- Joined
- Jan 3, 2009
- Messages
- 2,605
- Points
- 0
Republicans deal stinging mid-term rebuke to Obama
AFP
AFP - 1 hour 1 minute ago
WASHINGTON (AFP) - – Resurgent Republicans smashed the Democratic power monopoly Tuesday, exit polls projected, in a debilitating blow to President Barack Obama just two years after he took power on a tide of hope and history.
Exploiting fear and fury over the stuttering economic rebound, Republicans grabbed back the House of Representatives, though Obama's beleaguered Democrats clung onto the Senate, albeit with a reduced majority.
House Minority Leader John Boehner, tipped to replace Nancy Pelosi as speaker, warned Republicans would only work with Democrats if the president changed course. Related article:Americans told Obama 'change course': Republican leader
"We hope President Obama will now respect the will of the people, change course, and commit to making the changes that they are demanding," a tearful Boehner told a Republican victory rally in Washington.
"To the extent he's willing to do that, we're ready to work with him. But make no mistake, the president will find in our new majority the voice of the American people as they've expressed it tonight."
AFP
AFP - 1 hour 1 minute ago
WASHINGTON (AFP) - – Resurgent Republicans smashed the Democratic power monopoly Tuesday, exit polls projected, in a debilitating blow to President Barack Obama just two years after he took power on a tide of hope and history.
Exploiting fear and fury over the stuttering economic rebound, Republicans grabbed back the House of Representatives, though Obama's beleaguered Democrats clung onto the Senate, albeit with a reduced majority.
House Minority Leader John Boehner, tipped to replace Nancy Pelosi as speaker, warned Republicans would only work with Democrats if the president changed course. Related article:Americans told Obama 'change course': Republican leader
"We hope President Obama will now respect the will of the people, change course, and commit to making the changes that they are demanding," a tearful Boehner told a Republican victory rally in Washington.
"To the extent he's willing to do that, we're ready to work with him. But make no mistake, the president will find in our new majority the voice of the American people as they've expressed it tonight."