Sentences with phrase «since midterm elections»

When Rep. Bill Goodling, R - Pa., announced his agenda at an organizational meeting of the House education committee on Jan. 4, he outlined a plan of action that had been in the works since the midterm elections that made him the chairman.
Forty - seven percent of conservatives now say the climate is changing, a leap of 19 points since the midterm elections of 2014, according to the survey released yesterday by Yale and George Mason universities.
Congress has funded five, two since the midterm elections.

Not exact matches

Democratic candidates have outperformed expectations in every special election since President Donald Trump came into office, and it's increasingly looking as if Trump's 2018 nightmare of losing both the House and the Senate in midterm elections could come true.
The president's party has lost ground in Congress in all but two of the initial midterm elections since the Civil War.
They're also going to question if Trump has the competence and resolve to convince Congress to approve any agreement that he secures, especially after the midterm elections in November, since it's unclear if Republicans will remain in control of the House.
Since 1962, the average peak - to - trough S&P 500 Index decline during these years was 19 %, although the past three midterm election years averaged closer to a 10 % drop (the correction in February 2018 was approximately 10 %).
Furthermore, once the midterm election takes place, the index has been higher one year later every time since 1946.
The Democrats will lose control of the Senate in January because of heavy losses in midterm elections last month and will go deeper into a House minority than at any time since 1928.
Although sitting US President's party's lose seats in midterm elections (i.e. Democratic losses in 1994; Republican losses in 2006), the 2010 election resulted in the highest loss for a party in a House midterm election since 1938.
Trump attendance at the private fundraiser for Handel is his first such endeavor for a congressional hopeful since he took office and confirmation that the GOP sees Georgia's 6th Congressional District runoff as a barometer of the 2018 midterm elections.
Since 1902, the president's party has been on the losing end of the battle for legislative seats in 27 of 29 midterm election cycles.
During these midterm elections it was expected that voter turnout would be lower than in presidential election years, according to data since the 1840s.
As we enter the run - up to the 2018 midterm elections, Trumpism is weakening under its own self - inflicted wounds, the ambivalent legitimacy of Trump's election by a popular minority due to the eccentricities of the Electoral College, and a spreading realization that behind the economic populism of his campaign rhetoric is the most reactionary Republican economic and social policy agenda since the late nineteenth - century era of Social Darwinism and Jim Crow.
Despite falling below 50 % since 1999, turnout is not yet as low as that of the US Midterm elections, which usually falls below 40 %.
As the midterm elections loom next week, Republicans are jockeying to keep their majority in the House, while Democrats are racing to capture the handful of seats that could put them on top for the first time since 1994.
Craig Johnson of Piper Jaffray recently noted that since 1930, midterm election year corrections have averaged 17 %.
According to the 300 - page document, though global warming — and the worldwide homelessness and drought associated with it — was a desperate problem immediately following the release of the Academy Award — winning documentary An Inconvenient Truth, China's undervalued currency, the midterm elections, and gay marriage have since monopolized lawmakers» time.
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