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Democrats retain slim majority in Senate

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However, Montana’s Democratic Sen. Jon Tester faced a difficult challenge from Republican Rep. Denny Rehberg. .

One critical battleground, Virginia, was a race between two political giants, Tim Kaine and George Allen, both former governors. Kaine, who made an appeal to women, minorities and independents put off by Allen’s conservative tilt, captured the seat. Allen, the towering son of the former football coach, had sought to retake the Senate seat he lost six years ago after uttering a racial slur.

With the once-broad playing field narrowed, the chance for a wholesale makeover in the Senate, and with it a mandate for governing, slipped away from the Republicans.

Conservative Republican Senate candidates Todd Akin in Missouri and Richard Mourdock in Indiana stirred intense controversy with remarks about rape and abortion. Akin suggested that pregnancy rarely results from “legitimate rape,” while Mourdock said that even pregnancy from rape was a life that “God intended.”

Missouri’s Democratic Sen. Claire McCaskill, who had once been a prime GOP target as an ally of Obama, won after Akin’s comments narrowed the race. In Indiana, Rep. Joe Donnelly switched the Senate seat into the Democratic column after winning a long-shot bid against Mourdock.

One key Republican-held seat was in Nevada, where Sen. Dean Heller, who was appointed to office after his Republican predecessor resigned amid a sex and lobbying scandal, was trying to beat back a challenge from Democratic Rep. Shelley Berkley, the congresswoman from Las Vegas.

The Republican strongholds of Nebraska and North Dakota had been considered easy flips to the GOP column with the retirement of Democratic senators.

In Nebraska, former Democratic Sen. Bob Kerrey, once the governor, was unable to make a comeback against Republican Deb Fischer, a Sarah Palin-backed state legislator. But Democrat Heidi Heitkamp, the former North Dakota attorney general, proved to be a robust campaigner and was in a tight race with Republican Rep. Rick Berg.

A record number of women ran for the Senate. Hawaii’s Democratic Rep. Mazie K. Hirono would become the first Asian American woman in the Senate if she defeats former Gov. Linda Lingle, a Republican.

Perhaps one race brought the most uncertainty: In Maine, the independent former governor, Angus King, has declined to say which party he would caucus with, although he is expected to join Democrats. On Tuesday, he claimed the seat held by retiring Republican Sen. Olympia Snowe, one of the few moderates in Congress.

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