World Mapping
Rookie
Posts: 70
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« on: January 08, 2023, 03:45:42 AM » |
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« edited: January 09, 2023, 10:16:05 AM by World Mapping »
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Hello, everyone.
As we all know, last year, the United States had its Midterm Elections, in which 1/3rd of the Senate, all 435 seats in the House of Representatives, 39 governments (36 states + 3 territories), among other things, were up for election.
Many people were expecting a massive Red Wave/Tsunami, in which the GOP would retake both chambers of the United States Congress; however, the widely-anticipated Red Wave ended up being a "Red Ripple", in which the GOP barely retook the House, and actually lost a seat in the Senate, bringing the Democratic majority up from 50 + VP tiebreaker to 51.
The crushing defeat for the GOP was largely attributed to two main things;
I. Dobbs v. Jackson SCOTUS case, which handed the regulation of abortion back to the states, many of which proceeded to ban the practice. This caused Democratic turnout to be higher than expected.
II. Donald Trump's poor candidate endorsements, especially in the swing states (*cough* Doug Mastriano *cough*), and his overall heavy involvement in '22 election season, hinting at his presidential bid and all.
Let's say, that, after the 2020 Presidential Election, Donald Trump agrees to a peaceful transition of power, and remains less active in the 2022 Midterm field, + Dobbs ruling either never occurs, or is scheduled for a date in 2023, and that all of this results in a large Republican Wave: GOP retakes the House 248-187 & the Senate 54-46, and the governorships of OR, NV, NM, KS, WI, PA, and narrowly, NY are flipped. MA and MD still inevitably go Democratic. Kari Lake wins in Arizona, holding that state for the Republicans, too.
How does this affect U.S. politics in the immediate future going ahead? Would the Democrats replace Biden with someone like Whitmer or Newsom? Would Trump be the unquestionable heir apparent to the 2024 GOP nomination?
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