By the time @nancypelosi took the stage in Washington—to chants of “Speaker, Speaker!”—it was nearly midnight. The House Democratic leader was there to tell her party that despite a night of equivocal results and occasional heartbreak, they had won, and she was the proof: #Democrats, she said, “have taken back the House for the American people!” If Democrats hoped the midterm #elections would deliver a decisive rebuke to President Trump and his Republican allies, they did not quite get it. As of early Nov. 7, the party was on track to capture the House of Representatives by a healthy margin, flipping more than 30 GOP-held seats and winning the total vote by about 9 percentage points. But the #GOP gained ground in the #Senate, easily defeating at least three Democratic incumbents in states Trump won in 2016. And while the Democrats elected a slate of new governors, chipping away at the GOP’s nationwide advantage, their gains in statehouses were less than party strategists had hoped. In Washington, only the House will change hands, as voters elevated the Democrats to serve as a check on the scandal-plagued president and his party. Pelosi, the minority leader and former speaker, intends to again seek the speakership; if she is successful, the 78-year-old will become Trump’s principal foil and foe. Democrats may not have gotten the sweep they yearned for, but they got what matters to Pelosi—power. From their new foothold in Congress’s lower house—one-half of one-third of American government—the Democrats can engage in asymmetric warfare, seizing partial control of a political narrative that for two years has been dominated by Trump. Democrats are already drawing up plans for a panoply of investigations aimed at the president and his allies, who are bracing for the storm to come. Read more on TIME.com. Video source: Associated Press

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TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 11月7日 17時05分


By the time @nancypelosi took the stage in Washington—to chants of “Speaker, Speaker!”—it was nearly midnight. The House Democratic leader was there to tell her party that despite a night of equivocal results and occasional heartbreak, they had won, and she was the proof: #Democrats, she said, “have taken back the House for the American people!” If Democrats hoped the midterm #elections would deliver a decisive rebuke to President Trump and his Republican allies, they did not quite get it. As of early Nov. 7, the party was on track to capture the House of Representatives by a healthy margin, flipping more than 30 GOP-held seats and winning the total vote by about 9 percentage points. But the #GOP gained ground in the #Senate, easily defeating at least three Democratic incumbents in states Trump won in 2016. And while the Democrats elected a slate of new governors, chipping away at the GOP’s nationwide advantage, their gains in statehouses were less than party strategists had hoped. In Washington, only the House will change hands, as voters elevated the Democrats to serve as a check on the scandal-plagued president and his party. Pelosi, the minority leader and former speaker, intends to again seek the speakership; if she is successful, the 78-year-old will become Trump’s principal foil and foe. Democrats may not have gotten the sweep they yearned for, but they got what matters to Pelosi—power. From their new foothold in Congress’s lower house—one-half of one-third of American government—the Democrats can engage in asymmetric warfare, seizing partial control of a political narrative that for two years has been dominated by Trump. Democrats are already drawing up plans for a panoply of investigations aimed at the president and his allies, who are bracing for the storm to come. Read more on TIME.com. Video source: Associated Press


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