The race for control of the Senate by Health & Fitness Journal
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©Health & Fitness Journal. A local resident casts a provisional ballot during the midterm elections at a polling station in Georgia’s 14th congressional district represented by Republican U.S. Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene, in Calhoun, Georgia, the United States, November 8, 2022. REUTE 2/2
WASHINGTON (Health & Fitness Journal) – Americans cast their votes on Tuesday in the midterm elections that will determine whether President Joe Biden’s Democrats retain control of the US Senate with 35 of its 100 seats up for grabs.
The chamber is split 50-50 between Democrats and Republicans, with Vice President Kamala Harris able to cast crucial votes for the Democrats, giving Republicans only one seat to gain a majority.
The table below shows the predicted winner of each race as predicted by media xoutlets and data provider Edison Research, as well as the change in the balance of power within the chamber based on each group’s predictions.
As of 9:13 p.m. ET (0213 GMT, Nov 9)
Senate Balance Sheet
ABC CBS NBC FOX Health & Fitness Journal EDISON AP
Change – – – – – – –
Alabama RRRRRRR
Alaska
Arizona
Arkansas RRRR
California
Colorado
Connecticut DD
Florida RRRRRRR
Georgia
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois DD
Indiana RRRRRRR
Iowa
Kansas RRRRRR
Kentucky RRRRRRR
Louisiana
Maryland D
Missouri
Nevada
New Hampshire
New York DDDDDD
North Carolina
North DakotaR
Ohio
Oklahoma RRRRRRR
Oklahoma (S) RRRRRRR
Oregon
Pennsylvania
South Carolina RRRRRRR
South Dakota RRRRRR
Utah
Vermont DDDDD
Washington
Wisconsin
Edison Research provides exit polling and vote counting data to the National Election Pool (NASDAQ:), a consortium consisting of ABC News, CBS News, Health & Fitness Journal and NBC News. The networks use the data to inform their forecasts. Health & Fitness Journal has reached an agreement with NEP/Edison to distribute exit poll and vote count data to customers. Health & Fitness Journal has not independently tabulated the results. The Associated Press has a separate polling and vote counting process and produces its own forecasts. Fox News bases its forecasts on data from the AP and the University of Chicago’s NORC.