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Republicans likely to keep control of US House

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Among them is Rep. Robert Dold of Illinois. He won his suburban Chicago district with 51 percent, and this time faces a huge Democratic turnout in Obama’s home state.

“Illinois isn’t going to play as well (for Republicans) because of the presidential side of things,” Dold said. The Obama effect will be mitigated in part, he said, by Republicans drawn to vote by “other motivators” such as a yen for fixing the ailing economy.

—Republicans in Democratic states. New Hampshire’s Charles Bass, a Republican, has proven to be a bellwether of sorts, losing in the Democratic sweep of 2006, then winning his seat back in 2010 with 48 percent of the vote.

In Maryland, Democratic lawmakers redrew the state’s westernmost district so it reaches into the Washington suburbs, jeopardizing Republican Rep. Roscoe Bartlett’s 10-term hold on the seat.

Four of Rothenberg’s 19 tossup races are in New York, where redistricting has scrambled prospects for two Democrats and two Republicans. Even with those possibilities, a fellow New Yorker, Rep. Steve Israel, chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, is cautious.

“I will repeat what I’ve said all along: It is within range; the House is in play,” Israel told reporters Friday. “We’ve brought it from our 20-yard line to the Republicans’ 20-yard line. We’re sitting in their red zone … and we have a real opportunity to kick a field goal.”

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