Ayotte is third Republican Trump critic to lose Senate race

WASHINGTON, DC – SEPTEMBER 20: Sen. Kelly Ayotte (R-NH) (L) and Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) hold a news conference about military assistance to Israel at the U.S. Capitol September 20, 2016 in Washington, DC. Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) is threatening to stall approval of an agreement on military assistance between the U.S. and Israel by introducing legislation that would boost the aid above what the countries agreed on. Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images/AFP

WASHINGTON, United States (AFP) — US Senator Kelly Ayotte conceded to her Democratic challenger on Wednesday, making her the third Republican to lose a Senate race in a battleground state after refusing to endorse Donald Trump.

Ayotte’s defeat to Governor Maggie Hassan in New Hampshire means another pick-up for the Democrats in the battle for control of the Senate.

But Republicans outperformed expectations in Tuesday’s election and kept their grip on the chamber, with a likely final tally of 52 Republicans to 48 Democrats.

The two New Hampshire rivals were separated by just 600 votes by mid-afternoon Wednesday, some 22 hours after polls closed in the US election that saw Republican presidential nominee Trump deliver a stunning defeat of Democrat Hillary Clinton.

Ayotte called Hassan on Wednesday and conceded the race, US media reported.

Republican lawmakers had debated their strategy in recent months given the toxic rhetoric emanating from Trump, who had called Mexicans rapists, demeaned women and vowed to ban Muslims from entering the United States.

Some, particularly in swing states, strategized about whether to endorse Trump and incur the wrath of angry independent voters, or reject him and risk a backlash from his supporters.

After last month’s release of a 2005 video clip that caught Trump making vulgar remarks about women, Ayotte and Joe Heck, a congressman who lost his Senate bid Tuesday in Nevada, were among the first Republican lawmakers to reject the party’s presidential nominee.

Senator Mark Kirk of Illinois, locked in a tight battle with Iraq war veteran congresswoman Tammy Duckworth, had rejected Trump months earlier. Kirk was trounced by Duckworth on Tuesday.

Republican senators in safe re-election bids, such as John Thune of South Dakota and Mark Crap of Idaho, severely criticized Trump after the video clip remarks went public.

But within days they reversed course and re-endorsed the nominee, and handily won  re-election.

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