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Russia is unhappy the Democrats won the House

The 2018 US midterm election results are in — and Russia feels like it lost.

Russia President Vladimir Putin and Bernie Ecclestone, Chairman Emeritus of the Formula One Group, talk during the Formula One Grand Prix of Russia at Sochi Autodrom on September 30, 2018 in Sochi, Russia.
Russia President Vladimir Putin and Bernie Ecclestone, Chairman Emeritus of the Formula One Group, talk during the Formula One Grand Prix of Russia at Sochi Autodrom on September 30, 2018 in Sochi, Russia.
Russian President Vladimir Putin and Bernie Ecclestone, chair emeritus of the Formula One Group, talk during the Formula One Grand Prix of Russia at Sochi Autodrom on September 30, 2018, in Sochi.
Clive Mason/Getty Images

The 2018 US midterm election results are in — and Russia feels like it lost.

The Kremlin is unhappy that Democrats won the House. That makes sense, as Democrats have promised greater oversight of President Donald Trump’s foreign policy, and especially his warmth toward Moscow. That, Russia fears, could imperil efforts to improve ties.

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“It’s fair to suggest with a high degree of confidence there are no glowing prospects in terms of normalization of US-Russian relations on the horizon,” Dmitry Peskov, the Kremlin spokesperson, said on Wednesday about the election results. However, he added, both countries will continue to talk, and discuss security issues like arms control.

It could get worse for Russia, as Rep. Dana Rohrabacher — famously nicknamed “Putin’s favorite congressman” due to his close ties to the Kremlin — is on the verge of losing his seat after 15 terms in office.

Despite Trump and the Kremlin’s expressed desire to improve relations, things have gone downhill between the two countries during this administration.

Russia tried to influence the 2016 presidential election and favored Trump, according to a US intelligence assessment. Special counsel Robert Mueller is investigating whether there was any collusion between the Trump campaign and the Kremlin.

The US also has called out Russia for trying to sway public opinion during the midterms, and imposed more sanctions on the country over its chemical attack on a former Soviet spy in the UK earlier this year.

Meanwhile, Russia says it will build new missiles that can reach the US and possibly detonate a nuclear weapon.

The two countries also have opposed each other for years in the war in Syria, where Moscow has supported Syrian President Bashar al-Assad; the conflict has raged for seven years and killed hundreds of thousands of people.

Still, Trump maintains that being friendlier with Russia is a “good thing, not a bad thing” — but it’s unlikely the new Democrat-led House will agree.

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