The Yellow Brick Road to Retaking the House Majority
Well, Republicans lost
at least 37 seats in the midterm elections, meaning that they will need a net
gain of at least 14 in order to retake control.
Half of the Democrats’ pickups came in districts carried by Hillary
Clinton. Republicans should probably
write off those seats and focus on winning back the House by winning back many
of the seats carried by President Trump in the 2016
Presidential Election they lost this year, in addition to trying to flip seats
won by President Trump that Republicans have not held for decades.
As of right now, it
looks like Republicans have no pickup opportunities in California, Colorado,
Florida, Kansas, Texas, and Washington; states where Republicans ended up
losing at least one seat this year. Keep in mind that the Democrats will probably target
the remaining five seats carried by Hillary Clinton as they seek to expand
their House majority in 2020; in addition to a handful of seats that
Republicans only won by a narrow margin in 2018.
Without further ado,
take a look at the “yellow brick road” for retaking the House majority:
1.
Win back Oklahoma ’s 5th
Congressional District. In the last
several Presidential elections, the Republican candidate has swept every single
county in Oklahoma , including Oklahoma County ;
home to Oklahoma City ,
the state’s capital and largest city. Republicans have an ideal candidate for
the seat: Mick Cornett, the former Oklahoma
City mayor who unsuccessfully ran for Governor this year. Cornett carried Oklahoma County
in the initial primary, which he won with a plurality of the vote. However, Cornett failed to reach 50 percent
of the vote, forcing him into a runoff with businessman Kevin Stitt, who ended
up winning the runoff and becoming Governor.
Even in the runoff, Cornett still carried Oklahoma County ,
indicating that he has strong support in the largest population center of the 5th
district. Stitt ended up losing Oklahoma County in the general election, the
Democratic victory there may have contributed to Democrat Kendra Horn’s
unexpected victory in the district. Cornett
had run for the seat in 2006, losing to Mary Fallin, who later ended up
becoming Governor of Oklahoma.
Republicans should absolutely make sure not to run Fallin; she left
office with a 19 percent approval rating.
(+1)
2.
Win back South Carolina ’s 1st
Congressional District. Going into Election Day, it looked like any Republican
losses in the Carolinas would come from North Carolina ,
not South Carolina . Believe it or not, the Republicans actually
ended up losing a seat in South Carolina, which became open when its current
occupant, Mark Sanford, lost his primary to Katie Arrington, after President
Trump tweeted out his support for her and criticized Sanford. President Trump won the 1st District
with 53.5 percent of the vote in 2016. Considering the fact that a Senate race
will take place simultaneously with the Presidential Election, that should
definitely help Republicans. (+1)
3.
Win back
at least two seats out west. President
Trump carried Arizona ’s 1st
Congressional district, Nevada ’s 3rd
Congressional district, and New
Mexico ’s 2nd Congressional district in the
2016 Presidential Election. A Democrat
has held AZ-1 since the redrawn district first emerged following the 2010
Census. Republicans held the seat in Nevada as recently as
2016, when its Congressman Joe Heck, retired to unsuccessfully run for the
Senate. With all due respect, Danny
Tarkanian, the Republican Party’s nominee for the 3rd District in
the past two races, sucks as a candidate.
He couldn’t manage to win either time despite the fact that President
Trump carried the seat in 2016 and he did not face an incumbent in either
election. If Republicans want to flip the seat, they need to pick someone else.
As of right now, New Mexico’s 2nd Congressional District looks like
the easiest pickup for the Republicans, it only flipped because its former
Congressman, Steve Pearce, opted to run for Governor rather than run for re-election. The last time Pearce gave up his seat to make
an unsuccessful statewide bid, he successfully won his seat back two years
later. Hopefully, Pearce will run for
his old seat and win. Republicans
probably need to pick up at least one of the two remaining seats if they want
to retake the House. (+2)
4.
Win back
at least two seats in New York . Republicans have already lost New York ’s 11th Congressional District (Staten
Island) and New York ’s 19th
Congressional District in the 2018 elections, and currently trail in the
uncalled race in New York ’s
22nd Congressional District, located in Upstate New York. President Trump carried all three of those
districts, in addition to New York ’s
18th Congressional District, which Democrat Sean Patrick Maloney has
represented since 2012. President Trump carried the 11th and 22nd
Districts with well over 50 percent of the vote in 2016 while he carried New
York’s 19th and 18th Congressional Districts, both
located at least partially in the New York metropolitan area, by smaller margins. (+2)
5.
Win back
at least one “rust belt” seat overwhelmingly carried by President Trump. President Trump carried Minnesota ’s 7th Congressional
District with more than 60 percent of the vote in 2016. Pennsylvania ’s
8th Congressional District voted for President Trump by a 15-point
margin. The incumbent in Minnesota ’s 7th Congressional district, only
won re-election with 52 percent of the vote this year while the incumbent in Pennsylvania ’s 8th
Congressional district only won re-election with 54 percent of the vote. (+1)
6.
Win back
at least one seat in Virginia .
Of the three seats Republicans lost in Virginia ,
Virginia ’s 7th
Congressional District seems most likely to flip back into the “R” column. President Trump won the district with roughly
51 percent of the vote, in contrast to a smaller margin of victory in Virginia ’s 2nd Congressional District, and his
loss in Virginia ’s
10th Congressional District. (+1)
7.
Win back
at least one seat in Michigan .
Republicans lost in Michigan ’s 8th Congressional
District, which President Trump carried with more than 50 percent of the vote,
and Michigan ’s
11th Congressional District, which President Trump only carried with
a plurality. President Trump will surely
target Michigan
in 2018 and his presence in the state should help put at least one of the
challengers to the new freshmen Congresswomen over the top. (+1)
8.
Win back
at least one “rust belt” seat narrowly carried by President Trump. Republicans
should keep their fingers crossed that Illinois Senator Dick Durbin retires and
should do everything they can to ensure that Congresswoman Cheri Bustos runs
for his seat. Bustos represents Illinois ’s 17th
Congressional District, an industrial district in Western
Illinois that President Trump carried in 2016. Her absence on the
ballot removes the incumbency advantage and would help Republicans recruit a
high-quality candidate for the seat.
Another option, Wisconsin ’s
3rd Congressional district; has not had a Republican representative
for nearly a quarter of a century but President Trump carried it with 49
percent of the vote in 2016. (+1)
9.
Win back
at least one seat in New England . At this point, it looks possible that not one
of the Congressional districts in New England
will have a Republican representative in the 116th Congress. The implementation of ranked-choice voting
could cause incumbent Republican Congressman Bruce Poliquin of Maine ’s 2nd Congressional District, the lone
Republican in New England , to lose his
seat. It looks like he may win with a
plurality of the vote on the first ballot, but he may end up losing if a
majority of the supporters of the third-party candidates end up backing his
Democratic challenger. President Trump also won New
Hampshire ’s 1st Congressional District in the 2016
Presidential Election and came very close to winning in New Hampshire ’s 2nd Congressional
district. (+1)
10. Win back at least one seat in Iowa . In 2016, President
Trump carried all four of Iowa ’s
Congressional districts. After the 2018
elections, Republicans only control one of them. Based on the results of the 2018 elections,
Iowa’s 3rd Congressional District looks like the easiest pickup; incumbent
Congressman David Young only lost by a little less than two percentage points. (+1)
11. Win back at least two seats in New Jersey : Democrats nearly swept Republicans out of
power in New Jersey ;
in the 116th Congress, only one of the state’s twelve Congressional
districts will have a Republican representative. Democrats picked up two open seats and ousted
two Repulican incumbents. President
Trump won New Jersey ’s 2nd District
and New Jersey ’s 3rd Congressional
District with more than 50 percent of the vote while he carried New Jersey ’s 11th
Congressional District with a plurality of the vote. (+2)
12. Win back at least two “suburban”
districts: The Republicans lost a series of “suburban” districts across several
states where President Trump won with less than 50 percent of the vote. Districts that come to mind include Georgia ’s 6th Congressional District,
Illinois’s 14th Congressional District, Minnesota’s 2nd
Congressional District, and Pennsylvania ’s
17th Congressional District.
Based on the numbers alone, Republicans should have an easier time
picking up Georgia 6 and Illinois 14; they lost
those districts by extremely small margins.
President Trump will probably make an appearance or two in Georgia , which
may emerge as a crucial battleground state in 2020. He will probably also want to campaign on
behalf of Senator David Perdue’s re-election bid. Perdue finds himself among only a handful of
Senators actually committed to implementing an “America first” immigration system. (+2)
So, following that
“yellow brick road” I laid out would lead to Republicans picking up 16
seats. That may or may not put them over
the top, as a handful of races remain uncalled. Currently, Republicans lead in
uncalled races in California ’s 39th
Congressional District, Georgia’s 7th Congressional District, Maine’s
2nd Congressional District, New York’s 27th Congressional
District, and Texas ’s 23rd
Congressional District while Democrats lead in California ’s
45th Congressional District, New York’s 22nd
Congressional District, and Utah ’s
4th Congressional District. For a while, it looked like Republican
incumbent Mia Love had lost re-election in Utah ’s 4th Congressional District
but Democrat Ben McAdams’s lead has shrunk as more of the vote has come in. According to The Salt Lake Tribune, forthcoming
votes in heavily Republican
Utah County
could help put Love over the top.
The “yellow brick road”
will certainly change at least a little bit as more races get called and
incumbents announce their retirements ahead of the 2020 election; now only
slightly more than 700 days away. The
race to retake the House has already begun.
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