Washington — liberals seemed to have fought off a conservative "red wave" as the residue settled from Tuesday's midterm races, however by and large control of Congress stays unsettled, with the GOP still inside striking distance of taking the House and the fight for the Senate considered a shot in the dark.
Liberals got a Senate seat in the vital province of Pennsylvania, where CBS News projected that Pennsylvania Lt. Gov. John Fetterman crushed Conservative Mehmet Oz in the most costly and firmly watched Senate challenge in the country. Fetterman will supplant GOP Sen. Pat Toomey in the upper chamber, which at present has 50 leftists and 50 conservatives.
A few other Senate races stayed up in the air later Wednesday morning. Georgia's challenge between Liberal Raphael Warnock and Conservative Herschel Walker stayed a shot in the dark in CBS News' evaluations. Neither up-and-comer presently has over half of the vote, which is expected to stay away from a run-off under state regulation. Georgia's decisions official said early Tuesday that he anticipates that the race should progress to a no holds barred matchup.
GOP Sen. Ron Johnson is projected to win re-appointment in Wisconsin, overcoming Liberal Mandela Barnes to keep the state's Senate seat in conservative hands.
Arizona's race was inclining toward thSenate e liberals, while Nevada race is a shot in the dark, as per CBS News gauges. In general control of the is in like manner described as a shot in the dark, meaning either party could eventually arise with control whenever results are concluded.
