Dems will take the house, GOP retains the senate.
I voted yesterday, straight whig ticket.
Vote your Conscious and not the way they tell you to vote...
Whose "they",the Fear Mongers?
Vote your Conscious and not the way they tell you to vote...
I was definitely conscious when I voted.
I'd not be terribly upset at the Dems gaining the House. That is where the actual conservatives in government reside but losing the Senate is worse (Judges, etc). With the House gone, there'd be gridlock & we would all be safe for awhile (seeing how a Repulican controlled Congress has proven nearly worthless)
I'd not be terribly upset at the Dems
As coherent as I ever am...Were you coherent?
I'd not be terribly upset at the Dems gaining the House. That is where the actual conservatives in government reside but losing the Senate is worse (Judges, etc). With the House gone, there'd be gridlock & we would all be safe for awhile (seeing how a Repulican controlled Congress has proven nearly worthless)
Which party do you want to control Congress?
Selection Votes
Democrats 85% 9,660
Republicans 10% 1,140
Divided Congress 5% 542
11,342 votes total
Looking for a Lifeboat
A new NEWSWEEK poll shows that the GOP has lost more ground. Will rallying the base stem a Democratic tide
Updated: 8:08 a.m. PT Nov 4, 2006
Nov. 4, 2006 - As President George W. Bush jets across Red State America this weekend, Republican candidates are falling further behind Democratic rivals, according to the new NEWSWEEK poll. While the GOP has lagged behind Democrats throughout the campaign season, the trend in the past month—when NEWSWEEK conducted four polls in five weeks—had suggested the Republicans were building momentum in the homestretch.
No more. The new poll finds support for Republicans (and for President Bush) receding. For example, 53 percent of Americans want the Democrats to win enough seats to take control of one or both houses of Congress in the midterm elections on Tuesday. Those results are close to early October levels, while less than a third of Americans (32 percent) want Republicans to retain control. If the elections were held today, 54 percent of likely voters say they would support the Democratic candidate in their district versus 38 percent who would vote for the Republican-a 16-point edge for the Democrats.