U.S. midterms latest: Pelosi to announce future plans after GOP House win

Biden faces gridlock with Congress split between Democrats, Republicans

Nikkei staff writers

NEW YORK -- As vote counting continues in some states, Republicans took back the House of Representatives -- albeit by a slim margin -- while Democrats secured control of the Senate.

Though preelection polls pointed to a Republican landslide, results in many states turned out to be disappointing for the GOP as President Joe Biden's Democratic Party outperformed expectations.

The results of the midterms also are expected to affect U.S. economic and foreign policy toward Asian countries.

Entries include material from wire services and other sources. Here are the latest developments:

UPDATES CLOSED

Thursday, Nov. 17 (New York time)

10:11 a.m. U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is expected to address her plans for the future with colleagues on Thursday, The Associated Press reports, after Democrats narrowly lost control of the House to Republicans in the midterm elections.

Pelosi's widely anticipated decision on whether to seek another term as the Democratic leader would come after the party stymied an expected Republican wave in Congress but also following a brutal attack on her husband, Paul, late last month by an intruder in their San Francisco home.

Wednesday, Nov. 16

6:46 p.m. Republicans win control of the House of Representatives in the wake of the Nov. 8 midterm congressional elections, but with only a slim majority that falls short of the party's hoped-for "red wave."

With Republicans running the House, President Joe Biden faces gridlock in Congress over the final two years of his term. The Democrats had gone into the election with a narrow majority in the 435-seat chamber.

Tuesday, Nov. 15

3:17 p.m. Kevin McCarthy wins the Republican nomination for speaker of the House. If the Republican Party controls the House, which is expected to happen soon, he has the chance to seize the gavel from Nancy Pelosi. The formal vote for House speaker will come when the new Congress convenes in January.

8:35 a.m. Republicans are only one seat away from taking control of the House of Representatives. The Associated Press has called 217 seats for Republicans, while Democrats are at 205. Races for the remaining 13 seats have yet to be called.

Sunday, Nov. 13

11:00 a.m. U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said it was too soon to say whether she would seek to maintain her leadership post with control of the chamber following Tuesday's election still uncertain, adding that she has no plans to fade away.

Saturday, Nov. 12

10:40 p.m. U.S. President Joe Biden says he was "incredibly pleased" with the turnout in the U.S. election after Democrats clinched control of the Senate, a major victory for the president as he looks to his next two years in office, according to Reuters.

Speaking to reporters in Cambodia ahead of an East Asia Summit, Biden said the turnout was a reflection of the quality of candidates his party was fielding.

9:50 p.m. The Associated Press reports that Democrats kept control of the Senate on Saturday, as Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto's victory in Nevada gave Democrats the 50 seats they needed to keep the Senate.

8:50 a.m. The Associated Press reports that in Nevada, Democratic Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto was running barely behind Republican Adam Laxalt. With the remaining tens of thousands of uncounted ballots mainly coming from the state's urban cores, her campaign expressed optimism she could overtake her challenger. Laxalt, meanwhile, has steadily predicted he'll stay in the lead as the count drags on.

Friday, Nov. 11

11:25 p.m. Democratic Sen. Mark Kelly wins his bid for reelection in Arizona, a crucial swing state, defeating Republican venture capitalist Blake Masters to put his party one victory away from clinching control of the chamber for the next two years of Joe Biden's presidency.

As of now, Republicans and Democrats both hold 49 seats in the 100-seat Senate. If the Democrats reach 50, the liberal party will have control of the upper chamber because Vice President Kamala Harris holds the tiebreaker vote.

Of the two states that don't have a clear winner yet, Nevada is still counting votes. Georgia is set to hold a runoff on Dec. 6.

Wednesday, Nov. 9

9:53 p.m. Republicans inched closer to a narrow House majority, while control of the Senate hinged on a few tight races, The Associated Press reports.

Either party could secure a Senate majority with wins in both Nevada and Arizona -- where the races were too early to call. But there was a strong possibility that, for the second time in two years, the Senate majority could come down to a runoff in Georgia next month.

In the House, Republicans on Wednesday night were within a dozen seats of the 218 needed to take control, while Democrats kept seats in districts from Virginia to Pennsylvania to Kansas and many West Coast contests were still too early to call.

5:21 p.m. U.S. President Joe Biden speaks to reporters on the midterm elections, saying that Nov. 8 was "a good day, I think, for democracy, and I think it was a good day for America."

"While the press and the pundits [were] predicting a giant red wave, it didn't happen," he said.

On running again in 2024, Biden said that his intention is to but that he hasn't made a final decision yet. "My guess is it'd be early next year we make that judgment," he said.

Apart from the election, when asked whether he would tell Chinese President Xi Jinping at a possible meeting this month that he is committed to defending Taiwan militarily, Biden said that "what I want to do with him when we talk is lay out what ... each of our red lines are, understand what he believes to be in the critical national interests of China, what I know to be the critical interests of the United States, and to determine whether or not they conflict with one another."

"The Taiwan doctrine has not changed at all from the very beginning," he added.

4:20 p.m. Wall Street ends sharply lower as Republican gains in midterm elections appear more modest than some expected. Preliminary data shows roughly 2% losses for the S&P 500, Dow Jones Industrial Average and Nasdaq composite.

"I think we were in a unique situation where the more the Republicans won, the better off the market would have been," says Jay Hatfield, CEO of Infrastructure Capital Management in New York. "At least there would have been some stocks strongly rallying, like defense and energy stocks."

Clean energy shares -- which typically benefit under Democratic leadership -- rose, with the Invesco Solar ETF up for the day.

2:30 p.m. Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock of Georgia and Republican challenger Herschel Walker will meet in a Dec. 6 runoff after neither reached the general election majority required under state law, Georgia secretary of state Brad Raffensperger confirms, according to the BBC.

Unless either the Democrats or the Republicans sweep the two remaining tight U.S. Senate races -- in Arizona and Nevada -- the runoff election will decide which party controls the Senate.

1:10 p.m. Sen. Ron Johnson is projected to win reelection in Wisconsin, beating Democratic challenger Lt. Gov. Mandela Barnes in a hotly contested race, according to The Associated Press. Johnson's win bolsters Republicans' hope of winning back control of the Senate.

10:15 a.m. Voters in conservative Kentucky reject a ballot measure that would have established that the state's constitution does not protect or recognize a woman's right to an abortion.

Voters in Michigan, California and Vermont support ballot initiatives enshrining abortion rights in their state constitutions.

9 a.m. Democrats win elections for governor in the "blue wall" states of Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, enabling them to defend against Republican-dominated state legislatures on issues such as abortion rights and fair elections.

Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan and Tony Evers of Wisconsin are reelected, while Josh Shapiro will succeed an outgoing Democratic governor in Pennsylvania, Edison Research projects. The three states served as a "blue wall" that helped President Joe Biden defeat Donald Trump in 2020, when Republican officials tried to overturn those results.

8 a.m. New York Gov. Kathy Hochul wins her bid for a full term against Lee Zeldin, a Republican member of the U.S. House. The Democrat's victory comes after American semiconductor firm Micron Technology said in October it would invest up to $100 billion to build a new plant in central New York.

3 a.m. In a huge victory for Democrats, Lt. Gov. John Fetterman defeats Trump-backed Mehmet Oz to capture Pennsylvania's Senate race, flipping a seat that had been in Republican hands.

Fetterman, 53, suffered a near-fatal stroke in May, and returned to campaigning months later with hesitant, altered speech.

Tuesday, Nov. 8

11:09 p.m. Republicans continue to hunt for the one-seat gain needed to control the U.S. Senate, but neither party has flipped a seat so far.

J.D. Vance keeps Ohio's open Senate seat in Republican hands, defeating Democratic Rep. Tim Ryan in a race that featured anti-China rhetoric. Democratic Sen. Michael Bennet wins reelection in Colorado, while Republican incumbent Chuck Grassley of Iowa also wins another term.

10:30 p.m. Republicans aimed to flip three House districts in Virginia considered bellwethers for the nation, but look likely to settle for one -- an outcome that portends significant Republican gains but not a tsunami.

Democratic Rep. Jennifer Wexton defeated Republican Hung Cao in the 10th District, seen as the toughest of the three for the Republicans to flip.

Republican Jen Kiggans ousted Democratic Rep. Elaine Luria, a former Navy commander, in the 2nd District, seen as the easiest for Republicans to take.

Democratic Rep. Abigail Spanberger, a former CIA officer, narrowly leads Republican Yesli Vega in the 7th District with 95% of the vote counted.

10:28 p.m. Georgia might be facing another U.S. Senate runoff. Republican Herschel Walker leads Democratic incumbent Raphael Warnock 49.5% to 48.6% with nearly 70% of the vote counted. But if neither reaches 50%, the two leading candidates advance to a runoff in December. Warnock won a runoff in January 2021 for the final two years of the Senate term.

9:23 p.m. Democratic Attorney General Maura Healey has been elected governor of Massachusetts, making history as the nation's first openly lesbian governor, AP reports.

9:21 p.m. A judge in Arizona's Maricopa County rejects a Republican request to keep polls open past their usual closing time of 7 p.m. after electronic vote-counting machines malfunctioned at some precincts. The judge says Republicans provided no evidence that a voter was unable to cast a ballot because of the machine problems and noted that the lawsuit was filed late in the day despite the issues being known since the morning.

9:01 p.m. Democrat Tammy Duckworth of Illinois, Republican Rand Paul of Kentucky and Democrat Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut are among the U.S. senators to win reelection. Duckworth was born in Bangkok and speaks Thai and Indonesian. In 2004, she was deployed as a helicopter pilot to Iraq, where she lost both legs in a crash.

8:43 p.m. Republican Anna Paulina Luna, a U.S. Air Force veteran, flips Florida's 13th Congressional District seat, beating Democrat Eric Lynn, a former Obama administration official. This suburban Tampa district is one of several Democratic-held seats in Florida that Republicans are likely to pick up, thanks to a new district map backed by Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis. Republicans need only a net pickup of five seats to take control of the House.

8:10 p.m. Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis wins a second term in Florida by defeating Democratic challenger Charlie Crist in what was widely seen as a precursor to a DeSantis presidential run in 2024 -- which could put him in a primary battle with Donald Trump.

DeSantis has been at the forefront of a number of the country's partisan fights, bucking COVID-19 restrictions while backing a law limiting discussion of LGBTQ issues in schools.

8 p.m. Several more states close their polls including Michigan, where a high-profile contest for governor is underway, and Pennsylvania, where Democratic Lt. Gov. John Fetterman and Republican rival Mehmet Oz are locked in what is expected to be a tight Senate race.

7:18 p.m. News outlets including The Associated Press project that Republican Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina will win reelection and that Rep. Peter Welch will win the Senate race contested in Vermont, keeping that seat in Democratic hands. Both victories were expected.

7 p.m. Polls close in Georgia -- where a crucial Senate seat is up for grabs --South Carolina, Vermont, Virginia and the rest of Indiana and Kentucky.

6 p.m. The first U.S. polls close in parts of the states of Kentucky and Indiana, where districts are expected to announce results soon.

4:30 p.m. Donald Trump, posting on his Truth Social platform, tells people to protest in Detroit, apparently referring to a software glitch that told some in-person voters that they had already requested an absentee ballot.

"The Absentee Ballot situation in Detroit is REALLY BAD. People are showing up to Vote to be told, 'sorry, you have already voted,'" he writes. "Protest, Protest, Protest!"

3:45 p.m. Problems with dozens of electronic vote-counting machines in the battleground state of Arizona are sparking false claims of evidence of election fraud.

Maricopa County Recorder Stephen Richer told reporters early Tuesday that about 20% of the machines in the state's most populous county were malfunctioning, and that technicians were being deployed to fix them. All votes will be counted, said Richer, who expected that election deniers would "exploit" the issue.

"Reports are coming in from Arizona that the Voting Machines are not properly working in predominantly Republican/Conservative areas," former President Donald Trump said in a statement. "Here we go again? The people will not stand for it!!"

Republican gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake, who has echoed Trump's false claims of a stolen 2020 election, also seized on the machine problems, issuing a "voter alert" on her Twitter account.

Barricades have been erected around the county's elections office in central Phoenix in anticipation of potential protests.

3:20 p.m. Asian Americans fear further violent attacks against them nationwide as candidates from both parties intensify their anti-China rhetoric.

Tim Ryan, the Ohio Democratic candidate for the Senate, has repeatedly attacked Beijing for job losses and rising prices in the U.S. In late September, he tweeted, "Bad trade deals have screwed Ohio. China is winning. Workers are losing."

Ryan's Republican opponent, J.D. Vance, has expressed similar sentiments.

"We're really not in a great place in Ohio in terms of this race," said Jona Hilario, a member of the Asian American Midwest Progressives advocacy group.

Meanwhile, U.S. Rep. Michelle Park Steel -- a California Republican and a Korean American -- has labeled her Taiwanese American Democratic opponent Jay Chen as a communist and "China's choice" in a heavily Vietnamese neighborhood.

2:20 p.m. Former President Donald Trump predicts a "great night" for Republicans, while the current occupant of the White House, Joe Biden, warns that Democrats face a "tough" battle as midterm voting continues.

10:40 a.m. Under pressure from a Republican lawsuit, Philadelphia officials decide to bring back a time-consuming vote-counting process meant to prevent double voting.

Philadelphia city commissioners voted at a special meeting to reinstate a process called "poll book reconciliation."

The decision will delay the vote count in one of the most hotly contested battleground states, where Democratic candidate Lt. Gov. John Fetterman and Republican rival Mehmet Oz are locked in a tight Senate race.

9:45 a.m. Officials are seeing no credible threats against U.S. voting machines or poll books during the elections, Reuters reports, citing a senior federal cybersecurity official. "We see no specific or credible threat to disrupt election infrastructure," the official tells reporters during a scheduled briefing just as election day was beginning.

The official, who briefed journalists on condition of anonymity, says that did not mean there would be no hiccups. Officials in New Jersey's Mercer County say there are "issues with voting machines" there and that poll workers are on hand to help voters, Reuters reports.

Monday, Nov. 7

10:50 p.m. Former President Donald Trump says he will make a "big announcement" next week, possibly teasing another presidential run on the eve of the midterms.

"I'm going to be making a very big announcement on Tuesday, Nov. 15, at Mar-a-Lago," Trump tells a crowd in Ohio during a rally, AP reports. Explaining the wait, he adds, "We want nothing to detract from the importance of tomorrow."

Trump has said in recent days that he would "very, very, very probably" run again.

4:20 p.m. Wall Street ends sharply higher as investors see a likely win for the Republican Party in the House of Representatives in the U.S. midterm elections. Republican control of the House would threaten Biden's legislative agenda with gridlock, dooming tax hikes. The Dow Jones Industrial Average finished 1.3% higher than last Friday.

6:53 a.m. Russian businessman Yevgeny Prigozhin says he has interfered in U.S. elections and will continue doing so -- "carefully, accurately, surgically and in our own way, as we know how to do" -- the first such admission from someone implicated by Washington. His remarks come in response to a request for comment from a Russian news site.

Prigozhin, known as "Putin's chef" because his catering company operates Kremlin contracts, has been formally accused of sponsoring Russia-based "troll farms" that seek to influence American politics. He has been hit by U.S., British and European Union sanctions.

Sunday, Nov. 6

7:44 p.m. President Joe Biden, visiting New York's suburban Westchester County to campaign for Democratic Gov. Kathy Hochul, warns that a Republican win in Tuesday's midterm elections could weaken U.S. democracy.

Former President Donald Trump, at a rally in Miami, recycles many of his unfounded claims about 2020 election fraud and hints that he may announce another presidential bid soon.

Republicans have hammered Biden for high inflation and increased crime in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. Democrats face grim prospects despite fulfilling Biden's promises to boost clean-energy incentives and rebuild crumbling roads and bridges.

5 p.m. Here's some advice for anyone following the U.S. midterm elections on Tuesday: Be ready for a long night and maybe days of waiting before it's clear whether Republicans or President Joe Biden's Democrats will control Congress.

All 435 seats in the U.S. House of Representatives are up for grabs, as are 35 U.S. Senate seats and 36 governorships. Republicans need to pick up five seats for a House majority and just one to control the Senate. Nonpartisan election forecasters and polls suggest Republicans have a strong chance of winning the House, with control of the Senate likely to be closer fought.

4 p.m. The U.S. government has warned of possible attempts by Russia and China to undermine voter confidence and widen rifts in American society ahead of Tuesday's midterm elections.

"What they attempt to do is create instability in our domestic environment and then show that back home -- you know, 'This is what democracy brings you: instability, riots, January 6th, race hatred,'" said Scott White, an associate professor at George Washington University with a specialty in cybersecurity.

Saturday, Nov. 5

4 p.m. Asian Americans have been the fastest-growing group of voters over the past two decades, and they will play an important role as Democrats and Republicans battle for control of Congress in the midterm elections.

"The general feeling is that we don't fit nicely into either the Republican or the Democratic party," said Angela Hsu, president of the Georgia Asian Pacific American Bar Association. "I think to a large degree, it's very much swing votes."

11 a.m. U.S. Democrats and Republicans appear more divided than ever, but the parties have recently found common ground on China.

Many congressional incumbents from both parties tout the CHIPS and Science Act, designed to help the U.S. compete with China in technology, as well as the strict chip export ban on China announced in October. The tech industry has mostly given up hope for a U-turn on U.S.-China relations, and now seeks government support that could mitigate the price it is paying for decoupling.

10 a.m. North Carolina officials have registered 14 instances of potential intimidation or interference with voters and election workers ahead of Tuesday's elections, records provided to Reuters show. Those instances in which election workers have been targeted occurred during early voting.

In several other states, aggressive canvassing tactics by Republican-aligned groups have raised voter intimidation concerns among election officials and voting rights lawyers.

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