NEW YORK โ Americans awoke Wednesday to Election Day outcomes that remained nearly as murky as the night before: โHouse, Senate control still hangs in the balance,โ a CNN caption blared.
Yet if the results of midterm elections hadn't solidified, the media narrative clearly had. Good night for Democrats. Bad night for Republicans. Bad night, especially, for Donald Trump.
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This quick analysis took shape despite the very real possibility that Republicans would wind up wresting control of one or both houses of Congress from the Democrats. From the coverage's perspective, Republicans had failed to meet expectations.
โRepublicans wildly underperformed, and heads should roll,โ conservative commentator Ben Shapiro tweeted.
The Washington Post's website headlined, โCongress Hangs in the Balance as Democrats Defy Expectations.โ
The New York Times headlined, โControl of Congress Hinges on Closely Fought Races.โ Yet further headlines on the newspaper's site said there were no signs of a red wave that Republicans expected, and the lead analysis story was about why an expected GOP rout fell short.
The Times' closely watched โNeedle,โ which barely budged much of Tuesday night, predicted Wednesday afternoon that the Democrats had a 66% chance of controlling the Senate, and the Republicans an 83% chance of winning the House.
Trump, who opted not to announce a 2024 candidacy the night before the election, faced a particularly rough media assessment.
A Washington Post analysis explained, โwhy the 2022 election was such a disaster for Trump.โ
The New York Post, overlooking the governor's race in its home state, put Trump rival Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis on its cover, standing before a huge American flag. โDeFuture,โ was the headline.
Fox News' website ran a steady stream of stories with damaging headlines: โTrump-endorsed Vance doesn't mention former president in victory speech.โ โRepublican Brad Raffensperger, reviled by Trump, wins again in Georgia.โ And, โConservatives point finger at Trump after GOP's underwhelming elections results.โ
โThis ended up being a referendum on crazy,โ said MSNBC commentator Donny Deutsch on Wednesday.
Armed with statistics and projections on election night, television networks were wary of drawing conclusions about the closely divided nation's political future. The night's first big story, DeSantis' big win, was favorable for Republicans.
But as Tuesday night slipped into Wednesday morning, the story of what was not happening for the GOP became the main talking point.
โRepublicans will have some soul-searching to do here,โ said Fox News Channel's Dana Perino.
Kellyanne Conway, the former Trump aide who was a commentator on Fox, grew impatient at one point with on-set discussions about Republicans not performing up to expectations or hopes.
โItโs enough,โ she said. โWeโll take it.โ
Fox News Channel averaged the most election-night viewers, 7.2 million, more than double any other network or channel during prime time. According to Nielsen, MSNBC drew 3.1 million; NBC, 3.097 million; ABC, 3.03 million; CBS, 2.5 million; CNN, 2.48 million.
Television networks made an extra effort Tuesday to have personnel on hand to deal with threats to democracy, such as election deniers or attempts to prevent voting. Instead, there wasnโt much for them to do.
Through it all, news organizations stressed transparency, and how counting election results had become more difficult because of increased early voting and different state rules in how the vote was counted.
โThis is more complicated than it was 10 years ago,โ CNNโs John King said, โbecause people are voting in different ways.โ
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David Bauder is APโs media writer. Follow him on Twitter at http://twitter.com/dbauder