House of Donkeys
Democrats won decisive control over the House of Representatives yesterday, a fact that blankets all of the front pages this morning. The papers struggled to keep up with the late-breaking returns, and most shied away from publishing exact figures, but USA Todaytakes the cake for the latest updated number in its print edition, where it declared that Democrats won at least 27 Republican-held seats (they needed 15). "Today the American people voted for change and they voted for Democrats to take our country in a new direction, and that is exactly what we intend to do," Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, who is slated to become the nation's first female speaker, said at a Democratic rally last night.
The Senate is a different story, and the fight for its control could last weeks, or even months. Democrats managed to win several of the contested seats around the country, including in Missouri and Maryland. But the battle for the Senate is now concentrated in Montana and Virginia, two states where Democrats have a slight lead. Virginia is bound to stay in the news as the razor-thin margin of less than 8,000 votes between James Webb and Republican Sen. George Allen is likely to result in a recount.
The Los Angeles Timesstates the House takeover and possible Senate victory "loomed as the most decisive political shift in Washington since 1994, when Republicans won control of Congress for the first time in 40 years." Also for the first time since 1994, Democrats won a majority of the country's governorships.
All the papers front analysis pieces that mention all the pre-vote speculation seems to have played out as most elections were decided on national issues, especially Iraq. The New York Timessays the election has put "a proudly unyielding president on notice that the voters want change, especially on the war in Iraq." The Washington Postsays the victory will "challenge Democrats to make the leap from angry opposition to partners in power."
The LAT looks at the results and declares the GOP's failure was due to a strategy of appealing solely to conservatives and forgetting the middle. Interviews with voters revealed that, as expected, independents were more likely to cast a ballot for Democrats. USAT says exit-poll data shows Republicans suffered a drop from some of their traditional supporters. The Wall Street Journal analyzes the role of the Hispanic vote and declares it could be one of the biggest factors in the campaign. Polls showed Hispanics favoring Democrats over Republicans by 73 percent to 26 percent.
The NYT fronts, and everyone else goes inside with, the vast array of problems voters faced at different polling places around the country. Electronic voting machines didn't work, some poll workers didn't know how to operate the equipment, there was confusion over who was registered, and some voters had to endure long lines in order to cast their ballot. There were also reports of intimidation and some voters in several states, including Colorado and Virginia, received calls telling them their polling places had changed or they were registered somewhere else and that they would be arrested if they tried to vote. But in the end, election experts agreed these were all minor glitches and would not invalidate any election. (Slate's Dahlia Lithwick and Blake Wilson kept track of the "best polling disasters" throughout the day.)
In Connecticut, Sen. Joseph I. Lieberman, who was running as an independent after he lost the Democratic primary, easily defeated Ned Lamont.
Rep. Nancy Pelosi will probably become the most powerful woman in the history of Congress, and this will happen after a race that saw a record number of women candidates at the state level, as well as for the U.S. Senate, declares the WSJ on Page One.
Even though things are too close to call in the Senate race in Virginia, voters in that state did approve a constitutional amendment banning marriage for same-sex couples, as well as civil unions. Seven other states had similar constitutional amendments on the ballot yesterday and they were approved in Idaho, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Wisconsin. Results were still pending in Colorado, Arizona, and South Dakota.
In Michigan, voters approved a measure that banned the state from using affirmative action in public hiring, education, and contracting.
Daniel Politi writes "Today's Papers" for Slate. He can be reached at todayspapers@slate.com.


