 

Sheik

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Maybe she can get a job as a stunt double in Tyler Perry’s next Madea movie.
 

bbgun

please don't "dur" me
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Fuck. Walker narrowly lost in Wisconsin. That's the last time my parents give him money.
 

fortsbest

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I was sad to see that in WI. But, you know what spending 70 miilion in a Texas Senate race against Cruz gets you? Absolutely nothing! :towel
 

Sheik

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Montana is crazy close. Tester just took back the lead.
 

BipolarFuk

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Even Red States Want Expanded Medicaid

Even Red States Want Expanded Medicaid

Medicaid scores big in Utah, Idaho, Nebraska voting

On Tuesday, in politically fraught midterm elections across the country that reshaped the House and Senate, three traditionally red states voted to expand their Medicaid programs, expanding coverage to an estimated 325,000 low-income Americans.

Voters in Nebraska, Idaho and Utah passed ballot initiatives that will broaden coverage of the federal and state health insurance program, a provision of the Affordable Care Act, to all residents whose income is less than 133 percent of the poverty line (that’s roughly $16,000 for one person, or about $32,700 for a family of four).

In Idaho Opens a New Window. , a surge of voters passed Proposition 2, with 61 percent in favor and 39 percent who voted no, of the initiative that increased Medicaid coverage to people under age 65 whose income is 133 percent of the federal poverty level, or less.

An almost-identical initiative in Utah Opens a New Window. -- Proposition 2 -- passed on a slightly more narrow margin, with 54 percent in favor and 45 percent against. Similarly, in Nebraska Opens a New Window. , voters narrowly passed the Medicaid expansion, with 53 percent in favor and 46 percent against. (In both Utah and Nebraska, people whose income is below 138 percent of the federal poverty line are now qualified for Medicaid).
 

Kbrown

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Jeff Sessions resigned. I look forward to his being a revered figure in The RESISTANCE! just like every formerly-hated intelligence and law enforcement agent.
 

jsmith6919

Honored Member - RIP
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Jeff Sessions resigned. I look forward to his being a revered figure in The RESISTANCE! just like every formerly-hated intelligence and law enforcement agent.
I'm just surprised he doesn't have a gofundme already
 

L.T. Fan

I'm Easy If You Are
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Jeff Sessions resigned. I look forward to his being a revered figure in The RESISTANCE! just like every formerly-hated intelligence and law enforcement agent.
I am not that extrenme about him but he did sit on his thumbs as far as looking into areas that were serious allegations against his agencies under his purview.
 

Kbrown

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So I actually kind of like the parties splitting the legislature, but holy shit, I have never seen a party not get absolutely everything it wants and want to change the entire system.

We have gone from abolishing the Electoral College, to Supreme Court term limits, to abolishing the Senate or making it proportional. It is incredible.
 

skidadl

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So I actually kind of like the parties splitting the legislature, but holy shit, I have never seen a party not get absolutely everything it wants and want to change the entire system.

We have gone from abolishing the Electoral College, to Supreme Court term limits, to abolishing the Senate or making it proportional. It is incredible.
America is too dumb to know that it is incredible. How sad is that?
 

BipolarFuk

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Arizona GOP sues to limit mail-in ballots in Senate race

Arizona GOP sues to limit mail-in ballots in Senate race

About 75 percent of voters cast ballots by mail, but those ballots have to go through the laborious signature confirmation process.

Republicans filed a lawsuit Wednesday night to challenge the way some Arizona counties count mail-in ballots as election officials began to slowly tally more than 600,000 outstanding votes in the narrow U.S. Senate race — a task that could take days.

Republican Rep. Martha McSally and Democratic Rep. Kyrstin Sinema were separated by a small fraction of the 1.7 million tabulated votes.

About 75 percent of Arizona voters cast ballots by mail, but those ballots have to go through the laborious signature confirmation process, and only then can be opened and tabulated. If county recorders have issues verifying signatures they are allowed to ask voters to verify their identity.

The suit filed Wednesday by four county Republican parties alleges that the state's 15 county recorders don't follow a uniform standard for allowing voters to adjust problems with their mail-in ballots, and that two counties improperly allow those fixes after Election Day.

The GOP complained about the issue before Election Day and threatened to sue. Democrats alleged it was attempted voter suppression and that recorders have followed the same procedures for years with no issues. Republicans said it was about following the law and having a timely ballot count.

The sluggish count is a perennial issue for Arizona, but has rarely received such a high level of attention because the GOP-leaning state generally has had few nationally-watched nail-biting contests.

The lawsuit alleges that signature verification must stop when polls close, and seeks an injunction to stop the counting of such ballots that have been verified after then. It's unclear how many of these votes still remain outstanding, but the suit singles out the state's two biggest urban counties, the center of support for Sinema. It says the two counties allow voters to help clear up signature problems up to five days after the election.

Democrats believe the uncounted urban ballots dropped off shortly before Election Day favors Sinema.

The lawsuit is scheduled to be heard Friday, after the next release late Thursday of tallied ballots.

It's one window into the complexities of mail ballots and the so-called "late earlies" that arrive just before Election Day and regularly gum up the state's vote counting system.

This election featured heavy statewide turnout of about 60 percent, more in line with a presidential election than a midterm — part of the reason county registrars were overloaded with uncounted ballots.

One candidate familiar with the long wait is McSally. It took The Associated Press 12 days to name her as the loser of her first congressional race in 2012 because the margin was so narrow and vote counting was slow. McSally's second and successful bid for the seat ended with a recount in December of 2014, more than one month after the election.

McSally tweeted early Wednesday that she was going "to bed with a lead of over 14,000 votes."

She added: "We're confident tomorrow will bring more good news."

Sinema tweeted that the "race is about you and we're going to make sure your vote is counted. There are a lot of outstanding ballots — especially those mailed-in — and a lot of reasons to feel good!"

The cliffhanger Senate race comes in what's otherwise shaping up to be another banner Arizona year for Republicans. The GOP has won every statewide race in Arizona over the past decade, and Democrats were hoping Sinema could break that streak.

Republican Gov. Doug Ducey was easily re-elected over a challenge from Democrat David Garcia, a professor. The GOP notched victories in the attorney general, treasurer and secretary of state races as well.

The picture was brighter for the state's Democrats in Congress, where Democrat Ann Kirkpatrick was elected to the Tucson-area swing district seat vacated by McSally and Democrats held all their other four seats, giving them a majority of the state's nine-member U.S. House delegation.

The Senate contest was the marquee race, featuring two champion fundraisers who are no strangers to tight races. They are battling over the seat vacated by Sen. Jeff Flake, a Republican who decided not to run for re-election because he realized his criticism of President Donald Trump made it impossible for him to survive politically.

McSally and Sinema have both remade themselves politically. McSally, 52, is a onetime Trump critic who has embraced the president since his election. She has tried to rally Republican voters by emphasizing her military background as the first U.S. female combat pilot while touting her support for the president's tax cut and other parts of his agenda.

Sinema, 42, is a former Green Party activist who became a Democratic centrist with her first election to the House of Representatives in 2012.
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This party will DO ANYTHING to make sure people have a harder time voting or just not counting them anyway. :lol
 
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