With or without Congress
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US President Barack Obama yesterday pledged to work with Republican lawmakers after their midterm election win but warned he would act without them to protect his core agenda, starting with immigration reform.
The US leader stopped short of accepting direct responsibility for his Democratic party's colossal defeat at the hands of opponents who successfully turned the election into a repudiation of his policies.
The GOP snatched control of the Senate, tightened its grip on the House of Representatives and won key Democrat governorships, in an election Obama admitted was "a good night" for Republicans.
"To everyone who voted, I want you to know that I hear you," Obama said.
Congress's two top Republicans said the new legislature would focus on jobs and the economy, and move to repeal Obama's signature achievement -- the health care bill known as Obamacare, which provides medical insurance for millions who lack it.
Democrats suffering from the whiplash of their overwhelming defeat were left to contemplate what went wrong.
Some Republicans nevertheless acknowledged they need to find avenues of cooperation with Obama so they are seen as capable congressional stewards ahead of the 2016 presidential race.
In a lengthy White House news conference, Obama insisted he was "eager to work with the new Congress to make the next two years as productive as possible."
Obama said he would also ask the new Congress for help in battling the spread of Ebola in west Africa and beyond, and to endorse US-led military action against jihadists in Iraq and Syria.
But, in the absence of a strong legislative base for the remaining two years of his presidency, Obama said he would press ahead with plans on immigration reform.
He said he would take executive action this year, without waiting to see whether the new Congress makes progress toward a comprehensive bipartisan immigration reform bill.
Despite Obama insisting he was optimistic about America's future, exit polls Tuesday confirmed the pessimistic mood that several Republican winners had capitalized on. Voters are convinced the nation is headed in the wrong direction and are skeptical of the abilities of the president and his Democrats to turn things around.
Analysts say one of the biggest consequences of the Republican victory in the senate this week is that Barack Obama will be spending a lot more time on world affairs.
With Republicans unlikely to suddenly adopt a more bipartisan approach to domestic policy, the president will have no choice but to concentrate in his last two years in the White House on foreign policy.
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