Dhe nese nuk gabohem, Dhoma e Perfaqesuesve eshte pothuaj e sigurt qe mbetet me shumice republikane, right ?
Dy pyetje per ju te Amerikes please:
Kur (cfare ore) ia vlen te fillojme te ndjekim rezultatet? Ne cilen media?
Me pak se 2 min
Une s’jam i ameriqise por rreth ores 1 e gjys - 2 të nates, me oren e Uropit, fillojne rezultatet
nga ora 2 e nates me oren shqiptare, qe ne East Cost merret vesh kush fiton, ndiq keto shtete: Florida, Ohio, North Carolina, New Hampshire. Kush i fiton keto fiton zgjedhjet.
Rrofshi @STALKER dhe @ohsnap, por pyetja tjeter ishte “Ku?” Dmth me thoni nje media te besueshme per te dyja frontet
Dhe kjo jo se rezultatet do ndryshonin ne varesi te medias, por thjesht do me pelqente te degjoja komente te hajrit
edhe 50 min.
Rezultatet e para per Trumpin, shenje e keqe.
Shut up. Too early for that shit. Vetem Kentucky ka dale. Ato zdromsat pa dhombe dihej qe jane per Trump : She’s gonna take their guns !!!
sic dhe ka thone koka e modhe me qetesi dhe me dashuri. Florida dhe Michagani do e bojne pucin sot.
Ka shume mundesi qe lodhem kot: 538 voters janë pikerisht anetaret e Kongresit? (100 senatoret + 435 perfaqesuesit e Dhomes se Perfaqesuesve). Kam kujtu se voters nuk janë kongresmenët !!
A jane normale keto rezultate kaq te thella? Psh si ky ne Kentucky 75 - 22, ose Indiana 69 - 27?
E kam parasyshe bastionet, winner takes it all etj, por me cudit a jane dallimet kaq te thella, zakonisht?
ato jane kot, jane bastione, nuk merret njeri me ato. Keto shtete ndiqni:
Florida, Ohio, New Hampshire, Nevada, Michigan, Pennsylvania, North Carolina. Kush kap keto fiton.
Statistikisht po por une skam qene kurre ne wyoming
E para qe vetem 1% e votes eshte numeruar, po edhe sikur te numerohen 100% ne ca shtete, ke rezultate aq te thella.
Ka shqiptare edhe ne Wyoming. Kryesisht studente, exchange students.
Paniku ne bursa po ulet ne oret e vonshme te burses. Donaldi e hengri qafen e pates.
gjeta kete permbledhje shpejt e shpejt, po ke pak kohe e durim tani vone
ja ta postojme ne faqe:
A total of 469 seats in the U.S. Congress (34 Senate seats and all 435 House seats) are up for election on November 8, 2016.[1]
The big story of the 2016 congressional election cycle is whether or not the Democratic Party will be able to regain control of the Senate. In order to take the chamber back, Democrats need to gain five seats in 2016. The majority of vulnerable seats are held by Republican incumbents, many of whom are freshmen who were swept into office in the Tea Party wave of 2010. As a result of this wave, Democrats only have 10 seats to defend in 2016, while 24 Republican incumbents are up for re-election.[2]
The unexpected death of Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia on February 13, 2016, placed even greater importance on the 2016 Senate elections. Confirmation of a new Supreme Court justice requires 60 votes in the Senate, giving the Republican-controlled Senate the ability to deny any nominee chosen by President Barack Obama. Several Republican senators, including Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, declared that the next president should have the responsibility of appointing the new justice. McConnell said in a statement, “The American people should have a voice in the selection of their next Supreme Court Justice. Therefore, this vacancy should not be filled until we have a new President.”[3]
Appointment and confirmation of the replacement justice will be left to the newly elected president and Senate in 2017. This put increased pressure on both parties to win the Senate in 2016, as the chamber has the ability to confirm or deny the next president’s nominees. This also raised the issue of Republican obstructionism in battleground states and potentially harm Republican incumbents who need to appeal to more moderate voters in order to win re-election. Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) said of the issue, “I believe that many of the mainstream Republicans, when the president nominates a mainstream nominee, will not want to follow Mitch McConnell over the cliff. The American people don’t like this obstruction. When you go right off the bat and say, ‘I don’t care who he nominates, I am going to oppose him,’ that’s not going to fly.”[3][4]
There is significantly less at stake in the U.S. House in 2016, as control of the chamber is unlikely to be in question. In order to flip the chamber, the Democratic Party needs to pick up 30 seats. While it is unlikely for the Democratic Party to gain control of the chamber in this election cycle, Democrats can reduce the majority that the Republican Party holds. Heading into the election, Republicans hold their largest majority in the U.S. House since 1928.[5]
The fact that 2016 is a presidential election year is expected to be a boon for Democratic candidates. In the past decade, Democrats have made gains in both chambers in presidential elections, while they have suffered losses in the midterms. Should Democrats fail to retake the Senate in 2016, it is unlikely that they will get another opportunity until at least 2020.[6]
HIGHLIGHTS
>There are nine Senate battlegrounds that will decide which party will control the Senate.
> There are 23 House battlegrounds. Even if Democrats swept them, they still would not control of the House. Democrats need to gain 30 seats to win the House.
> There are only 21 states that feature at least one battleground race in either the House or the Senate. The rest are largely noncompetitive.
na jep ndonje link per live updates online, po munde