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Shortly after the November 2006 election, Scott Elliott of ''ElectionProjection.com'' said that the Democratic majority would be tough to beat - at most the GOP could take back fourteen House seats - two short of a majority. ==Overview== On April 8, 2008, analyst Stuart Rothenberg of The Rothenberg Political Report (who bills himself as non-partisan) stated that the fight for the House would be a "one-sided battle, with Democrats having most of the targets." He points to a list of one dozen seats (out of all 435 seats in the House) that are most likely to change hands, of those twelve, ten are open seats, seats which Republicans won by 3% or less in 2006 or otherwise endangered GOP seats. In May 2007, conservative columnist Robert Novak wrote that he believed there were at least a few House seats that were won by Democrats in 2006 "solely because of GOP corruption," and that such seats would be "the most likely to return to the Republican column in 2008". He also said, Novak qualified this by saying that in "previous elections, major House gains by either party have always been followed by losses in the next election". InTrade.com, the only betting site that offered odds on control of the House, put the likelihood of the Democrats retaining control at about 90% . There have been three special elections for open Republican seats, IL-14 (formerly held by Dennis Hastert), LA-06 (formerly held by Richard Baker) and MS-01 (formerly held by Roger Wicker). Democrats won all three elections. After the MS-01 loss, Ron Gunzburger wrote, "GOP insiders in DC now privately acknowledge the Democratic victory in this seat likely foreshadows a dismal general election ahead for congressional Republicans." 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Predictions for the 2008 elections of the United States House of Representatives」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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