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Democrats retake House, make broad gainsStaff and agencies
"Its the night we have been waiting for," said House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif. Democrats also rode the coattails of a decisive victory by Barack Obama in New Mexico to win one House seat they havent controlled in four decades and another the GOP had held for 28 years. Both were left up-for-grabs by GOP retirements. With more than 380 of the 435 House races decided, Democrats held leads for a dozen other Republican-held seats. Republicans were leading in fewer than a handful of seats held by Democrats. "This will be a wave upon a wave," Pelosi said. In the northeast, GOP Reps. John R. "Randy" Kuhl of New York and Phil English of Pennsylvania were defeated. Democrat Eric Massa unseated Kuhl in New Yorks southern tier, and Kathy Dahlkemper, a 50-year-old mother of five, toppled English in a swing district of rural communities and old industrial steel towns in Pennsylvanias northwest corner. In upstate New York, former congressional staffer Dan Maffei won election to succeed retiring GOP Rep. Jim Walsh, becoming first Democrat in nearly 30 years to represent the district around Syracuse. Downstate, Democratic city councilman Mike McMahon won the race on Staten Island to succeed GOP Rep. Vito Fossella, R-N.Y., who was forced to resign amid drunk driving charges and revelations that he fathered a child from an extramarital affair. In the South, too, Democrats made inroads. High school civics teacher Larry Kissell won election in North Carolina, defeating Republican Rep. Robin Hayes. Democrat Gerald Connolly, a former chairman of the Fairfax County Board of Supervisors, was elected to succeed retiring GOP Rep. Thomas M. Davis III in a northern Virginia district thats trending more Democratic because of an influx of new voters. And in a far more conservative district further south, Rep. Virgil H. Goode Jr.,R-Va., was in a too-cloe-to-call race for survival against Democrat Tom Perriello. Democrats also made inroads in the West, where they captured the two New Mexico seats and one left open by retiring GOP Rep. Rick Renzi, whos awaiting trial on corruption charges. The news wasnt all good for Democrats. Republican attorney Tom Rooney defeated first-term Democratic Rep. Tim Mahoney of Florida, who had admitted to two extramarital affairs just weeks before Election Day. Republican Bill Cassidy dealt a bruising defeat to Rep. Don Cazayoux, D-La., elected in a special election six months ago. And in Texas, Republican Pete Olson, a former chief of staff to Sen. John Cornyn, beat Democratic Rep. Nick Lampson. But other freshman Democrats once considered vulnerable cruised to easy re-election. First-term Democratic Reps. John Yarmuth of Kentucky, Indianas Joe Donnelly and Brad Ellsworth, and New Hampshires Rep. Carol Shea-Porter won easy re-election. They were part of a crop of freshman Democrats in conservative-leaning districts who began compiling campaign war chests and moderate voting records almost from the moment they were elected two years ago, leaving only a few of them endangered on Tuesday. Former five-term Republican Rep. Anne Northup was unable to mount a comeback in Louisville, Ky., against Yarmuth despite GOP presidential nominee John McCains decisive victory in the state. In 2006, Democrats won 30 seats and control of Congress in a surge powered by voter anger over the Iraq war. This year the sour economy and public antipathy for President Bush posed the biggest challenges for Republican candidates. The Democrats were aided by a wave of GOP retirements and huge financial and organizational advantages over Republicans. Thats despite voter hostility toward the Democratic-controlled Congress. Just one in five voters Tuesday approved of the job Congress was doing, about as poorly as Bush fared, according to AP exit polling. Six in 10 voters cited the economy as the most important issue facing the nation. About half said the economy is poor and nearly all the rest said its not good. The results were based on a preliminary partial sample of nearly 10,000 voters in Election Day polls and in telephone interviews over the past week for early voters. Democrats now control the House by a 235-199 margin, with one vacancy. GOP lawmakers at risk included Alaskas Rep. Don Young, Colorados Rep. Marilyn Musgrave, and Michigans Reps. Tim Walberg and Joe Knollenberg. Rep. Lee Terry of Nebraska, once considered a safe bet for re-election, was also in major trouble. Rep. John P. Murtha, D-Pa., who chairs a subcommittee with the most influence on the Pentagons spending, who had a scare after calling his district south of Pittsburgh "racist," won easy re-election. Democratic candidates raised $436 million, compared with Republicans $328 million, according to federal data compiled by the nonpartisan Center for Responsive Politics. The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee poured $76 million into competitive races and the National Republican Congressional Committee spent $24 million. Because hurricanes delayed October primaries, two Louisiana seats one that belonged to retiring Republican Rep. Jim McCrery and another held by indicted Democratic Rep. William Jefferson wont be decided until December. Those districts held primaries Tuesday.
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