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"I'm excited, really excited and a little nervous," she told reporters. She avoided commenting on the national issues of the Senate race in Nevada. "I'm not an expert, and we'll leave that to the investigators. But I think we will win. "
– José A. Del Real
"The tears of the democrats"
LOWELL, Ind. – The predictions of a democratic wave are hard to find in northern Indiana. At a rally organized in a barn for the end of the vote, last weekend, hundreds of Republicans celebrated their birthday around a brat and a cornbread.
"The blue wave everyone is talking about is that of the Democrats," said Mark Paul John, a painter who describes himself as an "artist of freedom."
"Democrats do not listen," he said while exposing a painting of soldiers he had entrusted to police officers in Ferguson, Missouri, following the assassination of Michael Brown , a black and unarmed teenager, shot dead. "They just complain."
Adam Sedia, 34, a lawyer, said the crowd was larger than at the same event two years ago.
"Many people want to keep the momentum," he said, stepping on a hay bale. "I would like to see more judges like Judges Gorsuch and Judge Kavanaugh."
Republican confidence was also strong outside of Indianapolis, during the final leg on Sunday night of the state-owned G.O.P. David Klingerman, a 72-year-old retired contractor, said he "did not feel like" a blue wave. "I think we will stay stable," he said.
And in Tippecanoe County, Bea Smith, the president of the local women's republican club, predicted a match by G.O.P. House and Senate.
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