President Obama’s historic win on Tuesday night — he’s the first sitting president since FDR to win re-election with an unemployment rate this high — ensures his legacy: The Affordable Care Act won’t be overturned, Social Security and Medicare will likely be preserved, and women will have greater reproductive rights, access to healthcare and fair pay.
But Obama is hardly the only winner. Progressives across the nation are cheering, thanks to the success of several ballot initiatives and other signs suggesting that the country is getting more liberal. Here are five:
1. Democrats crushed the GOP in Senate racesA few months ago, it seemed all but certain that Republicans would take control of the Senate. But Democrats have actually increased their Senate majority from 53-47 to 55-45. This is in large part thanks to Richard Mourdock and Todd Akin, the two candidates in Indiana and Missouri, respectively, who made controversial remarks about rape and abortion. They lost substantially, especially among women voters. Other big wins included progressive hero Elizabeth Warren in Massachusetts, who took back the late Sen. Ted Kennedy’s seat from Republican Scott Brown, and Rep. Chris Murphy, who won against Republican wrestling exec Linda McMahon in Connecticut, who poured millions of dollars into her campaign.
2. Same-sex marriage wins in two statesMaryland and Maine voted to legalize gay marriage—the first states to approve initiatives by popular vote. (Prior to Tuesday, gay marriage had gone down in defeat in some form or another on some three dozen past referendums.) They both passed by approximately a 5% margin. A similar initiative in Washington is still too early to call.
Minnesota also defeated a constitutional amendment that would have defined marriage as between one man and one woman. The wins for gay rights are an important signal to the Supreme Court as it plans to consider same-sex marriage cases later this year, and suggest that national attitudes on gay marriage continue to change.









