It's Election Day, and Democrats' chances of retaining control of the Senate look pretty slim, according to election models at the Washington Post, the New York Times, and FiveThirtyEight, which put the chances of a GOP victory at 96%, 73%, and 76%, respectively. The Post notes that all three election models agree that the GOP is likely to pick up seats in Arkansas, Colorado, Louisiana, Montana, South Dakota, and West Virginia, while Democrats will probably hang on to North Carolina and New Hampshire—leaving Alaska, Georgia, Iowa, and Kansas as the races to watch. Harry Reid says the Iowa race will be crucial for Senate control, although there is a chance control may not be decided today, or even this month. More:
- Mitt Romney believes the polls this time around and he's confident about the GOP's chances, the Hill reports. This election is the "last chance" for voters to "pass judgment," says Romney, who has campaigned for Republicans across the country but hasn't indicated he's planning a third bid for the presidency.
- Despite an economy that's slowly finding its stride, polls indicate voter interest is "substantially lower" than it was four years ago, with a populace worn down by ISIS and Ebola, the Times reports. Lackluster candidates comparing each other to Taylor Swift and clown cars haven't helped.