The Republican Party is likely to retain control of the House of Representatives in the coming days, but with the makeup of the chamber virtually unchanged despite decisive victories in the presidential race and US Senate contests.
GOP members are projected at this point to win a single-digit majority. Seventeen seats around the country remained up for grabs as of Monday evening, with Democrats currently leading in nine and Republicans in eight — in two cases, by just a few hundred votes.
Of the races already called, Republicans have secured 214 — four short of a majority. Democrats currently sit at 204 in the chamber.
The result is remarkable and would represent a clean sweep for party, with Donald Trump soundly defeating Kamala Harris, winning seven out of seven fought-over swing states, winning the popular vote for the first time, and even shrinking his margins of defeat in long-held Democratic bastions like Maryland.
But nevertheless, it could still cause headaches for the GOP next year. Case in point: the already-rambunctious state of the House Republican majority, which has hovered in the single digits for months and even before then was so unruly it resulted in the ouster and eventual resignation of Kevin McCarthy, the Republican who won the role of speaker after more than a dozen votes.
With Donald Trump poised to install loyalists across his administration, the real test for him this time around — in terms of ramming through as much of his ultra-conservative, nationalist agenda as possible — will be posed by Congress.
His ability to unify and bully Mike Johnson’s members into falling in line will be key to halting the kind of rebellion that took down McCarthy and could stall his legislative agenda.
Even his more optimistic aides will probably privately agree that the party risks losing the House once again in the coming midterm elections, though the Senate may be out of reach for Democrats thanks to a map that once again gives their rivals the edge.
That leaves roughly a year and a half before an election will in some way hinder the GOP’s ability to pass policy through Congress. For perspective: last time around, GOP House and Senate majorities worked together to pass Trump’s signature tax cuts in his first year, after trying and failing to repeal the Affordable Care Act. The vast majority of Trump’s agenda was pursued through the Executive Branch.
He’ll be essentially on that same timeframe — unless, of course, Democrats fail to get their act together between now and then. It’s always possible that Republicans will hold the House, too, in 2026.
On the Democratic side, wounds remain extremely raw following last week’s defeat. Harris underperformed compared to the party’s Senate candidates as well as House candidates in areas where her support collapsed, like Dearborn, Michigan.
This was coupled with an admission from Jon Favreau, former speechwriter to Barack Obama, that Joe Biden’s internal polling showed Trump winning 400 electoral votes in what have been an absolute bloodbath during the period his aides and campaign officials were angrily insisting he was the best candidate to put forward.
The president-elect formally announced two Cabinet nominees on Monday — GOP conference chair Elise Stefanik to be his UN ambassador, and former Rep. Lee Zeldin to lead the EPA.
In the days ahead, the focus will be on bigger positions being filled in Trump’s Cabinet — secretary of State, Defense and the attorney general among them — as well as news regarding the incoming administration’s first big legislative push.