Top Items:
Jay Newton-Small / TIME:
McConnell: No Shutdowns, No Full Obamacare Repeal — An exclusive interview with TIME about his plans as Majority Leader — Sen. Mitch McConnell was giddy, not an emotion often seen in the sober 72-year-old Kentuckian. But that's the only way to describe TIME's interview with him in Perry County, Kentucky, on Monday afternoon.
Discussion:
Talking Points Memo, Politico, OnPolitics and Business Insider
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Peter Baker / New York Times:
President Obama Left Fighting for His Own Relevance — WASHINGTON — Two things were clear long before the votes were counted on Tuesday night: President Obama would face a Congress with more Republicans for his final two years in office, and the results would be seen as a repudiation of his leadership.
Sahil Kapur / Talking Points Memo:
Meet The Real Next Senate Majority Leader: Ted Cruz — If you thought House Speaker John Boehner has had a miserable time trying to govern, wait until you see what incoming Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell is about to deal with. — The Kentucky Republican achieved his lifelong dream …
Discussion:
The Moderate Voice
Molly Ball / The Atlantic Online:
A Republican Wave Sweeps the Midterm Elections — In an echo of 2010, the GOP overshot its targets, taking the Senate and winning House and statehouse races across the board. Now what will they do? — LOUISVILLE, Ky.—Republicans took the Senate majority in a commanding sweep on Tuesday …
Discussion:
Vox
Carrie Budoff Brown / Politico:
No Obama pivot after midterms — Voters demanded change from Washington on Tuesday, and Republicans say it's now up to President Barack Obama to deliver it. — But don't count on that happening. — The White House that emerges after the midterm elections won't look …
Discussion:
Liberaland, Hinterland Gazette, The Hill, Le·gal In·sur·rec· tion and Talking Points Memo
New York Times:
Negativity Wins the Senate
Negativity Wins the Senate
Discussion:
John Hawkins' Right Wing News and Washington Post
New York Times:
Election Results: Republicans Win Senate Control With at Least 7 New Seats
Election Results: Republicans Win Senate Control With at Least 7 New Seats
Discussion:
American Prospect, Washington Post, The Carbon Brief, Outside the Beltway, Firedoglake and National Journal
Evan Osnos / New Yorker:
The Dawn of the Age of McConnell
The Dawn of the Age of McConnell
Discussion:
The Moderate Voice, The Great Debate, Guardian, Washington Post, Raw Story, Addicting Info and The Atlantic Online
The Hill:
Democrats sift through the debris — Democrats on Wednesday morning began sorting through the wreckage of disastrous midterm elections in which losses eclipsed even their worst fears. — The scale of the defeats, taken together, was breathtaking: a Senate majority lost …
Discussion:
Power Line
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Jesse Byrnes / The Hill:
Axelrod: White House changes would be ‘wise’ — Personnel changes at the White House would be “wise” to ensure President Obama's final two years in office are successful, former adviser David Axelrod said Tuesday. — Axelrod, who served at the White House during Obama's first term …
Discussion:
Washington Post
Tom Williams / Roll Call:
McConnell, Boehner, Pelosi and Reid Invited to White House
McConnell, Boehner, Pelosi and Reid Invited to White House
Discussion:
National Review
Justin Sink / The Hill:
After blowout, Obama to answer questions
After blowout, Obama to answer questions
Discussion:
Politico and Political Wire
Alexander Burns / Politico:
GOP takes control of Senate in midterm rout
GOP takes control of Senate in midterm rout
Discussion:
ABC News, ABC News, The Hill, Fox News and Just Security
Washington Post:
Battle for the Senate: How the GOP woke up while Democrats were feeling the drag — One night in early September, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell called a longtime colleague, Sen. Pat Roberts, from his living room in Louisville, furious about the 78-year-old Republican's fumbling and lethargic reelection campaign.
Discussion:
Power Line, The Atlantic Online, The Hill, Mediaite, BillMoyers.com, emptywheel and RedState
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New York Times:
Republicans' First Step Was to Handle Extremists in Party — WASHINGTON — It was late spring, and Republican leaders knew that if they wanted to win the Senate, they needed to crush the enemy: not Democrats, but the rebels within their own party. — And Chris McDaniel …
Discussion:
Bloomberg Politics and No More Mister Nice Blog
Elana Schor / Politico:
Elections give Keystone a filibuster-proof majority
Elections give Keystone a filibuster-proof majority
Discussion:
Outside the Beltway
Amy Walter / The Cook Political Report:
Election Night Takeaways — This wasn't just a bad night for Democrats. This was a downright drubbing. — So, what happened? — All Politics Is National: Democrats believed they could help isolate and insulate their vulnerable Democrats from an unpopular president by making each contest about the individual candidates.
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Josh Kraushaar / National Journal:
Republicans Just Broke Democrats' Blue Wall
Washington Monthly:
The New Segregation — It's class, not race. And we know how to solve it. — Three years ago, Kelly Williams-Bolar, a poor, single mother, stood in a Summit County, Ohio, courtroom facing a number of felony charges, including one count of grand theft. Her crime: stealing an education …
Discussion:
Joanne Jacobs
Nate Silver / FiveThirtyEight:
The Polls Were Skewed Toward Democrats — For much of this election cycle, Democrats complained the polls were biased against them. They said the polls were failing to represent enough minority voters and applying overly restrictive likely-voter screens. They claimed early-voting data was proving the polls wrong.
Discussion:
Talking Points Memo
Nathaniel Herz / Anchorage Daily News:
Sullivan lead holds in Alaska U.S. Senate race; Begich won't concede — Republican U.S. Senate candidate Dan Sullivan appeared to grab an insurmountable lead over incumbent Democratic Sen. Mark Begich early Wednesday, with all of Alaska's precincts reporting.
Discussion:
The Daily Caller, Talking Points Memo, Associated Press, Washington Post, BizzyBlog and Guardian
Noelle Crombie / Oregonian:
Recreational marijuana passes in Oregon: Oregon election results 2014 — Oregon voters said yes to marijuana Tuesday, making the state the third to allow the possession and sale of cannabis for recreational rather than strictly medical use. — The crowd at the Southeast Portland club Holocene …
Discussion:
PBS, Washington Post, Anchorage Daily News, New York Magazine, Bloomberg Politics, Outside the Beltway and BuzzFeed
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Dan Merica / CNN:
Oregon, Washington, D.C. legalize marijuana
Oregon, Washington, D.C. legalize marijuana
Discussion:
Bloomberg View, Bloomberg Politics, Wall Street Journal and Jezebel
Helena Bottemiller Evich / Politico:
Berkeley breaks through on soda tax — Berkeley, Calif., a city known for its progressive politics, made history Tuesday night by approving the first real sin tax on soda in the United States. — Voters looked likely to approve Measure D, a penny-per-ounce tax, by a wide margin …
Discussion:
ThinkProgress, The Huffington Post, Truth Revolt and Bloomberg Politics
Tina Nguyen / Mediaite:
MSNBC's Matthews and Sharpton Bash Grimes Concession Speech: ‘You Need to Be Gracious!’ — In the Kentucky Senate race, Democrat challenger Alison Lundergan Grimes lost by a wide margin to Senator Mitch McConnell, and as such, gave a concession speech — one that the MSNBC election coverage team immediately tore apart.
Discussion:
Hot Air and PoliticusUSA
Larry Mayer / ABC News:
Election Results 2014: Here Are the Key Races That Are Still Too Close to Project — Voters in states across the nation handed Republicans control of the U.S. Senate on Election Day 2014, strengthened their majority control of the House of Representatives and also made a strong showing in gubernatorial races.
Philip Klein / Washington Examiner:
27 senators who voted for Obamacare won't be part of new Senate — BELTWAY CONFIDENTIAL CONGRESS OBAMACARE SENATE HEALTH CARE 2014 ELECTIONS — On Dec. 24, 2009, the Democratic-controlled Senate passed President Obama's healthcare law with a filibuster-proof 60-vote majority …
ABC News:
Meet Elise Stefanik, the Youngest Woman Ever Elected to Congress … Republican Elise Stefanik has become the youngest woman elected to Congress in history, winning her race against Aaron Woolf in New York's 21st open district 56-32, ABC News projects. — She's the first Republican to win the district …
Discussion:
Yahoo! News, The College Fix, American Spectator, Outside the Beltway and Hot Air
Timothy P. Carney / Washington Examiner:
Tonight's darker omen for the GOP: Losing the Senate in 2016 — BELTWAY CONFIDENTIAL CONGRESS BARACK OBAMA REPUBLICAN PARTY 2014 ELECTIONS 2016 ELECTIONS CAMPAIGNS — However well Republicans do tonight, President Obama will retain a veto pen. That means GOP control of both chambers …
Discussion:
The Agonist