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  • On November 8th, the US will hold

  • 475 separate federal elections.

  • If you vote in the US, you can vote in at least one of them.

  • The results will determine who controls these:

  • the two houses of Congress.

  • After the 2020 election, Democrats controlled the House of Representatives

  • and the Senate, as well as the Presidency.

  • The three bodies that have to align

  • if you want to make new laws.

  • And they did.

  • But even when government is split between the parties.

  • Each one of these bodies still holds

  • tremendous power on its own.

  • So the importance of what this picture looks like

  • can't be overstated.

  • And each one of these three outcomes

  • contains a very different story

  • about the next 2 years in the US.

  • Scenario 1: Democrats keep both houses.

  • This is not considered the most likely outcome.

  • The Democrats have gotten a ton passed in the last two years.

  • My name's Li Zhou.

  • I am a politics reporter at Vox.

  • I've been covering the hill for over 6 years now.

  • So if Democrats get to stick with this arrangement... then what?

  • One of the big things that they've said they'll do

  • is codify Roe V. Wade into federal law,

  • and that would mean

  • a national protection for access to abortion.

  • Paid family leave, subsidies for child care,

  • universal pre-K, the PRO act which protects people's ability

  • to organize and unionize.

  • But there's a catch to all this.

  • And it's connected to the reason Democrats haven't done any of it yet.

  • These laws are subject to a rule the Senate has

  • (It's called the filibuster)

  • that requires not 51 out of 100 votes to pass a law...

  • but 60 out of 100.

  • And Democrats want to change that rule.

  • Just... not all Democrats.

  • They have this 50/50 very narrow majority

  • but they only have 48 who are actually down to change the rules.

  • And so they need at least 52,

  • is kind of the magic number

  • that Democrats have been hoping for, in order to both

  • change the rules, and then pass a lot of the bills

  • that we've talked about.

  • Scenario 2: Republicans win the House of Representatives.

  • When the House is controlled by a different party

  • than the presidency or the Senate.

  • That gives them a lot of leverage.

  • My name's Dylan Matthews.

  • I'm a reporter at Vox.

  • They also have a lot of control over investigations.

  • They can run committees.

  • They can subpoena people.

  • They can make people testify. They can dredge up documents.

  • We can see that by going back

  • to the last time the government looked like this.

  • One thing that the GOP majority

  • in 2011 and onward did was investigate

  • the Obama administration extensively.

  • The "fast and furious" gun smuggling scandal,

  • on the Benghazi scandal after those attacks happened in 2012.

  • "-Easily obtained...." "Well, but Senator, again—"

  • "Within hours, if not days."

  • After Democrats won in 2018...

  • They also launched a bunch of investigations

  • into the Trump administration, one of which

  • culminated in the first impeachment.

  • Investigations can matter a lot.

  • More often than not, they're kind of a sideshow.

  • My sense ahead of time

  • is that that lever of power will be less important

  • than the ability to block must-pass legislation

  • on spending and the debt ceiling.

  • The debt ceiling fight in 2011

  • was one of the first stories I covered at The Washington Post.

  • The debt ceiling is this limit

  • on how much the federal government can borrow.

  • Almost the entirety of the international financial system

  • is built on the idea that US Treasury bonds are a safe asset.

  • Once you hit the debt ceiling, they are no longer a low risk asset.

  • That would lead to investments,

  • and borrowing, and homes and everything

  • being way more expensive throughout the world

  • which would be a pretty major financial crisis.

  • You need the House and Senate and the President

  • to agree for the debt ceiling to be raised.

  • The most dramatic example of that

  • happened in the summer of 2011.

  • The debt ceiling was coming due in early August.

  • That gave House Speaker John Boehner and members of his caucus

  • incredible leverage. Unless the Obama administration

  • was willing to let the debt ceiling be breached,

  • they kind of had to come to a deal.

  • Ultimately, $2.1 trillion in cuts

  • to the National Parks, Head Start programs, the FBI

  • National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation.

  • One area of the budget is pandemic prevention.

  • The choice that was made to invest a lot less

  • in preventing pandemics as a part of this deal..

  • It certainly couldn't have helped.

  • I mostly expect this Congress to be more hard-line,

  • in terms of their demands and unwillingness to compromise.

  • Scenario 3: Republicans win the House and the Senate.

  • The Senate has to confirm any federal judge.

  • I'm Ian Millhiser, I'm a lawyer

  • and I cover the Supreme Court for Vox.

  • The president nominates

  • anyone who's going to be appointed to the federal bench

  • but they don't get the job

  • unless a majority of the Senate votes

  • to confirm that individual.

  • There's a little more than 800

  • active judges in the federal system.

  • There are district judges who try cases,

  • Court of Appeals or circuit judges.

  • And then there's the Supreme Court.

  • The last time we had a Democratic president and a Republican Senate

  • was in 2015 and 2016.

  • Under Barack Obama, the Republican Senate

  • basically hit stop on Supreme Court confirmations

  • and on nearly all Court of Appeals confirmations.

  • And then, of course, what happened was

  • Republicans held all those seats open

  • until Donald Trump got into office

  • and then filled them with Republicans.

  • Trump's judges have overruled Roe v. Wade,

  • which is the reason why abortion is now illegal in many US states.

  • A sweeping reinterpretation

  • of the Second Amendment, our firearms amendment.

  • And now judges are striking down gun laws left and right.

  • A wholesale attack on voting rights,

  • particularly on the Voting Rights Act, which is the law that prevents

  • race discrimination.

  • At the lower court level,

  • we just had three Trump judges declare the entire

  • Consumer Financial Protection Bureau unconstitutional.

  • If Republicans take the Senate

  • then they can block the confirmation of any judge.

  • If you hold those seats open,

  • they're still vacant when a Republican comes to office,

  • and then the Republican can fill them.

  • The Republican Party

  • which is an institution that wants power...

  • has figured out that if it controls the judiciary,

  • it can gain, potentially, a permanent veto power

  • over any law that's enacted

  • over any regulatory policy that's enacted

  • regardless of who controls the White House

  • and regardless of who controls the Congress.

  • They're going after voting rights hard.

  • And if you don't have the right to vote

  • then you don't have any rights.

  • Eventually, the voters who've been disenfranchized

  • don't have any recourse

  • because they have no way to change who controls the government.

  • And the government is controlled by people who don't share their interests.

  • So that's the worst case scenario.

  • Right now, we're still at the point where

  • you know, elections are the best method that can be used

  • in order to reverse America's democratic decline.

  • Out of the 475 individual

  • House and Senate elections that will decide control of Congress...

  • most of them are not close races.

  • The election will really be decided by these races...

  • only about 1 out of 7 House elections

  • and just a handful of Senate races.

  • And so if you live in one of those places...

  • it means you have a lot of power over which one of these we choose.

On November 8th, the US will hold

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