8A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, November 4, 2004 NEWS 0 THE DAY AFTER REUNITING THE COUNTRY "Reaching these goals will require the broad support of Americans, so today I want to speak to every person who voted for my opponent. To make this nation stronger and better, I will need your BOWING OUT "Don't lose faith, what you did made a difference. And building on itself, we will go on to make a difference another day. I promise you that time will come.... And it's worth fighting for." - Democratic candidate John Kerry concedes yesterday Kerry states SCalifornia * support and I will work to - President Bush, Bush states Alaska Arizona Alabama Arkansas Colorado Florida earn it." victory speech yesterday U U U Connecticut 40 Delaware District of Columbia Illinois U U Georgia Idaho Hawaii Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Indiana Kansas Kentuck' Louisian Mississil Missouri Montana NebraskE ;y U U U U Minnesota New Hampshire New Jersey New York 3 :a Nevada North Carolina Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island Vermont Washington Wisconsin 0 U' U U; U; U North Dakota Oklahoma South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Wyoming 40 President Bush stands with his family and Vice President Dick Cheney before a roaring crowd of his supporters prior to delivering his accep- tance speech in the Ronald Reagan Building in Washington yesterday. Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry waves to supporters with his wife Teresa Heinz Kerry at his side after delivering his concession speech at Faneull Hall in Boston yesterday. I I National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice, left, and chief strategist Karen Hughes await President Bush's acceptance speech in the Ronald Reagan Building in Washington yesterday. A tired crowd lingers at Copley Square in Boston, hoping to see John Kerry or at least learn who the president will be, in the wee hours of the morning yesterday. 4 Republicans strengthen hold on U.S. House, Senate 'The red states get redder and the blue states get bluer' WASHINGTON (AP) - A triumphant phalanx of conservative candidates paved the way as Republicans used Election Day to strengthen their grip on Congress and vanquish one of the Democrats' most visible national leaders. As undecided races in the House and Senate dwindled to a handful, both chambers' GOP leaders rejoiced in their added muscle. In the next Congress, Republicans will have at least 231 seats and probably one more for what would be a three- seat pickup in the 435-member House. The GOP will control the new Senate 55 to 44 plus a Dem- ocratic-leaning independent, a four-seat gain. "Last night was a monumental victory for the United States Senate," said Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-Tenn.). Frist, who will still need to muster 60 votes to fend off Democratic filibusters that can derail bills, spoke during a whirlwind one-day victory lap through four of the five south- ern states where Republicans grabbed seats from retiring Senate Democrats. The GOP's favorite scalp was that of Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle of South Dakota, the 18-year Sen- SENATE HOUSE Republican Democrat Underscoring the conservative tide, the National Rifle Association said 14 of the 18 Senate candidates and 241 of the 251 House candidates it endorsed had won. It circulated long lists of incoming House and Senate freshmen it consid- ered "pro-gun." Sen. Lincoln Chafee (R-R.I.), perhaps the Senate's most moderate Republican, told The Providence Journal that he might switch parties if President Bush were re-elected. "I'm not ruling it out," he said. Chafee spokesman Stephen Hourahan yesterday seemed to try tamp down rumblings of a switch, saying of his boss, "He has no intention of making an announcement of any- thing in the near future." Moderate Republicans took note of what happened and began staking out their territory. The likely new chairman of the Senate Judiciary Com- mittee, moderate Sen. Arlen Specter (R-Pa.), warned the White House against trying to fill any upcoming Supreme Court vacancies with judges who would oppose abortion rights or invite Democrats to block them for being too conservative. 4 55+4 E Republican 231 +4 44-4 Democrat 200-3 9 Independent I *Independent I * *ndecided 3 A