Factbox: U.S. midterm elections: The race for control of the Senate

Voters cast their ballots at Northern High School in the midterm election, in Detroit, Michigan, November 8, 2022. (Reuters/Evelyn Hockstein)

 Americans cast ballots on Tuesday in midterm elections that will determine whether President Joe Biden’s Democrats keep control of the U.S. Senate, as 35 of its 100 seats are up for grabs.

The chamber is divided 50-50 between Democrats and Republicans, with Vice President Kamala Harris able to cast tie-breaking votes for the Democrats, so Republicans need to pick up only one seat to take the majority.

The following table shows the projected winner of each race as forecast by media outlets and data provider Edison Research, as well as the change in the balance of power within the chamber based on each group’s projections.

As of 8:12 p.m. ET (0112 GMT, Nov. 9)

Senate tally
ABC CBS NBC FOX CNN EDISON AP
Shift
Alabama R R R R R R
Alaska
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Connecticut D
Florida R R R R R R
Georgia
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois D
Indiana R R R R R
Iowa
Kansas
Kentucky R R R R R R
Louisiana
Maryland D
Missouri
Nevada
New Hampshire
New York
North Carolina
North Dakota
Ohio
Oklahoma R R R R R
Oklahoma (S) R R R R R
Oregon
Pennsylvania
South Carolina R R R R R R R
South Dakota
Utah
Vermont D D
Washington
Wisconsin

Edison Research provides exit polling and vote count data to the National Election Pool, a consortium consisting of ABC News, CBS News, CNN and NBC News. The networks use the data to inform their projections.Reuters has an agreement with NEP/Edison to distribute exit polling and vote count data to clients. Reuters has not independently tabulated the results. The Associated Press has a separate polling and vote count operation and makes its own projections. Fox News relies on data from the AP and the University of Chicago’s NORC to inform its projections.

—Reporting by Washington newsroom

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