Nov. 12, 2022 US election coverage | CNN Politics

Nov. 12, 2022 US election coverage

WASHINGTON, DC - NOVEMBER 08: The rising sun creeps across the US Capitol dome on November 8, 2022 in Washington, DC. After months of campaigning, Americans across the nation are heading to the polls to cast their votes in the midterm elections. Republicans are favored to take back control of the US House of Representatives and if they can do the same in the US Senate it would mean a divided government in Washington for the next two years. (Photo by Samuel Corum/Getty Images)
'Very good news' for Biden: CNN projects Democrats will keep control of Senate
03:05 - Source: CNN

What we covered here

  • Democrats keep control of Senate: Democrats will maintain their narrow Senate majority, CNN projects, after victories in close contests in Nevada and Arizona.
  • Meanwhile in Georgia: The state’s Senate contest is headed to a Dec. 6 runoff, and a Democratic victory there would broaden the party’s majority in the chamber.
  • Where things stand in House races: Republicans appear to be inching closer to the 218 seats that would deliver them a House majority, but several congressional races — including in California and Colorado — remain uncalled.
34 Posts

Biden says Democrats "feel good" about where they are as they look ahead to Georgia's runoff election

US President Joe Biden speaks during a press conference a day after the US midterm elections, from the State Dining Room of the White House in Washington, DC, on November 9,

President Biden celebrated Democrats’ win in the Senate, telling reporters in remarks that the party is now focusing on the upcoming Georgia runoff election.

Biden said he believes the turnout is a reflection of “the quality of our candidates” and that they all are “running on the same program.”

“And so, I feel good, and I’m looking forward to the next couple of years,” Biden said.

The president noted that the future of his agenda is “always better” with 51 Democratic senators.

“Because we are in a situation where you don’t have to have an even makeup of the committees —  so that’s why it is important, mostly,” Biden said. “But, it’s simply better, the bigger the number the better.”

Biden spoke with Schumer and Cortez Masto following Senate projection

President Biden spoke Sunday with Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, the White House said.

Biden spoke with Cortez Masto at 10:08 a.m. local time and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer at 10:28 a.m. local time, following the news that Democrats have held onto their majority in the Senate, according to the White House.

Nevada's secretary of state-elect says "future of American democracy hinged on the outcome" of his race

Cisco Aguilar, the Democrat who will be Nevada’s next secretary of state, said the “future of American democracy hinged on the outcome” of his race in his matchup with avowed election denier Jim Marchant, who baselessly insisted that the 2020 presidential election in Nevada was “rigged.” Marchant said he would not have certified President Joe Biden’s win in Nevada if he had been secretary of state in 2020.

He praised voters “who put country over the party and rejected extremism so that the will of Nevada’s continues to determine the future of our believed state.”

Aguilar will be the first Latino to serve in that role in Nevada.

Analysis: Why the Georgia runoff election is still really important to Democrats

Although Democrats are already projected to win control of the Senate, CNN chief political Gloria Borger said the upcoming Dec. 6 Georgia runoff is still really important to the party.

“And no Democrat will tell you that they are going to fight any less hard for that seat,” she said.

In remarks to reporters tonight, President Biden celebrated Democrats’ win in the Senate and said the party is now focusing on the Georgia runoff. He noted that the future of his agenda is “always better” with 51 Democratic senators.

“Because we are in a situation where you don’t have to have an even makeup of the committees — so that’s why it is important, mostly,” Biden said. “But, it’s simply better, the bigger the number the better.”

More on the runoff: Neither Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock nor Republican challenger Herschel Walker surpassed the 50% threshold needed to win the race outright Tuesday evening, CNN projected, forcing a runoff election.

With Democrats’ projected win in the Nevada Senate race, they now have 50 Senate seats to Republicans’ 49 seats. 

Even if Republicans win the Georgia runoff, though, Vice President Kamala Harris would continue to cast the tie-breaking vote in an evenly divided Senate to guarantee the Democratic majority.

CNN’s Eric Bradner contributed reporting to this post.

CNN Projection: Democrat Cisco Aguilar will defeat Jim Marchant in Nevada secretary of state race

Democrat Cisco Aguilar will win the contest for Nevada secretary of state, CNN projects.

Democrat Cisco Aguilar will win the contest for Nevada secretary of state, CNN projects, defeating Republican Jim Marchant, who repeatedly spread falsehoods about the legitimacy of recent elections in the state. 

Aguilar, a Las Vegas attorney and former aide to the late US Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, will be the state’s first Latino secretary of state. During the campaign, Aguilar said he wanted to “remove barriers to voter participation” and make elections more transparent “to maintain the public trust.” 

But much of the attention in the race focused on Marchant, who falsely attributed former President Donald Trump’s 2020 loss to a “rigged” election in the state and encouraged hand-counting of ballots, rather than the use of vote-tallying machines – a process critics say would lead to chaos and errors in running elections. 

Aguilar will fill an open seat now held by a Republican Barbara Cegavske, who was censured by her party for refusing to go along with false claims pushed by allies of former President Donald Trump that he lost Nevada in 2020 because of widespread fraud.  

Cegavske is term limited. 

Aguilar’s previous roles have included working as general counsel to the management company of husband-and-wife tennis legends Andre Agassi and Steffi Graff and serving on the state’s athletic commission. 

Sen. Cortez Masto's campaign reacts to her Nevada win: "She proved everyone wrong again"

Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto speaks during a gospel breakfast with former President Bill Clinton, on November 6, in Las Vegas.

Moments after CNN projected Democratic Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto will keep her Senate seat, the senator’s campaign director of communications took to Twitter to say that the first Latina senator has never lost an election. 

“You know who always said we were going to win this race? Catherine Cortez Masto,” Josh Marcus-Blank, the campaign’s communication director, tweeted. “So many people outside Nevada counted her out, but she knows her state, she campaigned everywhere, and she just beat the top Republican recruit in the country to deliver the Senate majority.”

Marcus-Blank went on to post, “What did people get wrong about this race? The first Latina Senator knows her community better than anonymous sources. The daughter of a Teamster knows how to fight for working families. And CCM’s a former AG — the crime attacks couldn’t stick.” 

With Cortez Masto’s win, the Democrats will keep their narrow Senate majority for the next two years.

See his tweet:

Schumer: This election is a "victory and a vindication for Democrats"

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer called the midterm elections and the Democrats’ win in his chamber “a victory and vindication” for the party.

Schumer, who spoke after the Senate race in Nevada was called in favor of incumbent Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto, said three things helped the Democrats secure the chamber: “One, our terrific candidates. Two, our agenda and our accomplishments. And three, the American people rejected the anti-democratic extremist MAGA Republicans.”

Schumer said Democrats had “faith we were talking to what American people really cared about.”

“And we knew the negativity, the nastiness, the condoning of Donald Trump’s Big Lie, and saying that the elections were rigged, when there’s no proof of that at all – would hurt the Republicans, not help them,” he said.

A Democratic majority in the US Senate also means Schumer remains leader in the upper chamber.

“I feel good,” Schumer said. “I feel good for the country because so many people worried – I did – about this democracy, with all the negativity and all the threats and even some people doing violence.”

“America showed that we believe in our democracy, that the roots of democracy are deep and strong, and it will prevail as long as we fight for it,” he added.

Schumer signaled that he would try to work across the aisle in the Senate, but isn’t opposed to taking on legislation “on our own.”

“My first choice is always to do it bipartisan,” Schumer said. “But on issues that really matter to the American people and when the Republicans aren’t being bipartisan, won’t be bipartisan, we try and do it on our own.”

GOP has "an awful lot of soul-searching" to do after Democrats' win in the Senate, CNN's Gloria Borger says

Following CNN’s projection that Democrats will keep control of the Senate, CNN chief political analyst Gloria Borger said Republicans now have “an awful lot of soul-searching” to do.

Borger said that this may be the moment that shows that former President Donald Trump “is not a kingmaker any longer.”

“But I think that the fact that the Republicans couldn’t pull this off is going to force them to go to the couch and have a little bit of therapy and say, ‘Why did we do this? Were we following the wrong leaders? And how can we fix this?’” she said.

“One short-term answer might be to tell your voters that they should vote by mail because maybe it is easier and maybe more people do it,” she added.

CNN political director David Chalian explained what the win means for President Biden and his administration.

“This is very good news for the Biden administration, because things like judges and Cabinet appointments and what have you, that will not be under the purview of Mitch McConnell to navigate through the Senate, that will be under the purview of Chuck Schumer who will maintain his role of majority leader,” Chalian said.

“In terms of the balance of power shifting in Washington, with this Senate projection it doesn’t, because the most vulnerable Democratic incumbent figured her path to victory,” he added.

CNN Projection: Democrats will keep control of the Senate

The Capitol building is seen through the American flags in Washington, D.C. on October 20.

Democrats will keep their narrow Senate majority for the next two years, CNN projects, after victories in close contests in Nevada and Arizona. Democrats now have 50 Senate seats to Republicans’ 49 seats. 

In Nevada, CNN projects that Democratic Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto, a former prosecutor and state attorney general, will defeat Republican Adam Laxalt, her successor in the attorney general’s office and the son and grandson of former senators.  

In Arizona, CNN projects that Democratic Sen. Mark Kelly, a former astronaut and the husband of former Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, will defeat Republican Blake Masters, a venture capitalist who was endorsed by Trump and supported by tech mogul and emerging GOP megadonor Peter Thiel. 

Georgia’s race between Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock and Republican challenger Herschel Walker is headed to a December runoff after neither candidate cleared the 50% threshold on Tuesday.  

Even if Republicans win the Georgia runoff, though, Vice President Kamala Harris would continue to cast the tie-breaking vote in an evenly divided Senate to guarantee the Democratic majority. 

Only one Senate seat has changed hands so far in the 2022 midterm elections: Pennsylvania, where Democratic Lt. Gov. John Fetterman, who campaigned as he recovered from a May stroke, defeated Republican Mehmet Oz, the celebrity doctor who was endorsed by former President Donald Trump.  

Republicans successfully defended seats in hard-fought races in Florida, North Carolina, Ohio and Wisconsin, while Democrats retained their seats in competitive contests in Arizona, Colorado, Nevada and New Hampshire.  

More on the Democrats’ Senate win: Retaining Senate control is a huge boost to President Biden over the remaining two years of his first term in the White House.  

It means Democrats will have the ability to confirm Biden’s judicial nominees — avoiding scenarios such as the one former President Barack Obama faced in 2016, when then-Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell refused to hold a vote on his Supreme Court nominee, Merrick Garland. It also means that Senate Democrats can reject bills passed by the House and can set their own agenda.  

CNN Projection: Nevada's Cortez Masto will win reelection, allowing Democrats to hold the Senate 

Democratic Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto will win reelection in Nevada, CNN projects,

Democratic Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto will win reelection in Nevada, CNN projects, clinching a critical victory that will allow Democrats to keep control of the US Senate.  

Cortez Masto had long been viewed as one of the most vulnerable Democratic incumbents as she fended off a challenge from former Nevada Attorney General Adam Laxalt in a state whose economy had been hard hit by the Covid-19 pandemic and inflation.  

With Cortez Masto — the first Latina senator — securing a second term, Democrats will hold 50 seats and Republicans will hold 49. Democrats are also defending a seat in Georgia, where Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock and Republican Herschel Walker are headed to a December 6 runoff. Even if Republicans pick up that seat, Vice President Kamala Harris will still hold the tie-breaking vote, as she does now in the evenly divided chamber. Democrats were able to hold the majority, in part, because they picked up a seat in Pennsylvania, where Lt. Gov. John Fetterman, a Democrat, defeated Trump-backed Mehmet Oz in the contest to replace retiring Republican Sen. Pat Toomey.  

Control of the US House still hangs in the balance and may not be determined for some time with ballots left to be counted in closely contested races in California, as well as other states. 

Key Nevada county expected to release results from its remaining 22,000 ballots soon 

Ballots are sorted in the tabulation area at the Clark County Election Department during the ongoing election process on November 9, in North Las Vegas, Nevada.

Clark County, Nevada, will release results from its remaining 22,000 mail ballots tonight, according to county registrar Joe Gloria.

This batch of results will be released “sometime this afternoon or early evening,” he said earlier today.

Why these votes are key: Clark County is home to Las Vegas and is the largest county in Nevada. Results from the vote-rich county could be pivotal in deciding Nevada’s razor-thin race for US Senate between Republican Adam Laxalt and incumbent Democrat Catherine Cortez Masto, which is still uncalled. 

An additional 268 ballots arrived in the mail today, which is the last day ballots can arrive. Only ballots that were postmarked by Election Day will count. 

In addition, there are 7,139 mail ballots that could still be “cured,” Gloria said at a press conference Saturday. That means there was an issue with the ballot — such as a missing signature – that a voter can fix to have their vote counted. Not all of these 7,139 ballots will get “cured,” meaning they won’t all ultimately get counted. 

There are also still 5,555 provisional ballots that need to be adjudicated and potentially counted, Gloria said. Provisional ballots are used when there is an issue at an in-person polling place, like if it’s unclear whether someone is registered or if they show up at the wrong precinct. The county examines the provisional ballots and verifies that the voter was eligible – so some, but not all, of these 5,555 ballots will count. 

Analysis: Why it takes longer to count West Coast votes

An election worker carries trays filled with mail in ballots to open and verify at the Maricopa County Tabulation and Election Center in Phoenix on November 11.

What’s taking so long to determine which party has control of the US House and Senate? Blame California, Nevada, Washington and the whole vote-by-mail West Coast, really.

Actually, don’t blame them. This is just how elections work in 2022.

Blame an evenly divided electorate: If elections weren’t so close, it wouldn’t take so long to figure out who won.

CNN has still not projected who will control either the House or the Senate in large part because of close races on the West Coast.

Read this more detailed report on the latest state of play from CNN’s Jeremy Herb.

Probably worth the wait: The benefit of knowing who won on Election Day is arguably outweighed by allowing more people access to the vote and the cost savings of not having to staff so many polling places.

Bill Gates, the chairman of the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors, told CNN’s Sara Sidner on Thursday why it takes longer to count mail-in ballots and those placed in ballot drop boxes in the days immediately prior to and on Election Day. Maricopa is Arizona’s most populous county that includes Phoenix.

“This is how we run elections in Arizona,” Gates told Sidner. “If people don’t like that, they can go to the legislature and have them pass new laws.”

It’s a process that’s been in place in Maricopa County since the 1990s, he said. It’s also overseen by both Republican and Democratic Party officials.

Verifying signatures: With election officials visible, busily working behind him at the Maricopa County Tabulation and Election Center, Gates said those mail-in ballots that were dropped off right before and on Tuesday don’t even start the important process of signature verification until the Wednesday after Election Day.

“We have experts here who go through, compare the signature on the outside of the ballot envelope with the signature that we have in our voter registration file,” Gates said. “That takes a while because we got to get that right.”

Most states have some sort of signature verification system for their absentee and mail-in ballots, according to a tally from the National Conference of State Legislatures.

Keep reading here.

Where things stand in the Arizona governor's race as new vote counts come in

Tabulators process ballots at the Maricopa County Tabulation and Election Center in Phoenix, on Saturday.

An estimated 290,000 votes are yet to be counted in Arizona, and the governor’s race is still on the line.

The vast majority of these votes are in Maricopa County, CNN political director David Chalian explains.

Republican candidate Kari Lake needs in the range of 55 to 57% of that outstanding vote, Chalian said.

Watch him break down the numbers:

1774c8cf-d27d-4d36-a7f2-c0a68af33714.mp4
01:31 - Source: CNN

CNN Projection: Democrat Marie Gluesenkamp Perez will defeat Republican Joe Kent in Washington's 3rd District

Marie Gluesenkamp Perez will be the first Latino Democrat elected to Congress from Washington state, CNN projects, winning election to the state’s 3rd Congressional District.

Gluesenkamp Perez, an auto repair shop owner whose father immigrated to the US from Mexico, will defeat Republican Joe Kent to succeed GOP Rep. Jaime Herrera Beutler, who finished behind Gluesenkamp Perez and Kent in the August top-two primary.

Gluesenkamp Perez’s defeat of Kent is a significant victory for Democrats in a race that had been rated Lean Republican by Inside Elections with Nathan L. Gonzales.  

Democrats had long targeted this seat, but GOP Rep. Jaime Herrera Beutler had proven a strong incumbent. Her vote to impeachment Donald Trump after the US Capitol riot, however, made her a target of the former president. When she failed to advance to the general election in Washington’s top-two system, she became one of four Republicans who voted to impeached Trump who failed to make it to the general election — and the 3rd District became an open seat.

Kent, a former Green Beret and gold star spouse endorsed by Trump, had tried to shift his campaign rhetoric toward the center – including by removing calls to adjudicate the 2020 election from his website sometime between June and July. But as CNN KFile has reported, his campaign had been bogged down by associations with white nationalists and extremists, whom Kent has repeatedly had to distance himself from.

Arizona's Pima County will post about 20,000 votes by 8 p.m. ET

Pima County, Arizona, will post 19,944 newly counted votes on Saturday night by 8 p.m. ET, county officials said.

These officials added that the votes being released tonight are primarily mail ballots that were received or dropped off prior to Election Day. 

Pima County is a Democratic stronghold and is home to Tucson.

There are just under 50,000 votes left to be processed in the county and this remaining vote is primarily mail ballots that were dropped off on Election Day, according to the officials.

The county will not be posting any vote totals on Sunday and will not be holding a news conference, although they will continue to process ballots and tabulate results. After Saturday night’s post, the next vote dump and news conference will be on Monday.  

The county has also completed verifying early ballots and will begin work on processing the remaining 2,400 provisional ballots.

Here's what to watch for when more election results are released in key races tonight

The political world’s attention is on the western US Saturday as officials work through another day to tally the votes in key races.

The razor-thin elections for Nevada’s Senate seat and Arizona’s governorship have yet to be called. Large counties in both states are working to whittle down the tens of thousands of ballots that still need to be counted.

Races we’re watching

In Nevada: Republican Adam Laxalt is holding onto a slim lead of about 860 votes over Democratic incumbent Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto.

If Cortez Masto wins, Democrats are projected to take control of the Senate. If she loses, the fate of the upper house will be decided in December’s Georgia runoff.

In Arizona: Democrat Katie Hobbs leads Republican Kari Lake by about 31,000 votes in the governor’s race.

It’s been a fiery campaign marked by Lake’s unfounded claims about the 2020 election and Hobbs’ role as the Arizona secretary of state.

Where we expect results this evening

In both states taking center stage tonight, large counties will release a significant number of results.

Clark County, Nevada: Clark County, which is Nevada’s most populous and encompasses Las Vegas, will release results from its remaining 22,000 mail ballots tonight, according to county registrar Joe Gloria.

This batch of results will be released “sometime this afternoon or early evening,” he said, and he estimated that this could happen around 7 p.m. ET at the earliest.  

Washoe County, Nevada: Washoe County plans to release its next batch of results on Saturday night around 11 p.m. ET, according to election officials.

There are approximately 12,000 ballots remaining to be counted there, officials said, though it’s unknown how many will be in Saturday night’s batch of results.

Washoe County, which encompasses Reno, is Nevada’s second-largest by population and is considered a swing county.

Maricopa County, Arizona: More results are expected around 10 p.m. ET Saturday from Maricopa County, which is the most populous in Arizona.

Elections supervisor Bill Gates told CNN he expects a vote drop similar to last night, when the county reported about 80,000 more votes.

Gates said Friday that there are about 275,000 ballots left to count in the county, which includes Phoenix.

Maricopa County rebuts election disinformation in Tweet thread

In a series of tweets Saturday, Maricopa County, Arizona, officials pushed back against election disinformation and baseless fraud claims as they continued to count the vote in Arizona. 

The message continued: “CANDIDATES: All legal votes will be counted, including votes for you. If you have the most votes in the final tally, you will be elected. If you do not have the most votes, you will have lost your election.”

The account adds, wryly: “SOCIAL MEDIA BOTS: Your disapproval is duly noted but your upvotes and retweets will not be part of this year’s totals. This is not meant as an affront to your robot overlords, it’s just not allowed for in Arizona law.” 

Some background: On Friday night, the Republican National Committee and the Republican Party of Arizona tweeted a statement criticizing the vote-counting process as too slow in Maricopa County.

Arizona GOP gubernatorial nominee Kari Lake baselessly claimed Thursday that election officials were intentionally delaying results to make her look worse. And former President Donald Trump has claimed, without proof, that county officials are rigging the vote in favor of Democrats.

The county’s top election official, a Republican, has repeatedly pushed back on those claims.

“It’s really, really unfortunate that some candidates, some activists are deciding to spread this misinformation,” the chairman of the county’s Board of Supervisors, Bill Gates, told CNN’s Jim Acosta. “We have spent weeks at Maricopa County, getting that word out that people should not anticipate results on election night or even the next day. That it does take this long.”

CNN’s Tara Subramaniam contributed to this report.

Clark County pushes back against Trump’s election lies: "There's no way that we can find ballots"

Clark County Registrar of Voters Joe Gloria speaks to reporters Saturday.

Clark County Registrar of Voters Joe Gloria repudiated former President Donald Trump’s claim that they are corruptly “finding all sorts of ballots” in his county – and stressed that his team is simply following the law as they continue to count the remaining votes. 

Gloria was referring to ballots that are still trickling into election offices. In Nevada, ballots that are postmarked by Tuesday, Election Day, can still be counted, as long as they arrive by Saturday. About 270 such ballots arrived on Saturday, Gloria said, though it’s unclear how many were postmarked by Tuesday.

Trump’s claims: In a Truth Social post on Friday night, Trump baselessly accused the county of “finding” ballots and attempting to steal the election from Republicans. 

“Now they’re finding all sorts of Ballots in Clark County, Nevada. They are pulling out all stops to steal the Election from Adam Laxalt,” Trump falsely claimed, referring to the GOP nominee for Senate, Adam Laxalt, who is running against incumbent Democratic Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto.

At Gloria’s press conference Saturday, he also said that his office hasn’t heard from any candidates with complaints about voter fraud.

“We haven’t heard anything from any campaign related to fraud or questioning” the results, Gloria said.

While Trump has baselessly claimed that the Senate election is being stolen from Laxalt, the candidate himself hasn’t peddled those same unfounded allegations. Laxalt acknowledged in a series of tweets Saturday morning that Masto has a legitimate path to victory if the remaining ballots from Clark County break her way.

Protesters gather outside Maricopa County elections department as count continues

Demonstrators gather at a rally to protest midterm election results outside of Maricopa County Tabulation and Election Center in Phoenix, Arizona, on November 12.

Maricopa County, Arizona, elections supervisor Bill Gates said Saturday that protesters outside the building where ballots are being counted are “peaceful” and that he has “every reason to believe they will continue to be peaceful.”

“But I’ll tell you what, the people in Maricopa County overwhelmingly appreciate the work that’s being done by these folks, the long hours that they’re working. But people are excited to get the results, and I completely understand that. We just ask for their patience,” he added.

Gates said he anticipates a vote drop similar to last night, when the county reported about 80,000 more votes, which included many of the mail-in ballots that were dropped off at polling places on Election Day.

Gates said Friday that there are about 275,000 ballots left to count in the county, which includes Phoenix.

“I’m not a prognosticator. Our job here is to continue counting the votes and to get closer to having that completed,” he told Acosta on Saturday.

As voters wait for the final results, some on social media have baselessly claimed Secretary of State Katie Hobbs, who is also the Democratic nominee for governor, had been present in a Maricopa County room where ballots were being counted.

Asked about the false claim by Acosta, Gates called it a “head-scratcher.”

“For folks to put that sort of information out there, that that woman was Katie Hobbs is just a real head-scratcher for me, and what it says to me is that these people think that the people of Maricopa County are pretty gullible, and quite frankly, the people of this country,” Gates said.

The image is a screenshot of video from a tabulation room in Maricopa County. In Arizona, live video feeds showing the ballot-counting process across the state are available to the public. 

The woman wrongly identified as Hobbs has shoulder-length brown hair and wears glasses.

“Not every woman with glasses is Katie Hobbs,” reads a post from Maricopa County’s official Twitter account. “We can confirm this was a party Observer. Please refrain from making assumptions about workers who happen to wear glasses.”

READ MORE

Democrats will keep control of the Senate, CNN projects
Nevada’s Catherine Cortez Masto will win reelection, CNN projects, allowing Democrats to keep the Senate
How the Georgia Senate runoff will work
What to know about the outstanding votes in Nevada and Arizona
Meet the history-makers of the 2022 midterm elections
Kevin McCarthy faces rocky road to speakership as hardliners emboldened by GOP’s election showing
How Brian Kemp took on Trump and created a blueprint for the GOP

READ MORE

Democrats will keep control of the Senate, CNN projects
Nevada’s Catherine Cortez Masto will win reelection, CNN projects, allowing Democrats to keep the Senate
How the Georgia Senate runoff will work
What to know about the outstanding votes in Nevada and Arizona
Meet the history-makers of the 2022 midterm elections
Kevin McCarthy faces rocky road to speakership as hardliners emboldened by GOP’s election showing
How Brian Kemp took on Trump and created a blueprint for the GOP