Battleground champion
Obama rolls to re-election, stubborn Mitt Romney waits and waits to finallyconcede
In the end, the only thing Mitt Romney could slow when it came to Barack Obama's victory express was the president's acceptance speech.
Romney waited nearly two hours after all the networks called the election to call Obama himself and concede. The Republican challenger could not keep up with the president in the key battleground states as Obama won seven of the nine swing states — Ohio, Wisconsin, Virginia, Iowa, Colorado, New Hampshire and Nevada — to rack up a sizeable advantage in electoral votes. (The overall popular vote was very close).
No Republican has ever won the presidency without winning Ohio and Romney's camp refused to concede it had lost the state long after the networks called it.
Almost fittingly, it was winning Ohio that pushed Obama over the top for the necessary 270 electoral votes and had everyone calling the race his way. Romney had banked on taking Ohio, having put almost 130 field offices in the state. But a quarter of Obama's campaign rallies took place in Ohio and he beat Romney where the Republican absolutely needed to win.
No Republican has ever won the presidency without winning Ohio and Romney's camp refused to concede it had lost the state long after the networks called it.
But minutes before midnight in Houston, Romney finally took the stage in Boston and faced that reality.
"I pray that the president will be successful in guiding our nation," Romney said. Romney kept his remarks brief and only seemed to get emotional when he brought up his wife Ann.
"She would have been a wonderful First Lady," he said.
"For the United States of America, the best has yet to come," Barack Obama said.
While Romney licked his wounds, the scene in Chicago for Obama's Four More Years moment couldn't have been more energized. As Stevie Wonder's "Signed, Sealed, Delivered I'm Yours" blared over the loudspeakers, President Obama took the stage with First Lady Michelle Obama and their daughters to even more deafening cheers.
"For the United States of America, the best has yet to come," Barack Obama said.
Obama's remarks started after 12:34 a.m. Houston time, but you can bet that plenty of Americans stayed up with the president — or will tell their co-workers that they did Wednesday morning. Obama's second term will have the divided Congress that marked his first term (the Democrats maintained control of the Senate and the Republicans still have the House), but Obama sounded a hopeful tone in his acceptance speech that at least brought back memories of the giddy scene that marked his election in 2008.
"The task of perfecting our union moves forward," Obama said. "It moves forward because of you."
". . . Our economy is recovering, a decade of war is ending." Obama talked of returning to the White House "more inspired than ever."
When it came to local issues, the Houston Independent School District's $1.89 billion bond passed easily and all the A No Vote means Yes for public transit campaigning ended up meaning little as the METRO "general mobility" referendum passed even more easily. It's Houston, people still love their cars first.
Houston Community College also came out a winner, getting its $425 million bond passed, which will allow for expansion and classroom technology improvements.