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Vacancy Elections for United States Congress, DNC majority


WASHINGTON DC, USA - Due to unprecedented resignations and consequential departures which rooted from the first day of January, the United States Congress has had over ten vacant seats. Last night, the United States government tallied the votes for the new congressional election, and are as shown above.

The Democrats, who have traditionally always maintained their position in the White House, and still do in Congress, won seven seats in this election, out of the ten up for grabs. The most notable candidates re-appearing in the national spotlight include MargaretWellesley, a revolutionizing figure in previous British politics and the Roblox version of Margaret Thatcher, Tormentium, a representative who previously filed numerous overruled lawsuits against the White House and Congress (who resigned only weeks before running for office yet again), and CalvinWilson, a devout member of the Republican National Committee who disgraced his party numerous times by sabotaging public events and calling the murderer of Vice President TerenceWalsh "a Democrat".

This new congress yields numerous radical candidates from both sides of the political spectrum. Although neither party chairs - JorakStinger, or LukeSolace - have given any public address on the issue, it is clear that the Democrats, now holding 7/10 seats (Republicans hold 2/10) in the House of Representatives, and 4/10 seats (Republicans hold 3 seats) in the Senate. The Democrats have an overwhelming majority in the House and a very, very slim one in the Senate. Democrats hope that they can pass any progressive or liberal legislation before Republicans quite possibly swarm it in following elections - but regardless, partisanship has not reached such an extreme extent as of yet.

The Democratic Party currently has 77 members, chaired by Speaker Luke Solace. In the meantime, the Republican Party is catching up and changing its traditionally nonexistent membership into an impressive 43, due to a new conservative advertisement campaign launched by RNC member CalvinWilson.

POLITICO Capitol Hill (updated 8:02 PM EDT, 2015/1/26)

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