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Republicans deal stinging mid-term rebuke to Obama

Last Updated 03 May 2018, 04:29 IST

Resurgent Republicans, led by the ultra-conservative Tea Party movement, steamrolled Democrats in Tuesday’s key mid-term election by taking at least 60 seats for a commanding majority in the House. It was one of the chamber’s largest political swings of the past century.

Meanwhile, Indian-American Nikki Haley scripted history by winning the South Carolina gubernatorial polls, becoming only the second person of Indian origin to be the governor of a US state, but rest of the six candidates from the community drew a blank in the keenly contested mid-term Congressional polls.

Haley, 38, born of Sikh parents who migrated from Punjab, is the second Indian-American to be a governor of a US State after Bobby Jindal of Louisiana; and also the first Indian-origin woman governor.

The beleaguered Democrats clung onto the Senate, but the Republicans netted six seats, with two more battleground states, Colorado and Washington, yet to be declared. They needed an unlikely 10 pickups to take the Senate.

By early Wednesday, the Republicans had 46 seats in the US Senate against 51 for the Democrats out of 100 seats total, with three seats still in dispute. In the House, the Republicans won at least 239 of the 435 seats, with 12 seats still in dispute.

The Republicans also picked up 10 governorships, riding a wave of Republican enthusiasm across all regions on the country. The Republican House victory will force Nancy Pelosi, the first-ever woman chamber speaker, from power.

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(Published 03 November 2010, 07:14 IST)

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