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US midterm elections 2022
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A voter marks his ballot during early voting in Lansing, Michigan, on Monday. Photo: Reuters

Stakes high for Joe Biden, Democrats as America votes in midterm elections

  • America votes in midterms that polls show could land Congress back under Republican control
  • President Joe Biden framed his closing argument as a warning that US democracy is on the line

Americans on Tuesday cast the final ballots in US midterm elections, with Democrats fearing they could lose control of at least one of the two chambers in Congress amid high inflation and the dwindling popularity of President Joe Biden.

While the midterms usually serve as a referendum on the incumbent leader, Biden has sought to make the elections about his predecessor Donald Trump and “extremist” Republicans aligned with him, warning that they threaten democracy and basic rights, including through their denial of the results of the 2020 presidential race.

“Today we face an inflection point. We know in our bones that our democracy’s at risk and we know that this is your moment to defend it,” Biden told a cheering crowd on Monday at Bowie State University, a historically black college outside Washington.

The election outcome will likely define the 79-year-old Biden’s remaining two years in the White House and his potential re-election bid in 2024.

It may also shape the political future of Trump, 76, who has actively rallied for Republican candidates in the midterm cycle and suggested that he would announce his third presidential run next week.

“I’m going to be making a very big announcement on Tuesday, November 15 at Mar-a-Lago,” Trump said before a cheering crowd in Vandalia, Ohio Monday night, where he held his final rally of the midterm season to bolster Senate candidate JD Vance. “We want nothing to detract from the importance of tomorrow.”

In Tuesday’s contests, all 435 seats in the House and about one-third of the 100 seats in the Senate are on the ballot. In addition, 36 out of 50 states will elect governors.

The Democratic Party currently holds a slim majority in the House. The Senate is evenly divided, but Democrats hold the majority due to the tiebreaking vote of Vice-President Kamala Harris.

Billionaire Elon Musk, whose purchase of Twitter and vows to loosen the reins on who can say what on the platform has led to some speculation that it could unleash a wave of disinformation, tweeted on Monday that “independent-minded voters” should vote for a Republican Congress.

Polls have shown that Republicans are likely to gain a majority in the House. They are also slightly favoured to win the Senate, election forecaster FiveThirtyEight said, with races in Georgia, Nevada and Pennsylvania expected to play a crucial role.

A Republican-controlled House could stall Biden’s legislative agenda, ramp up oversight of the administration and launch congressional investigations into the president’s son Hunter, who has been accused of engaging in shady business dealings in Ukraine and China.

On the diplomatic front, no substantive changes are expected in the current US stance to pursue a tough China policy, due to bipartisan consensus on the issue. However, some Chinese analysts have suggested that relations between Beijing and Washington face uncertainty if the Republicans win control of one or both chambers of Congress.
President Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden at a campaign event at Bowie State University, a historically black college outside Washington. Photo: AP

The Biden administration’s efforts to support Ukraine against Russia’s invasion could be complicated as some Republicans have questioned the ballooning costs.

During the election campaign, Republican Party members criticised the Democratic administration for creating historically high inflation through what they view as “wasteful” government spending. They also accused Democrats of being soft on crime and illegal immigration.

Biden, who took office in 2021, entered the second year of his administration with bleak prospects for his party to maintain control of Congress in the midterms due to his sagging job approval rating amid an unabated coronavirus pandemic and higher prices.

Inflation was further elevated as food and energy prices were pushed up by Russia’s war, which began in February.

A Supreme Court decision in June to eliminate the constitutional right to abortion lifted optimism among Democrats that the strong public backlash could help them defy the historical trend of the president’s party losing House seats in midterm elections.

Over the summer, Biden also scored a series of legislative wins intended to lead to major investments and job creation in the country.

But with the economy remaining the top concern for voters, Republicans were seen regaining momentum in the weeks ahead of the elections.

According to Gallup polling data, presidents with an approval rating below 50 per cent have seen their party lose an average of 37 House seats in the midterms.

The polling organisation said in a report on November 1 that Biden’s 40 per cent job approval rating was higher than only one other recent president at the time of midterm elections – George W. Bush in 2006, at 38 per cent.

While campaigning has largely centred on domestic issues, the elections have garnered attention from around the world for signs as to whether the United States will see a 2024 comeback of Trump, whose unpredictable leadership style and unilateralist “America First” foreign policy put a strain on close US allies.

This year’s midterms are the first major election in the United States since a pro-Trump mob stormed the Capitol in January 2021 in an attempt to overturn the 2020 presidential election. Trump had called that election “rigged” and continues to repeat the claim without evidence.

The former Republican president, while facing questions over his role in the Capitol riot and criminal probes into his businesses and handling of classified documents, has repeatedly hinted another White House run in 2024.

Biden, who became the oldest-ever US president at the time of inauguration, said in a TV interview in October that it was his “intention” to throw his hat in the ring again, while acknowledging he had not made a formal decision.

More than 43 million Americans have already cast their ballots, either in person or through the mail, according to the US Elections Project, which tracks early voting.

Experts say it might be days or weeks before the outcome of some close races – and control of Congress – is clear.

Additional reporting by Reuters and Agence France-Presse

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