midterm election results pouring in overnight, democrats winning back the house, and some too close to call. ron meyer, you were with us yesterday. are you surprised what happened today? i m not that surprised. i thought republicans would pick up one in the senate and keep it the same. the polls are wrong in the senate, right in the house. looks like republicans pick up at least 3 seats in the senate, these are in states the president has been popular with, he made last-minute stop there and some are narrow victories and some quite big. the combat incumbent senator donnelly was beach in indiana. indiana is a state president obama won. florida is a state president
tremendous success of his very first midterm election is republicans keep control of the senate picking up at least four seeds in missouri, florida, indiana and north dakota. in the house as many expected the democrats have retaken control leaving the power split in washington. breaking out the biggest upsets, hardest losses on both sides of the aisle, all kinds of stuff to talk about. we begin with griff jenkins in florida, the most nailbiting outcomes of the entire election. always in the middle of it. last night s national elections were a referendum on donald trump you wouldn t have known it in florida, the two closely watched races in favor of the republicans starting with the race for the senate, rick scott coming from behind to
republican martha mcsally. sinema is slightly ahead but the race is close to being a toss-up. i called mcsally s campaign, they said it was an oversample of democrats, that is not an accurate reflection of the campaign. it is an online poll and does not include, the indiana one had a third-party candidate they asked the respondents to the poll. in the arizona one, they didn t use the green party candidate by name in the ballot, and the green party candidate in previous elections in arizona had got about 5.5% of the vote, that pulls away from a democrat, but regardless of that, there are 840,000 people who have already voted in arizona. and while you don t know how any of those people voted, they can tell in registration that 44% of the early voting in arizona is republican.
ireland. over four thousand workers are employed here but their jobs might be in danger soon that s why the british government has made an appeal to boeing. boeing is a major difference partner of the united kingdom and was one of the big winners from the last defense review so this is not the kind of behavior that we expect from a long term partner and i ve made that very clear to boeing when i met earlier in the summer. the punitive cherubs against bombarding have not yet gone into effect the u.s. international trade commission will rule on them at the beginning of next year. u.s. president donald trump has unveiled tax reform plans at a speech in indiana one of the biggest changes is a drastic cuts for corporations from thirty five percent to just twenty in his speech trump pledge to make it easier for americans to file their taxes saying they
indiana law is different from federal law. federal courts have interpreted the federal rifra the way the indiana one was written, that it can apply to suits when the government pressure comes, for example, through a lower party. lower courts had already held that people still get to practice their religion and exercise religion when they re earning a living. indiana s law is nothing different from what s existed for 20-plus years. no one can name a single place anywhere in the country where that law has ever been used to allow for discrimination. it s never, ever happened. it s a fake claim that does a lot of good for religious minorities. bishop, last word to you on reaction to his comments. well, one would have to question why the anti-gay organizations and leadership are so excited about this law and why they were congratulating