2010 United States Senate special election in Massachusetts
http://dbpedia.org/resource/2010_United_States_Senate_special_election_in_Massachusetts an entity of type: Thing
Las elecciones especiales al Senado de los Estados Unidos en Massachusetts de 2010 fueron unas elecciones especiales que se hicieron el 19 de enero de 2010 para escoger al Senador por Massachusetts. Las elecciones se hicieron para poder ocupar el escaño faltante para el resto del término, terminando el 3 de enero de 2013, en la cual el Republicano Scott Brown ganó las elecciones.
rdf:langString
L'élection sénatoriale américaine de 2010 au Massachusetts a lieu le 19 janvier 2010. Elle est organisée à la suite de la mort du sénateur Ted Kennedy en août 2009 et doit permettre l'élection d'un sénateur qui doit achever le mandat en cours, le 3 janvier 2013. Conformément à la loi du Massachusetts, après le décès, la démission ou la destitution d'un membre du Congrès, une élection partielle doit se tenir dans les 145 à 160 jours, qui suivent la vacance de la fonction. Le républicain Scott Brown remporte l'élection avec près de 52 % des voix.
rdf:langString
The 2010 United States Senate special election in Massachusetts was a special election held on January 19, 2010, in order to fill the Massachusetts Class I United States Senate seat for the remainder of the term ending January 3, 2013. It was won by Republican candidate Scott Brown.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
2010 United States Senate special election in Massachusetts
rdf:langString
Elecciones al Senado de los Estados Unidos de 2010 en Massachusetts
rdf:langString
Élection sénatoriale américaine de 2010 au Massachusetts
xsd:integer
24115349
xsd:integer
1124919123
rdf:langString
Democratic Party
rdf:langString
Scott Brown
xsd:integer
1060861
1168178
xsd:double
21.3
rdf:langString
Republican Party
rdf:langString
right
rdf:langString
Democratic Party
rdf:langString
InternetArchiveBot
rdf:langString
All others
rdf:langString
Jack Robinson
rdf:langString
Blanks
rdf:langString
Scott Brown
rdf:langString
Mike Capuano
rdf:langString
Alan Khazei
rdf:langString
Joseph L. Kennedy
rdf:langString
Martha Coakley
rdf:langString
Stephen Pagliuca
rdf:langString
People stand in line to see Barack Obama campaign for Martha Coakley at Northeastern University . Scott Brown supporters line the opposite side of the street .
rdf:langString
n/a
rdf:langString
+21.28%
<perCent>
-22.23
xsd:integer
30
rdf:langString
Massachusetts
rdf:langString
July 2018
rdf:langString
vertical
xsd:date
2010-01-19
xsd:integer
2010
rdf:langString
yes
rdf:langString
Poll
rdf:langString
BrownSupportersAtNortheastern2.JPG
rdf:langString
ObamaforCoakley2010.JPG
rdf:langString
Brown:
rdf:langString
Coakley:
xsd:integer
250
xsd:integer
2012
xsd:integer
2012
rdf:langString
no
rdf:langString
Democratic Party
rdf:langString
Republican Party
rdf:langString
Liberty
xsd:integer
54
100.0
0.05
0.99
46.71
51.8
51.83
10.6
47.07
47.1
12.08
89.4
13.39
27.82
xsd:integer
2006
xsd:integer
2006
rdf:langString
U.S. Senator
rdf:langString
presidential
xsd:integer
1145
1155
17241
22388
80248
88929
145465
162706
184791
310227
664195
1060861
1168178
2253727
xsd:integer
200
rdf:langString
Republican Party
rdf:langString
The 2010 United States Senate special election in Massachusetts was a special election held on January 19, 2010, in order to fill the Massachusetts Class I United States Senate seat for the remainder of the term ending January 3, 2013. It was won by Republican candidate Scott Brown. The vacancy that prompted the special election was created by the death of Democratic Senator Ted Kennedy on August 25, 2009. Kennedy had served as a U.S. Senator since 1962, having been elected in a special election to fill the vacancy created when his brother John F. Kennedy was elected President of the United States in 1960. The seat was held until the election by an appointee, Senator Paul Kirk, a former chairman of the Democratic National Committee, was not a candidate in the election to complete the term. This was the first open seat U.S. senate election in Massachusetts since 1984 and the first in this seat since 1962 where Ted Kennedy was first elected. A party primary election determining the winners of party nominations was held on December 8, 2009. The Democratic Party nominated Martha Coakley, the Massachusetts Attorney General; the Republican Party nominated Scott Brown, a Massachusetts State Senator. The race drew national attention due to Brown's unexpectedly closing the gap and running even with, or ahead of, Coakley in independent and internal polling in the last few days of the campaign. Polls closed at 8:00 p.m. Eastern Time. At 9:06 p.m., BNO News projected Brown as the winner of the race. At 9:13 p.m., The Boston Globe reported that Coakley telephoned Brown and conceded her defeat in the election. As a result of the election, the Republicans would control 41 seats in the United States Senate, enough to maintain a filibuster. Although Democrats would retain control of both Houses of Congress until January 2011, Brown's victory would greatly affect their political plans, most notably for the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, though the legislation was signed into law two months later. With his victory, Brown became the first Republican to win this seat since the Democrats captured it in 1952, and the first to win either Massachusetts Senate seat since 1972. Indeed, he was the first Massachusetts Republican to be elected to Congress since Peter Blute and Peter Torkildsen won reelection to the House in 1994. As of 2022, this was the last congressional election in Massachusetts won by a Republican.
rdf:langString
Las elecciones especiales al Senado de los Estados Unidos en Massachusetts de 2010 fueron unas elecciones especiales que se hicieron el 19 de enero de 2010 para escoger al Senador por Massachusetts. Las elecciones se hicieron para poder ocupar el escaño faltante para el resto del término, terminando el 3 de enero de 2013, en la cual el Republicano Scott Brown ganó las elecciones.
rdf:langString
L'élection sénatoriale américaine de 2010 au Massachusetts a lieu le 19 janvier 2010. Elle est organisée à la suite de la mort du sénateur Ted Kennedy en août 2009 et doit permettre l'élection d'un sénateur qui doit achever le mandat en cours, le 3 janvier 2013. Conformément à la loi du Massachusetts, après le décès, la démission ou la destitution d'un membre du Congrès, une élection partielle doit se tenir dans les 145 à 160 jours, qui suivent la vacance de la fonction. Le républicain Scott Brown remporte l'élection avec près de 52 % des voix.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
108552
xsd:date
2010-01-19
rdf:langString
2010 United States Senate special election in Massachusetts