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The Guardian - US
The Guardian - US
World
Joan E Greve in Washington, Richard Luscombe in Miami and Lois Beckett in Los Angeles

US elections 2024: control of House remains unclear

An illustration showing red and blue squares raining down in the House chamber
Without control of the House, the winner of the presidential race will face significant hurdles in implementing a legislative agenda. Composite: Getty/Guardian Design Team

Republicans have won a majority in the US Senate but control of the US House of Representatives remains unclear on Wednesday evening, with many of the most competitive races still uncalled.

With Donald Trump having won the White House, the stakes for control of the House have grown, since it could serve as either the sole Democratic check on the upcoming Trump presidency, or as the final Republican win that delivers a united pro-Trump government.

By Wednesday evening, Republicans were ahead 205-190, according to the Associated Press, after it called Democratic holds in New Jersey, Wisconsin and Texas, and victories for Republican incumbents in Michigan, Wisconsin and California.

North Carolina Republicans had won three seats previously held by Democrats, while Democrats flipped seats in Alabama and New York.

The US may have to wait days to learn who won the House, given that it took more than a week to make that call in 2022.

All 435 members of the House faced re-election, with Republicans looking to expand their narrow majority after two chaotic years in power.

The Republican House speaker, Mike Johnson, was re-elected to a fifth term and announced in a letter on Wednesday afternoon that he will be running for re-election as speaker. The House majority leader, Steve Scalise, is running for his position again, too.

Elise Stefanik, another loyal Trump ally and the highest-ranking woman among House Republicans, won a sixth term in New York.

But control of the lower chamber appears to be a true toss-up, as Democrats only need to win five more seats than they did in 2022 to regain their majority.

Johnson said he believed Republicans will keep a majority in the House, giving the party a “unified government”.

“The mandate that has been delivered shows that a majority of Americans are eager for secure borders, lower costs, peace through strength and a return to common sense,” Johnson said in his letter.

Scalise outlined the priorities of the Trump administration’s first 100 days, including measures to “secure the border” and ending the pause on LNG exports. “(Trump) can begin to get our economy back on track by slashing certain regulations and making the administrative state more efficient,” he said in a separate letter canvassing support.

Scalise said House Republicans would “lock in” tax cuts, “unleash American energy”, increasing energy exploration and production, and repealing unspecified Democrat policies introduced through the Inflation Reduction Act. The new administration would also “surge resources” to the southern border to build the “Trump Border Wall”, he added, while boosting border patrols to “stop the flow of illegal immigration.”

Hakeem Jeffries, the House Democratic leader, argued meanwhile that the “House remains very much in play”. The path to victory for Democrats is in seats in Arizona, Oregon, Iowa and California, he said.

“The party that will hold the majority in the House of Representatives in January 2025 has yet to be determined. We must count every vote,” Jeffries said.

In an election marked by Republicans’ intense anti-transgender rhetoric, Delaware voters elected the first openly trans member of congress, Democrat Sarah McBride, 34.

So far, both Democrats and Republicans have picked up seats due to redistricting, the process of adjusting district lines to keep up with population changes, with the Alabama Democrat Shomari Figures winning a district that had been changed to ensure fair representation for Black voters, while Republicans in North Carolina flipped three districts that had been reshaped by the Republican-controlled state legislature.

Democrats also flipped two seats in New York state, with Democrat Josh Riley, an attorney, beating the incumbent Republican Marc Molinaro, and John Mannion, a Democratic state senator, defeating incumbent Republican Brandon Williams in upstate New York.

Ten of the most hotly contested House races are in California, where Democrats need to flip at least one Republican seat in order to secure a majority, according to the Associated Press.

Without control of the House, Trump, the winner of the presidential race, will face significant hurdles in implementing his legislative agenda. Election forecasts suggest either party could end up with a majority of just a few seats, which could re-create some of the problems of the 118th Congress.

In 2022, the “red wave” that Republicans had promised failed to materialize, leaving the party with a House majority of just four seats at the start of 2023. That tight margin allowed a small group of hard-right Republicans to wreak havoc on the speakership race, forcing Kevin McCarthy to endure 15 rounds of voting before capturing the gavel.

But just nine months later, McCarthy was ousted from the speaker’s chair following a revolt staged by eight members of his own conference. McCarthy’s removal kicked off weeks of chaos, with the House at a complete standstill until Johnson, then a relatively unknown lawmaker, was elected to lead the chamber.

In recent months, Republicans have had to pitch themselves to voters for another two years in power after overseeing the most unproductive Congress in decades. Democrats have attempted to capitalize on Republicans’ legislative record as they look to rebuild a majority in the House, warning voters about the dangers of continuing the “dysfunction” in Congress.

“You’ve all seen it from day one, with 15 rounds of speaker elections [and] threats of shutdowns,” Representative Suzan DelBene, chair of House Democrats’ campaign arm, told Axios in August. “Those are the things that drive people at home crazy.”

Regardless of who wins a House majority, the new Congress will immediately face a highly consequential task when members are seated in January: certifying the results of the presidential election. In 2020, Trump supporters infamously attacked the Capitol in an unsuccessful effort to disrupt the congressional certification of Joe Biden’s victory, and lawmakers have sparked concern about the possibility of similar political violence after election day.

Read more of the Guardian’s 2024 US election coverage

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