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Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee
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===2013β2014 election cycle=== In [[2014 United States Senate elections|2014]], 21 Democrats were up for election. In order to have a majority, the Republicans were required to attain at least 51 seats in the Senate. The Democrats would have been able to retain a majority with 48 seats (assuming the two Independents continued to caucus with them) because, in event of a tie vote, Vice President [[Joe Biden]] becomes the tie-breaker. Many of the incumbents were elected in the Democratic wave year of 2008 along with President Obama's first election. Although Democrats saw some opportunities for pickups, the combination of Democratic retirements and numerous Democratic seats up for election in swing states and red states gave Republicans hopes of taking control of the Senate. 7 of the 21 states with Democratic seats up for election in 2014 had voted for Republican Mitt Romney in the 2012 presidential election. Democrats also faced the lower voter turnout that accompanies mid-term elections. By midnight ET, most major networks projected that the Republicans would take control of the Senate. The party held all three competitive Republican-held seats ([[Kentucky]], [[Kansas]], and [[Georgia (U.S. state)|Georgia]]), and defeated incumbent Democrats in North Carolina, Colorado, and Arkansas. Combined with the pick-ups of open seats in [[Iowa]], [[Montana]], [[South Dakota]], and [[West Virginia]], the Republicans made a net gain of 7 seats before the end of the night. In the process of taking control of the Senate, Republicans defeated three incumbent Democrats, a task the party had not accomplished since the 1980 election. Five of the seven confirmed pickups were in states that voted for Mitt Romney in 2012, but two of the seats that Republicans won represent states that voted for Barack Obama in 2012 (Colorado and Iowa). Of the three races that were not called by the end of election night, [[Alaska]] and [[Virginia]] were still too close to call, while [[Louisiana]] held a December 6 run-off election. Incumbent Virginia Democrat [[Mark Warner]] was declared the winner of his race by a narrow margin over Republican [[Ed Gillespie]] on November 7, and Alaska Republican [[Dan Sullivan (U.S. senator)|Dan Sullivan]] was declared the winner against Democratic incumbent [[Mark Begich]] a week later, on November 12. Republican [[Bill Cassidy]] defeated incumbent Democrat [[Mary Landrieu]] in the Louisiana runoff on December 6. Days after the election, the United States Election Project estimated that 36.6% of eligible voters voted, 4% lower than the 2010 elections, and possibly the lowest turnout rate since the 1942 election.
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