Republicans
Win Control of House, Cementing a G.O.P. Trifecta Under Trump
The party
protected vulnerable incumbents and picked off Democrats in competitive
districts, handing the president-elect a unified Congress to enact his agenda.
Catie
Edmondson
By Catie
Edmondson
Reporting
from Washington
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/11/13/us/elections/republican-house-trifecta.html
Nov. 13,
2024
Republicans
cemented their control of the House on Wednesday after holding onto a handful
of critical seats in Arizona and California and defeating incumbent Democrats
in key battleground districts, handing the G.O.P. a governing trifecta in
Washington to enact President-elect Donald J. Trump’s agenda.
It was not
yet clear what the margin of the Republican majority in the House would be, and
preliminary counts pointed to the likelihood that they would again hold only a
slight edge over Democrats. Votes were still being counted in some critical
contests in the West, and a few other races were still too close to call.
The
resignation of Representative Matt Gaetz of Florida on Wednesday after
President-elect Donald J. Trump said he would nominate him for attorney general
further complicated the math for the G.O.P. But Representative Hakeem Jeffries
of New York, the Democratic leader, had already conceded that his party had
fallen short, and The Associated Press declared that Republicans had
effectively won control of the chamber after calling an Arizona race for
Representative Juan Ciscomani.
Even a slim
majority amounted to an extraordinary triumph and turnabout for Republicans,
who just a year ago fretted that voters would punish them for the chaos and
dysfunction gripping the House under their leadership. Instead, G.O.P. leaders
have said they intend to use their chokehold on power in Washington to begin
quickly passing legislation, including a sweeping package of tax cuts,
loosening of regulations on domestic oil and gas production, and stringent
border security measures.
“Republicans
in the House and Senate have a mandate,” Speaker Mike Johnson said at a news
conference in front of the Capitol on Tuesday. “It was a decisive win across
the nation.”
“We’re going
to raise an America First banner above this place,” he said later.
As a red
wave swept across the nation, with voters registering their unhappiness with
the current Biden-Harris administration, many House Democrats and the party’s
candidates were ultimately unable to outrun Vice President Kamala Harris’s
performance.
Nowhere did
the party face more of a drubbing than in Pennsylvania, where Republicans
defeated Representative Matt Cartwright, who has held his Scranton-based Eighth
Congressional District seat since 2013. Representative Susan Wild, who flipped
her Lehigh Valley Seventh District seat in 2018, also lost.
A number of
Democratic incumbents in the House outperformed expectations, clinging to their
seats in Trump-friendly terrain and denying Republicans victories they had
expected to notch.
And
Democrats in New York won back three seats that had tormented them, ousting
Representatives Marc Molinaro, Anthony D’Esposito, and Brandon Williams in the
Hudson Valley, Long Island and Syracuse.
But all
across the nation, Democratic challengers fell short in races that party
operatives believed they could win. Representative Don Bacon of Nebraska, a
veteran Republican, defied the political headwinds in his liberal-leaning Omaha
district to win a fourth term. And incumbents facing competitive races in Iowa
and Arizona fended off their opponents, leaving Democrats short of the 218
seats they needed to win back control.
Maya C.
Miller contributed reporting.
Catie
Edmondson covers Congress for The Times. More about Catie Edmondson
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