The Arizona Republic

Dems push for control of House for 2 more years

- Alan Fram

Republican­s ousted their first incumbent Democrat but lost two seats they’d held in North Carolina as Democrats drove Tuesday toward extending their control of the House for two more years.

Freshman Democrat Debbie Mucarsel-Powell became the first incumbent to lose on Election Day, falling to MiamiDade County Mayor Carlos Gimenez in a South Florida district that President Donald Trump lost decisively in 2016. The race saw the two sides spend over $26 million, making it one of the country’s most expensive, and seemed to reflect Trump’s strength this year among Cuban voters.

Even so, Democrats as expected captured two North Carolina seats vacated after Republican incumbents retired following a court-ordered remapping made the district more Democratic. And public anxiety over the pandemic, Trump’s alienation of suburban voters and a vast fundraisin­g edge fueled Democratic hopes that they’d not only retain their House majority but make it larger.

In one noteworthy finish, Marjorie Taylor Greene, who has espoused unfounded QAnon conspiracy theories, won a vacant seat in northwest Georgia. Greene, whom Trump has called a “future Republican star,” has alleged an “Islamic invasion” of government offices and expressed other racist views. QAnon asserts that Trump is quietly waging a battle against pedophiles in the federal bureaucrac­y and Democratic Party. Greene has since backtracke­d from her embrace of QAnon.

Elsewhere, progressiv­e star Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez was reelected from her New York City district. And both parties’ No. 3 House leaders, Democrat James Clyburn of South Carolina and Republican Liz Cheney of Wyoming, won their contests easily.

The night’s initial returns offered few surprises, with the scores of both parties’ incumbents from safe districts easily reelected. But dozens of hotly fought races remained undecided into the evening.

Republican­s were hoping to oust some of the 29 Democrats in districts Trump won in 2016, mostly freshmen, in districts ranging from upstate New York to rural New Mexico.

But nearly all Democratic incumbents in potentiall­y vulnerable districts were outspendin­g their GOP challenger­s, often by vast margins. Democrats were also aiming millions at Republican-held seats from suburbs in Georgia, Texas and Indiana and even GOP stronghold­s like Little Rock, Arkansas, western Colorado and Alaska.

Both parties’ operatives agreed that the GOP was mostly playing defense and would be fortunate to limit Democratic gains to a modest single digits. Democrats control the House 232-197, with five open seats and one independen­t. It takes 218 seats to control the chamber.

Hanging over the contests were the coronaviru­s pandemic and the wounded economy, which voters ranked as top concerns, according to AP VoteCast, a national survey of the electorate. The

virus has killed 232,000 people in the U.S. and cases are rising in nearly every state, while millions have lost jobs.

Should Democrat Joe Biden defeat Trump and Democrats win the Senate majority, the party would fully control the White House and Congress for only the second time since 1995. They last held the presidency, Senate and House in 2009 and 2010, the first two years of Barack Obama’s presidency.

A larger Democratic majority would make it easier for House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., to pass party priorities that include expanding health care coverage and creating jobs with new infrastruc­ture projects. After a two-year run as one of her party’s most effective counterpoi­nts to Trump, the 80-yearold Pelosi is all but certain to serve two more years running the House.

For Republican­s, a failure to move significan­tly toward retaking the House — let alone losing seats — would trigger a reckoning about why they remain trapped in the chamber’s minority. A major question would be how to regain suburban voters who have fled the GOP in droves, largely in reaction to Trump’s embrace of racially insensitiv­e appeals, frequent reliance on falsehoods and policies on immigratio­n and social justice that many moderates view as harsh.

As in 2018 when they grabbed House control, Democratic ads emphasized pledges to make health care more accessible, preserve coverage for pre-existing conditions and shield voters from Republican­s out to terminate those requiremen­ts. Many Republican­s say they want to dismantle Obama’s health care law while retaining its coverage for preexistin­g conditions, but they’ve not presented a detailed proposal for doing that.

The pandemic has only amplified Democrats’ focus on health care. Trump’s repeated false statements downplayin­g the virus’ severity have also given Democrats political fodder.

Another GOP disadvanta­ge was that they were defending 35 open seats of lawmakers who didn’t seek reelection, resigned or lost party primaries. There were just 13 Democratic-held vacant seats caused by departures.

This year’s House elections were projected to cost a record $7.3 billion in spending by candidates’ campaigns and outside groups, according to an estimate by the nonpartisa­n Center for Responsive Politics. By mid-October, candidates’ campaigns alone had reported raising $1.7 billion, another record.

Unfortunat­ely for the GOP, the money wasn’t evenly distribute­d.

All 29 House Democrats in districts that Trump carried in 2016 outraised their GOP challenger­s, according to an Associated Press analysis of Federal Election Commission reports covering campaign finance through mid-October. In 19 of those races, the Democrats’ edge was 2-1 or more.

The imbalance was nearly as stark among the 42 Democrats who party leaders dubbed “Frontliner­s” because they seemed vulnerable, and even among the 53 Democratic seats that Republican leaders named as takeover targets. In those contests, Democrats outraised nearly all of their GOP rivals.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP ?? A larger Democratic majority would make it easier for House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., to pass party priorities.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP A larger Democratic majority would make it easier for House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., to pass party priorities.

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