0 Us Senate Election

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Senate and the U.S. House of Representatives make up the two chambers of Congress. The Senate has 100 members, 2 from each state, who are elected to serve for a term of 6 years. The control of the U.S. Senate hangs in the balance, with four races in three states still undecided days after the general election. With Joe Biden now the apparent winner of the presidency, the.

Will Warnock domestic dispute footage impact Georgia Senate race?

Fox News contributor Karl Rove joins 'Hannity' to discuss the state of the runoffs.

More than 2 million Georgians have already voted in the state's twin Jan. 5 Senate runoff elections, where the Republican majority in the Senate is at stake.

The latest early voting numbers released Thursday morning by state officials indicate that more than a quarter (26.7%) of all registered voters in Georgia have already cast a ballot in the two contests.

More than 1.3 million Georgians have cast a ballot through early in-person voting at polling stations that have been open for a week and a half, with more than 720,000 casting an absentee ballot.

With less than two weeks to go until the runoff elections, the high number of Georgians who have already voted in two Senate runoffs comes close to rivaling the early turnout at this point in the November general election. A record 4.9 million voters in the state cast ballots in the general election.

The November elections resulted in Republicans holding 50 Senate seats and Democrats controlling 48. Only the two seats in Georgia remain undecided. A win by either Perdue or Loeffler would keep. A federal judge on Monday dismissed a lawsuit that sought to stop the Senate runoff in Georgia, giving the Republican Party and allies an 0-5 record in election lawsuits in the state.

'It looks like it's going to be a fairly high turnout for a runoff election,' M.V. Hood, a political science professor at the University of Georgia and director of the school's survey research center, told Fox News on Thursday. 'People are energized.'

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But Hood added that with the holidays upon us, 'turnout's not going to reach the levels of the general election.'

An Election Defender volunteer directs voters to an area where they can get free hand sanitizer and masks during early voting for the Senate runoff election at a recreation center Thursday, Dec. 17, 2020, in Powder Springs, Ga. (AP Photo/Todd Kirkland)

The balance of power for the next Senate coming out of last month's elections is 50 Republicans and 48 Democrats. This means Democrats must win both of Georgia's runoffs to make it a 50-50 Senate. If that occurs, Vice President-elect Kamala Harris would be the tie-breaking vote, giving her party a razor-thin majority in the chamber.

In Georgia, where state law dictates a runoff if no candidate reaches 50% of the vote, GOP Sen. David Perdue narrowly missed avoiding a runoff, winning 49.75% of the vote. Democratic challenger Jon Ossoff trailed by roughly 87,000 votes.

In the other race, Republican Sen. Kelly Loeffler captured nearly 26% of the vote in a whopping 20-candidate special election to fill the final two years of the term of former GOP Sen. Johnny Isakson. Loeffler was appointed by Republican Gov. Brian Kemp after Isakson stepped down to due health reasons. Her opponent in the runoff, Democratic candidate Rev. Raphael Warnock, won nearly 33% of the vote in the special election.

0 Us Senate Election

If the Democrats win both races, they would control both the Senate and the House as well as the White House.

Fox News' Remy Numa contributed to this report.

ATLANTA -- Georgians cast high-stakes final votes Tuesday in elections to determine the balance of power in the new Congress, deciding Senate runoff elections sure to shape President-elect Joe Biden's ability to enact what could be the most progressive governing agenda in generations.

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Republicans are unified against Biden's plans for health care, environmental protection and civil rights, but some have feared that outgoing President Donald Trump's brazen attempts to undermine the integrity of the nation's voting systems might discourage voters in Georgia.

State election officials reported light turnout Tuesday, the day after Trump and Biden held Georgia rallies to encourage their parties' voters to turn out in force. Wait times at polling sites were 'almost nonexistent,' averaging about one minute statewide, said Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger.

Still, Georgia had already shattered its turnout record for a runoff with more than 3 million votes cast early by mail or during in-person advance voting in December. The state's previous runoff record was 2.1 million votes in a 2008 Senate race.

The huge early turnout was expected to benefit Democrats, as it helped Biden in November become the first Democratic presidential candidate to win Georgia since 1992.

'This is history unfolding in Georgia right now,' Jon Ossoff, one of Georgia's two Democratic challengers, told reporters outside an Atlanta polling site.

Republicans were counting on a big turnout Tuesday to boost their chances.

'You've got to swarm it tomorrow,' Trump told thousands of cheering supporters Monday night, downplaying the threat of fraud even as he repeatedly declared that the state's November elections were plagued by cheating that Republican officials, including his former attorney general and Georgia's elections chief, say did not occur.

Democrats must win both of the state's Senate elections to gain the Senate majority. In that scenario, the Senate would be equally divided 50-50 with Vice President-elect Kamala Harris serving as the tiebreaker for Democrats.

The Democrats secured a narrow House majority and the White House during November's general election.

Georgia's January elections, necessary because no Senate candidates received a majority of the general-election votes, have been unique for many reasons, not least because the contenders essentially ran as teams.

One contest featured Democrat Raphael Warnock, who serves as the senior pastor of the Atlanta church where Martin Luther King Jr. preached. The 51-year-old Warnock was raised in public housing and spent most of his adult life preaching in Baptist churches.

Warnock was facing Republican Sen. Kelly Loeffler, a 50-year-old former businesswoman who was appointed to the Senate a year ago by the state's Republican governor. She is only the second woman to represent Georgia in the Senate, although race has emerged as more of a campaign focus. Loeffler and her allies have seized on snippets of Warnock's sermons at the historic Black church to cast him as extreme. Dozens of religious and civil rights leaders have pushed back.

The other election pitted 71-year-old former business executive David Perdue, who held the Senate seat until his term officially expired on Sunday, against Democrat Ossoff, a former congressional aide and journalist. At just 33 years old, Ossoff would be the Senate's youngest member if elected. He first rose to national prominence in 2017 during an unsuccessful House special election bid.

Even a closely divided Democratic Senate wouldn't guarantee Biden everything he wants, given chamber rules that require 60 votes to move most major legislation. But if Democrats lose even one of Tuesday's contests, Biden would have little shot for swift up-or-down votes on his most ambitious plans to expand government-backed health care coverage, address racial inequality and combat climate change. A Republican-controlled Senate also would create a rougher path for Biden's Cabinet picks and judicial nominees.

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'Georgia, the whole nation is looking to you,' Biden declared at his own rally in Atlanta on Monday. 'The power is literally in your hands.'

Both GOP candidates strongly support the president. Perdue on Tuesday said that Trump would 'of course' deserve credit if the Republicans won. He said on 'Fox & Friends,' 'We'll look back on this day if we don't vote and really rue the day that we turned the keys to the kingdom over to the Democrats.'

Loeffler has pledged to join a small but growing number of GOP senators protesting Congress' expected certification of Biden's victory Wednesday.

'We have to get to the bottom of what happened in this election,' Loeffler told reporters while campaigning in the Atlanta suburb of Sandy Springs. 'There are too many unresolved, open investigations.'

Warnock accused Loeffler of 'aiding and abetting' Trump's efforts to overturn his election loss. He told supporters in suburban Marietta north of Atlanta, 'We know Joe Biden won Georgia. How many times do we have to count the votes? So what we need now is to get him help.'

Democrats have hammered Perdue and Loeffler, each among the Senate's wealthiest members, for personal stock trades made after members of Congress received information about the emerging threats of COVID-19 as Trump and Republicans downplayed the pandemic. None of the trades has been found to violate the law or Senate ethics rules, but Warnock and Ossoff have cast the Republicans as self-interested and out of touch.

Perdue and Loeffler have answered by lambasting the Democrats as certain to usher in a leftward lunge in national policy. Neither Warnock nor Ossoff is a socialist, as Republicans allege. They do, however, support Biden's agenda.

The Georgia runoffs mark the formal finale to the turbulent 2020 election season and have drawn nearly $500 million in campaign spending to a once solidly Republican state that's now a battleground. The outcome will help demonstrate whether the political coalition that fueled Biden's victory was an anti-Trump anomaly or part of a new landscape.

Biden won Georgia's 16 electoral votes by about 12,000 votes out of 5 million cast in November.

Democratic success will likely depend on a huge turnout among African Americans, young voters, college-educated voters and women, all groups that helped Biden win Georgia. Republicans have focused on energizing their own base of white men and voters beyond the core of metro Atlanta.

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In downtown Atlanta, Henry Dave Chambliss, 67, voted for the two Republicans. He said he wants Republicans to keep Senate control to ensure the incoming Biden administration doesn't slide 'all the way to the left.'

'I'm moderately successful and I know they will come after more of my money which I've earned,' Chambliss said. 'I was born a Southern Democrat, and I just hope and pray that some moderate voices are heard and things stay more in the middle of the road.'

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Beverly McDaniel cast her ballot Tuesday morning amid light turnout at a neighborhood center's gymnasium in Atlanta. She voted for both Democrats, saying she believes they would do better dealing with the hardships wrought by the coronavirus.

'Our kids are not fully, fully in school like they're supposed to be and people don't have jobs,' said McDaniel, a medical field worker. She said the virus 'is taking over where we should have the government taking over instead.'

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Bynum reported from Savannah, Georgia. AP journalists Haleluya Hadero and Angie Wang contributed from Atlanta.