Who won the House? What you need to know about why it might take ‘weeks’ to be sure

It is still not completely clear which party won control of the House of Representatives three days after the midterm election on Nov. 8, and it might still take weeks to find out for sure.

House Republicans continue to operate under the assumption that they won a majority. But that majority will likely be slim, and slow vote counts in California, Arizona, Colorado and Oregon make it impossible to declare any result with certainty.

According to the Fox News Decision Desk, Republicans had secured 211 House seats as of Friday morning, seven short of the 218 they need for a majority. Republicans are currently leading in enough outstanding House races to reach that goal.

2022 MIDTERM ELECTION RESULTS

The biggest factor standing in the way of a clear result is the slow count in California, where more than a dozen House races have yet to be called. The final results in California could make or break the GOP takeover in the House – Republicans hold narrow leads in several of those races, but many of them have still tabulated fewer than 50% of the votes that have come in.

According to a count provided late Thursday, more than 4.8 million ballots had yet to be processed. California’s Secretary of State Shirley Weber says it could still be weeks before it becomes clear who wins these races.

"It typically takes weeks for counties to process and count all of the ballots," Weber’s office says on its website. "Elections officials have approximately one month to complete their extensive tallying, auditing, and certification work (known as the official canvass)."

MCCARTHY OFFICIALLY ANNOUNCES SPEAKER RUN, MAKING CASE TO FELLOW REPUBLICANS AFTER MIDTERMS MISS EXPECTATIONS

Under California law, mail-in ballots must be postmarked on or before Election Day, but can still be received by county election officials up to seven days after the election and still be counted.

California state law says election officials must report their final results to Weber by Dec. 9.

In Arizona, there are still two House races that have yet to be called, and a Republican is leading in one of them. However, just like California, Arizona still has many votes to count.

According to Arizona’s Secretary of State Katie Hobbs, who is running for governor, more than 2 million ballots have been tabulated so far, but more than 500,000 remain.

"Elections don’t end on Election Day," Hobb’s website states. "It takes time to ensure all eligible votes are counted."

KEVIN MCCARTHY DECLARES GOP WILL TAKE MAJORITY IN THE HOUSE, PUSH OUT PELOSI AS SPEAKER

In Colorado, the results in two House races are not yet clear, including GOP incumbent Lauren Boebert’s close race against Democratic challenger Adam Frisch. As of Friday morning, Boebert was up a little more than 1,000 votes.

According to Colorado Secretary of State Jena Griswold, every county in the state is still in a post-election reporting phase of the election as of Friday morning, and none had completed a final counting of ballots. It might still be some days before final results can be seen in this state.

Finally, in Oregon, the fate of two close House races remains unclear, in part because that state will continue to count ballots by mail until Nov. 15. Under that state’s law, voters can file complaints about alleged election law violations as late as Nov. 21, and the very last day to resolve all ballot challenges is Nov. 29.

Aside from these four states, a small handful of other close House races are being delayed for various reasons, including waiting for mail-in ballot and absentee vote counts.

Biden Battles Teleprompter — And Bizarre Shrieking From The Audience — At COP27

President Joe Biden appeared to struggle to read what was on his teleprompter during his Friday appearance at the United Nations conference on climate change — known colloquially as COP27.

The president promised during his remarks in Egypt that that United States under his watch would do everything it could to make sure the world averted a “climate hell,” saying, “We’re not ignoring harbingers that are already here. So many disasters — the climate crisis is hitting hardest those countries and communities that have the fewest resources to respond and to recover.”

But during his remarks, Biden stumbled through a few sentences — and was then interrupted by several loud shrieks from somewhere in the audience.

WATCH:

BIDEN in EGYPT:

“Our significant climee will turbo charge the murg! The inner! The, enter… excuse me… Terg-Turbo charge! The emerging gloga clean enerk, energy economy! I was reading their quote. Sorry!” pic.twitter.com/LkUynuMXWu

— The First (@TheFirstonTV) November 11, 2022

Biden began by saying that energy agencies had concluded that the United States’ contribution to the global green energy initiatives would bring about substantial progress.

“Our significant climate investment will, quote, Turbo charge the murg — the ener — the, ener —excuse me — turb-turbo charge the emerging global clean ener — clean energy economy!” Biden said, adding a brief apology and apparently blaming the teleprompter for his difficulties. “I was reading their quote. Sorry!”

Biden continued to struggle through his remarks, however.

WATCH:

NOW – Biden says he is determined to make "transformational changes," then a strange sound briefly interrupts his speech at COP27. pic.twitter.com/C6pvyVohlV

— Disclose.tv (@disclosetv) November 11, 2022

“I came into the presidency determined to be trans — to make the trans-reformative transformational changes that are needed. That America needs to make,” he said, adding, “And we have to do for the rest of the world, to overcome decades of opposition and obstacles to progress on this issue alone. To re-establish the United States as a trustworthy committed global leader on climate.”

“As I stand here before you, we have taken enormous strides to achieve that —” Biden trailed off then as a series of loud shrieks and barks came from somewhere in the building. The president paused and scanned the audience, apparently looking for the source of the disruption, before he continued: “But I don’t stand here alone …”

Biden also took a moment during his COP27 appearance to apologize for the fact that, under former President Donald Trump, the United States had withdrawn from the Paris climate accord. “I apologize we ever pulled out of the agreement,” he said, adding that he planned to continue “meeting the climate crisis with urgency and determination.”

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