Southern Maryland News

Hoyer: Trump or Cruz as GOP nominee is a chance for house Democratic majority

- REBECCA RAINEY Capital News Service

By

BOWIE — House Minority Whip Steny Hoyer (D-Md., 5th) said March 28 that either Donald Trump or Ted Cruz at the head of the GOP ticket could produce a Democratic majority in the House.

Hoyer, who is the second-most powerful Democrat in the House, said at a press roundtable with college reporters that a Trump or Cruz nomination would be so polarizing that it would harm Republican­s seeking re-election to the House.

He said that there would be significan­t seat pick-ups across the country, including two in Florida, one in Virginia, one in North Carolina, depending on redistrict­ing there, one or two New York, a few seats in Iowa, one in Colorado, one or two in Michigan and one in Montana.

“The Republican­s took over a lot of statehouse­s in 2010, [and] as a result they had the governance of the House and the Senate,” Hoyer said. “There was partisan gerrymande­ring and as a result we have a steep hill to climb.”

“But, having said that, if either Trump or Cruz are the nominees, I think we have a very substantia­lly enhanced opportunit­y to win the majority of the House,” he said.

That would require the Democrats to win a net of 30 seats, the lawmaker acknowledg­ed.

The Republican­s currently hold 247 House seats to the Democrats’ 188. For either party, a majority requires control of 218 seats.

“But we have won 30 seats in the past and Republican­s have won 30 seats in the past, so it’s not outside the realm of possibilit­y,” Hoyer said.

Hoyer added that a Trump ticket in particular could generate even more gains for the Democratic Party.

He noted that Michael Gerson, a Republican columnist for the Washington Post, wrote earlier this month that Trump as the GOP nominee would destroy the party.

“Now [Gerson is] a Republican. If he’s correct, we could have a big victory and win more than the 30 seats that we need,” Hoyer said.

In response, Joe Cluster, executive director of the Maryland Republican Party said “the congressma­n is not living in reality in this primary.”

“I don’t think he is watching the turnout on the Republican side,” Cluster said. “I’m not sure how he is coming to that determinat­ion, but our turnout is up 60 to 70 percent in every state.”

He added: “There’s a mood nationally against the Democrats and we wouldn’t be seeing the turnout if there wasn’t.”

According to the non-partisan Cook Political Report, 18 Republican and four Democratic House seats are labelled as “toss ups.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States