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MIDTERM UPDATES: Fetterman Flips Pennsylvania Senate Seat; Hochul, Whitmer Fend Of Challengers; DeSantis Wins

   DailyWire.com
BRADDOCK, PA - NOVEMBER 08: Pennsylvania Democratic Senate candidate John Fetterman and his wife, Gisele, walk into their polling place to cast their votes at the New Hope Baptist Church on November 8, 2022 in Braddock, Pennsylvania. After months of candidates campaigning, Americans are voting in the midterm elections to decide close races across the nation
(Photo by Jeff Swensen/Getty Images)

The midterm elections are here. Democrats have held the House and Senate since 2020, but with the economy, crime, and border security on voters’ minds, Republicans have a chance to take power in Washington and stop the Biden agenda in its tracks. Voters will also be electing governors in 36 states, choosing legislators, and selecting a host of other local representatives.  From the halls of Congress to local school boards, today’s voters will decide the direction of the country for the coming years. Welcome to The Daily Wire’s 2022 midterms live blog: Refresh for updates.




(12:38 a.m. CST): Republican governor candidate Tim Michels conceded in the Wisconsin’s governor’s race to Democrat Gov. Tony Evers. Michels said, “I just called Gov Evers and conceded. I wish the Evers family well.”



(12:21 a.m. CST): John Fetterman will be the next Senator to represent Pennsylvania, according to a projection from DecisionDeskHQ. Fetterman’s victory over Oz was unexpected and gives the Democrats a pick-up in the Senate, although it’s still unclear which party will control the majority.

The outcome concludes one of the most closely watched contests in this year’s midterm election cycle. The race was marked by controversy over Fetterman’s health issues following his stroke in May. Two weeks before residents of the Keystone State took to the polls, Fetterman had provided choppy responses during the only debate as Oz pressed the current lieutenant governor and former mayor of Braddock on his left-leaning platform.

For months after the primary contests, polls seemed to show Fetterman with a sizable lead over his celebrity surgeon rival. In the weeks leading up to the general election, however, Oz pulled into a dead heat with his opponent, with some polls placing him ahead by slim margins.



(12:10 a.m. CST): Republican Lee Zeldin has not yet conceded to Gov. Kathy Hochul in the race for New York governor. The Republican said that there was a large amount of Election Day votes yet to be counted.

 

(12:05 a.m. CST): Democratic Lieutenant Governor John Fetterman says he’s officially defeated Republican Mehmet Oz. While one outlet has called the race for Fetterman, DecisionDeskHQ has not done so.


(12:00 p.m. CST): Polls are now closing in Alaska, where elections for statewide offices and Congress took place.


(11:55 p.m. CST): Republican Tom Kean Jr. defeated Democrat Tom Malinowski in the race of New Jersey 7th Congressional District, according to a projection from DecisionDesk HQ. Kean’s victory is another flip of a congressional seat for Republicans.



(11:43 p.m. CST): The first vote tallies of the night are coming in from Nevada. With an estimated 54% of the vote in, Democrat Catherine Cortez-Masto is leading Republican Adam Laxalt 55 to 42 for the Senate seat. A winner is not expected to be announced tonight.



(11:41 p.m. CST): Five-term Washington Democrat Sen. Patty Murray, 72, has won re-election against Republican challenger Tiffany Smiley, according to a projection from DecisionDesk HQ. Murray, who was first elected in 1992, faced a stiff challenge from Smiley who polled strongly in the waning days of the campaign.



(11:23 p.m. CST): Stacey Abrams called Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp’s campaign shortly after her defeat Tuesday night to congratulate him. She then appeared behind the podium to address her supporters.

“I may no longer be seeking the office of governor, but I will never stop doing everything in my power to make sure the people of Georgia have a voice,” she said, also adding, “I got into this race for one reason and one reason only, to fight. And not just any fight, a fight to save Georgia.”

After Abrams’ concession, Kemp joked with those attending his watch party, “Well, it looks like the reports of my political death have been greatly exaggerated.”


(11:19 p.m. CST): As the polls close on highly anticipated races Democrats have managed to keep contentious seats Republicans had hoped to pick up during this election cycle. Several other highly watched states have not been projected. 

Results for highly strategic Senate seats are still being counted in Pennsylvania, Georgia, Wisconsin, Arizona, Utah, and Washington. In Pennsylvania, Washington, and Arizona, results are currently leaning Democrat while results so far in Wisconsin and Utah are leaning Republican. Georgia’s race between Herscell Walker and incumbent Sen. Raphael Warnock is highly contested, and likely to go to a runoff as neither candidate is above 50%. Results have yet to come in from Nevada.


(11:00 p.m. CST): Polls are now closing in Hawaii, where elections for statewide offices and Congress took place. Polls remain open in Alaska.



(10:35 p.m. CST): Gov. Kathy Hochul (D-NY) survived her first election as governor of the Empire State on Tuesday night, besting GOP Rep. Lee Zeldin (NY) in a race that continued to tighten against the Democrat’s favor, according to a projection from DecisionDeskHQ.

Though it looked like 64-year-old Hochul would have an easy ride to victory as the incumbent Democrat, concerns over rising crime and sky-high inflation moved the race to a toss-up in recent weeks.


Congratulations to @BrianKempGA on winning re-election.

I wonder if @staceyabrams will concede this time. pic.twitter.com/kWNJYAhxr0

— Kari Lake (@KariLake) November 9, 2022


(10:29 p.m. CST): Former President Donald Trump dunked on Republican Joe O’Dea, who lost against Democrat Michael Bennett, saying, “Joe O’Dea lost BIG! MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!!!”

Last month, Trump attacked O’Dea, calling him a “RINO” after the Republican candidate said he didn’t want to see Trump run for president again. Republicans were hopeful going into the midterm elections that O’Dea would pull off one of the biggest Senate upsets of the night. 



(10:27 p.m. CST): Virginia Republican Jen Kiggans defeated incumbent Democrat Elaine Luria in Virginia’s 2nd Congressional district. Kiggans has served as a state senator for Virginia Beach.


(10:25 p.m. CST): Failed Democratic candidate Beto O’Rourke and Democrat Stacey Abrams have wasted over a hundred million dollars on unsuccessfully running for office. 

O’Rourke has launched three separate public office campaigns in the past six years. His latest race positioned itself as the most expensive campaign for governor in Texas history. O’Rourke raised a total of $76.6 million, with $27.6 million of that coming in from late February through June. Texas does not have limits on contribution amounts, and O’Rourke’s top donor was George Soros, who contributed $1 million to his campaign. 

Abrams has similarly raised close to $98 million throughout her bid for governor. Her campaign has accepted nearly $1 million in outside donations since the end of October, the majority of these coming from Black PAC and America Votes. 

Throughout the early summer, Abrams outraised incumbent Republican Governor Brian Kemp 3-to-1. Both candidates have far outspent their previous contribution record set in 2018, when Kemp beat Abrams despite raising millions less. Nearly half the money raised by the Abrams campaign originated in California, New York, Washington D.C., and Delaware. 


(10:16 p.m. CST): Candidates endorsed by the 1776 Project Pac have won several school board races across the country. Candidates Tara Battaglia, Steve Whisler, and James Miller all won in Carroll County Maryland, according to the group which supports increasing parental oversight of education.


(10:08 p.m. CST): Senator Lindsey Graham (R-SC), reacting to the New Hampshire results, tells NBC News that this is “definitely not a Republican wave, that is for darn sure.”


(10:07 p.m. CST): Republican J.D Vance has defeated Democrat Rep. Tim Ryan in the race for the Senate in Ohio, according to a projection from DecisionDeskHQ.


(10:01 p.m. CST): First results coming in from California. Governor Gavin Newsom, Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-CA), and Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) will all win re-election, DecisionDeskHQ projects.


(10:00 p.m. CST): Polls are now closing in California and Oregon. Polls are also closing in Oregon, where residents vote by mail and different time zones yield differing deadlines for ballots to be turned in across the state.


(9:54 p.m. CST): Former White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki took to to Twitter Tuesday night to complain about “disinformation” in Spanish language media.

“The Latino vote is not the same everywhere! There are huge generational differences and in Florida population of older voters (more likely Rs) much larger than younger,” she tweeted. “Socialism does not play there. And there is a massive disinformation problem in Spanish language media.”



(9:41 p.m. CST): Utah Lieutenant Governor Deidre Henderson, a Republican, says election results will be delayed by at least 30 to 45 minutes due to long lines in polling locations. This will be done to ensure that voters waiting in line at 8:00 p.m. local time can get the opportunity to cast their ballots.


(9:32 p.m. CST): Democrat Maggie Hassan will win re-election for the open New Hampshire Senate seat, defeating Republican challenger Donald Bolduc, DecisionDeskHQ projects.

While Hassan was not the most vulnerable Democrat up for re-election, Republicans still believed there was a chance at flipping the seat red. A couple of polls also had Bolduc slightly ahead of Hassan.


(9:28 p.m. CST): Texas Republican Governor Greg Abbott is projected to win re-election and a third term, marking a sound defeat of perennial Democratic candidate Beto O’Rourke.

The governor’s latest victory follows a recent surge in polls, in which the governor led by 11 points, according to a Texas Politics Project poll. He was first elected in 2014.


(9:22 p.m. CST): Democrat Michael Bennet, 57, will defeat Republican candidate Joe O’Dea in his bid for re-election as the U.S. senator for Colorado, DecisionDeskHQ projects. 

FiveThirtyEight had previously reported Bennet’s chances of winning the race at 92%, giving the senate seat a slim tipping point chance. But Bennet was one of the half-dozen Senate seats that Republicans were hoping to win, the others being in Nevada, Arizona, New Hampshire, Georgia, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and, possibly, Washington. 


(9:18 p.m. CST): Democrat Josh Shapiro will defeat Republican Doug Mastriano in the Pennsylvania governor’s race, DecisionDeskHQ projects.

Shapiro, 49, the commonwealth’s attorney general, won his primary race unopposed and engaged in the risky strategy of funding Mastriano as his preferred rival for the general election. Mastriano, a state senator and retired Army colonel, decisively won his primary against a crowded field that included former Representative Lou Barletta.

Mastriano won his primary easily following a last-minute endorsement from former President Donald Trump.


(9:09 p.m. CST): Maryland voters voted to legalize recreational marijuana on Tuesday, making it legal to have up to 1.5 ounces of the drug.


(9:05 p.m. CST): Joe Biden has made congratulatory phone calls to seven Democrats, including Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, according to the White House. Biden called a “lid” earlier this morning, meaning he didn’t expect to make any more news for the day.


(9:00 p.m. CST): Polls are now closing in Iowa, Montana, Nevada, and Utah. Polls are also closing in Idaho District 1, the place of residence for 1,007,769 people.


(8:58 p.m. CST): Republican Rudy Yakym, who defeated Democrat Paul Steury in the race for Indiana District 2, dedicates his victory to the late Rep. Jacki Walorski who was killed in a car crash earlier this year. “Jackie this victory is for you and we miss you every day,” he said.


(8:51 p.m. CST): Vermont voters added an amendment to the state’s constitution that makes abortion a constitutional right. The vote comes after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in June.


(8:45 p.m CST): L.A. County sent out an erroneous flash flood warning earlier today before the polls had closed telling people not to travel. The notification was not supposed to go to the whole county and was retracted.


(8:38 p.m CST): Maricopa elections official Bill Gates told reporters that “no one was disenfranchised today,” at a press conference after election machines in the county malfunctioned earlier in the day. He added that 95-99% of the ballots would likely be counted by Friday.


(8:30 p.m. CST): Republican Brian Kemp will defeat Democrat Stacey Abrams in the Georgia governor’s race, DecisionDeskHQ projects. The election was a rematch from the 2018 governor’s race, which Abrams notoriously refused to concede.


(8:26 p.m. CST): Republican Rep. Ted Budd has taken the lead against Democrat Cheri Beasley in the race for the Senate in North Carolina, with two-thirds of the vote in, according to Decision Desk HQ. 


(8:24 p.m. CST): Republican Sarah Huckabee Sanders will be the next governor of Arkansas, according to a projection from DecisionDeskHQ. 

Sanders, 40, who was former President Trump’s press secretary, defeated Democrat nominee Chris Jones to earn the role in which her father, Mike Huckabee, served from 1996-2007. In addition to Trump’s endorsement, Sanders had the backing of outgoing Governor Asa Hutchinson and held a commanding lead throughout the race.


(8:17 p.m. CST): Republican Rep. Ted Budd has taken the lead against Democrat Cheri Beeasley in the race for the Senate in North Carolina with two thirds of the vote in, according to Decision Desk HQ.


(8:10 p.m. CST): Alexandra Ocasio-Cortez (D) will win re-election to the U.S. House in New York’s 14th Congressional District, Ilhan Omar (D) will be re-elected to the House as the representative for Minnesota’s 5th Congressional District, and Chuck Schumer (D), the current Senate Majority Leader, will return to the Senate, DecisionDeskHQ projects. 

This will continue AOC’s three-year tenure in the House of Representatives, where she was first sworn in in January 2019. Her fellow squad member, Omar, was not facing a significant challenge. 


(8:09 p.m. CST): As the first votes come in for Michigan’s gubernatorial race, DecisionDeskHQ is reporting that Governor General Gretchen Whitmer is leading the race 61.26% to 37.44% against Republican Tudor Dixon.

Polls leading up to the election showed the possibility of this seat being flipped, with Dixon leading Whitmer by 0.3 percentage points in one instance. 


(8:03 p.m. CST): Arizona Republicans’ request to extend voting in Maricopa County has been blocked by a judge, after a portion of voting machines in the county were not functioning properly earlier in the day.


(8:00 p.m. CST): Polls have now closed in Arizona, Colorado, Louisiana, Minnesota, Nebraska, New Mexico, New York, North Dakota, South Dakota, Wisconsin, and Wyoming.


(7:55 p.m. CST): Florida’s governor race shows incumbent Republican candidate Ron DeSantis leading with 58.28% of the votes. DecisionDeskHQ called the race for DeSantis earlier in the evening. 

DeSantis, 44, who has already amassed close to four million votes in this race, took office as Florida’s governor in 2019. The previous race, which he won against Andrew Gillum in 2018, was a much narrower one, with DeSantis beating Gillum 49.6% to 49.2%

De Santis’ re-election as governor of Florida highlights an increase in Republican support and power in a state that has historically been considered a key battleground. The state gained a 30th electoral vote after the 2020 Census, making it an even more sought-after prize in general elections.


(7:53 p.m. CST): A poll worker in Flint, Michigan was arrested earlier today after the worker was allegedly drunk on the job. The worker allegedly fled from the scene, but returned and threatened violence before the individual was arrested by police for public intoxication and the violent threats.


(7:47 p.m. CST): Tennessee Republican Governor Bill Lee has defeated Democrat challenger Dr. Jason Martin and will have four more years as governor of the volunteer state, according to a projection from Decision Desk HQ.



(7:36 p.m. CST): The first vote tallies in Texas are rolling in. Governor Greg Abbott is leading Beto O’Rourke by nearly 15 points. There are still a lot more votes to be counted, however.


(7:30 p.m. CST): Polls have now closed in Arkansas.


(7:25 p.m. CST): Republican chances of taking the House seem to be steadily increasing, according to DecisionDeskHQ projections. Their live forecasting model now gives GOP representatives a 93% chance of flipping the House.


(7:23 p.m. CST): Massachusetts Democrat Attorney General Maura Healey has defeated Republican Geoffrey G. Diehl in a race for governor, according to a projection from Decision Desk HQ. Healey’s win would be a flip for Democrats.


 

(7:03 p.m. CST): Republican Governor Ron DeSantis and Senator Marco Rubio will win re-election, according to DecisionDeskHQ.


(7:00 p.m. CST): Polls just closed in a host of states with critical races including Alabama, Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Mississippi, Missouri, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Oklahoma, Rhode Island, and Tennessee. Polls also closed in Washington, D.C.

Additionally, most of Kansas closed down with the exception of District 1, home to about 700,000 residents who live in the MST part of the state. Similarly, in Michigan all polls close except for District 1, which closes at 9:00 p.m. EST. 

In Texas, District 16 and 23, home to over 1.5 million people, close at 9:00 p.m. EST while the rest of the state just closed down. Harris County had its hours extended until 9:00 p.m. EST.

In Pennsylvania, with the exception of Luzerne County, polling places also closed down. In Luzerne, residents have until 10 p.m. EST to vote. 



(6:53 p.m. CST): Laurel Lee, a Republican, will flip the Florida 15th House seat from blue to red. This is the first GOP pickup of the night, aside from the non-voting delegate who won in Guam.


(6:32 p.m. CST): DecisionDeskHQ projects that Republicans currently have an 86% chance of winning a majority in the House.


(6:30 p.m. CST): Polls are now closing in Ohio, West Virginia, and North Carolina. Both Ohio and North Carolina have U.S. senate seats up for grabs. The next round of polls close in half an hour, at 8:00 p.m. EST, and will include well over a dozen states.


(6:19 p.m. CST): The Republican National Committee has joined a lawsuit against Maricopa County officials seeking to extend voting hours after machines in certain parts of the county had difficulties earlier in the day. 

“The RNC is joining a Republican coalition to file an emergency motion to extend poll hours in Maricopa County because voting machines in over 25% of voting locations have experienced significant issues,” the RNC stated. “The widespread issues – in an election administered by Democrat Secretary of State Katie Hobbs – are completely unacceptable, especially as Republicans flock to the polls to vote in-person on Election Day.”



(6:09 p.m. CST): Twenty-one of the forty-four voting machines at the NRG Arena in Houston, Texas, are not working because a controller is down, according to KHOU 11 News Houston. Officials say they are working on getting them back up and running. 


(6:06 p.m. CST): Senator Todd Young (R-IN) will defeat Democrat Thomas McDermott in the race for the U.S. Senate seat from Indiana, according to a projection from DecisionDeskHQ. Young, 50, was first elected to the Senate in 2017, and was not facing a significant challenge from McDermott. 



(6:01 p.m. CST): Senator Rand Paul (R-KY) will defeat Charles Booker in the race for the U.S. Senate seat from Kentucky, according to a projection from DecisionDeskHQ. First elected in 2010, Paul was not expected to face any significant challenge from Booker, a former state lawmaker who had less than $1 million in his campaign account back in July. 


(6:00 p.m. CST): Polls just closed in Indiana, Kentucky, Georgia, South Carolina, Vermont, Virginia, and parts of Florida.  In Florida, District 1 and 2, where over 1.5 million people live, polls close at 8:00 p.m EST.

One House race in Indiana to watch will be in Indiana District 1, where Republican candidate Jennifer-Ruth Green is hoping to unseat incumbent Democrat Rep. Frank Mrvan. 


(5:43 p.m. CST): Several Georgia precincts must remain open past 7:00 p.m. EST, according to an order from Superior Court Judge Gregory Poole. The precincts affected all had issues opening on time, and none will be open longer than an hour past the original closing time, reports Local3News.


(5:37 p.m. CST): We’re preparing for another round of polls to close in less than half an hour. Georgia, South Carolina, Vermont, and Virginia all have polls closing at 7:00 p.m. EST. Some polls in Florida will also close.


(5:29 p.m. CST)The Champaign County Clerk and Recorder’s Office in Illinois said today that it has been the target of “cyber-attacks” over the last month that had caused “connectivity issues” for the office’s servers and networks. The office maintained that elections and data in the county remained “secure.” 

They said the “cyber-attacks” were a “strategic and coordinated effort to undermine and destabilize our democratic process. The intent is to discourage you from voting.” They also encouraged individuals to remain in line to vote.


(5:23 p.m. CST): The New York Times is getting mocked online for running a story suggesting ways to reduce “election stress.” One of the tips suggests breathing “like a baby.” This involves focusing “on expanding your belly as you breathe” to send more oxygen to the brain.


(5:00 p.m. CST): The first voting locations across the country just closed in Indiana and Kentucky, as large portions of those states closed down their polls at 6:00 p.m. EST. Indiana voters in District 1 and District 8, where there are nearly 1.5 million residents, will have until 7:00 p.m. EST to vote.

Kentucky voters in District 1 and 2 also have until 7:00 p.m. EST to vote while the rest of the state closes down its polls at 6:00 p.m. EST.


(4:37 p.m. CST): Early exit polling from CBS shows that many voters across the country have a dim view of President Biden and the American economy. According to an exit poll from the outlet, 73% of voters are angry/dissatisfied about the state of the country as opposed to 25% who are enthusiastic/satisfied.

A plurality of voters (46%) also told the outlet that Biden’s policies are hurting the country, while only 36% said his policies were helping. A majority (52%) said they trusted Republicans more on inflation than Democrats while voters gave an edge to Democrats on the issue of abortion. Over 60% of those surveyed said that gas prices had been a financial hardship for them.


(4:26 p.m. CST): More from Maricopa, County, Arizona. Officials say the issues voters were experiencing this morning had to do with printers, not voting machines. “It appears some of the printers were not producing dark enough timing marks on the ballots,” said board of supervisors member Bill Gates.


(4:17 p.m. CST): Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger said during a Tuesday press conference that election results for the state will likely be known earlier this year. This would be in contrast to the 2020 election when counting in the state went on for days.

“We’ll be updating every 10 minutes for a period of time, and we’ll be getting those results out as soon we can, because we know that voters want to see those results as quick as possible,” the Republican said at a press conference.

This is in part due to election reform laws passed by the state in 2021 that allow for earlier counting of early voting and absentee ballots


(4:05 p.m. CST): The first polls of the 2022 midterm election will close in less than an hour. With only a couple of exceptions, most polling places in Indiana and Kentucky close at 6:00 p.m. EST.



(3:50 p.m. CST): Maricopa County Recorder apologizes to “frustrated” and “inconvenienced” voters.


(3:38 p.m. CST): Polling location closed in Texas after death in nearby park.

Voting has been stopped at one polling location in Houston, Texas after a person was reported dead near Melrose Park Community Center. The death of the person, whose identity has not yet been revealed, is believed to have been caused by electrocution. The individual was installing lights in the nearby park, and the voting location was out of power around the time of the incident. Voters have been directed to another location.


(3:28 p.m. CST): The Nevada Secretary of State’s website is restored.


(3:24 pm CST): Early Tuesday afternoon police arrested a 38-year-old man who allegedly waved a knife at a polling station in Wisconsin while yelling “stop the voting” at staff. Police say they took the man into custody without incident. While no one was injured in the incident, voting was put on hold for about 30 minutes while police secured the scene. 

The police have launched an investigation and have not yet officially filed charges.


(3:16 pm CST): A number of voting machines in Maricopa County, Arizona, were malfunctioning Tuesday morning, with local outlets and county officials estimating as many as one in five machines were affected. Hours later, Maricopa officials now say they’ve found a solution and are deploying it to affected polling locations.

Full statement below:


(2:50 p.m. CST): Arizona gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake, speaking to reporters, says she will be the “worst nightmare” of the press for the next eight years. “We will reform the media as well. We’re going to make you guys into journalists again.”


The first Republican pick-up for the night is Guam. It is a non-voting delegate position in the U.S. House of Representatives but has been represented by a Democrat since the early 1990s.


Former President Trump tells Fox News that he would support Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) as speaker of the House, should Republicans regain control of the chamber. McCarthy is currently the minority leader, and Republicans are largely expected to gain a majority in the lower chamber.



The website for the Nevada Secretary of State’s office is down. They say they’re working on a fix but did not disclose a cause.


The White House hasn’t lifted its lid, but now says Joe Biden spoke with DNC Chair Jaime Harrison and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA). He spoke with other Democratic officials as well. The White House didn’t say what they discussed.


Leading political prognosticator David Wasserman believes that early turnout isn’t looking good for Democrats.


Former President Donald Trump says he voted for Ron DeSantis to be governor of Florida. Trump nicknamed DeSantis “De-Sanctimonious” on Saturday but declined to use the nickname again the next day.


Joe Biden is calling a “lid” the morning of election day. The “lid” signals to reporters that the president doesn’t plan on making any more news for today.

Biden admitted Monday that he thought it would be tough for Democrats to keep control of the House. His “lid” suggests he doesn’t believe there will be many opportunities for his party to brag about as the night goes on.

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The Daily Wire   >  Read   >  MIDTERM UPDATES: Fetterman Flips Pennsylvania Senate Seat; Hochul, Whitmer Fend Of Challengers; DeSantis Wins