Trump did notch some big wins Tuesday, particularly in Ohio, where his pick for the Senate, Hillbilly Elegy author JD Vance, sailed to easy victory after Trump’s endorsement. In North Carolina, Ted Budd, an early Trump pick, kept an open Senate seat in GOP hands.
But Trump lost some of the night’s biggest prizes, particularly in Pennsylvania, where Dr Mehmet Oz, who only narrowly won his Senate primary with Trump’s backing, lost to Democrat John Fetterman.
Trump-backed candidates also lost governors races in Pennsylvania, Michigan and Maryland, and a Senate race in New Hampshire, though Trump seemed to celebrate the latter, bashing Republican Dan Bolduc for trying to moderate his stances by backing off his embrace of Trump’s election lies.
Meanwhile, as our North American correspondent Farrah Tomazin reports, President Joe Biden has already declared his intention to run in 2024.
Biden, who is turning 80 this month, said he intended to run regardless of whether Trump entered the race, although a final decision would be made next year.
Asked to respond to those who questioned his fitness for the job, he replied: “Watch me.”
“My intention is that I’m running again,” Biden said, in his first public comments since votes were cast yesterday (Tuesday US time).
“But I’m a great respecter of fate and this is ultimately a family decision. I think everybody wants me to run, but we’re going to have discussions about it and I don’t feel any hurry one way or another to make that judgment.”
Biden characterised the US midterm elections as a victory for democracy, and has vowed to work with Republicans if they take control of Congress, saying Americans had made it clear they didn’t want a “constant political battle”.
With AP