Daily Camera (Boulder)

GOP wins slim House majority

- By Will Weissert, Sara Burnett and Jill Colvin The Associated Press

WASHINGTON >> Republican­s won control of the U.S. House on Wednesday, returning the party to power in Washington and giving conservati­ves leverage to blunt President Joe Biden’s agenda and spur a flurry of investigat­ions. But a threadbare majority will pose immediate challenges for GOP leaders and complicate the party’s ability to govern.

More than a week after Election Day, Republican­s secured the 218th seat needed to flip the House from Democratic control. The full scope of the party’s majority may not be clear for several more days — or weeks — as votes in competitiv­e races are still being counted.

But they are on track to cobble together what could be the party’s narrowest majority of the 21st century, rivaling 2001, when Republican­s had just a nine-seat majority, 221-212 with two independen­ts. That’s far short of the sweeping victory the GOP predicted going into this year’s midterm elections, when the party hoped to reset the agenda on Capitol Hill by capitalizi­ng on economic challenges and Biden’s lagging popularity.

Instead, Democrats showed surprising resilience, holding on to moderate, suburban districts from Virginia to Minnesota and Kansas. The results could complicate House GOP leader Kevin Mccarthy’s plans to become speaker as some conservati­ve members have questioned whether to back him or have imposed conditions for their support.

Mccarthy celebrated his party having “officially flipped” the House on Twitter on Wednesday night, writing, “Americans are ready for a new direction, and House Republican­s are ready to deliver.”

President Joe Biden congratula­ted Mccarthy, saying he is “ready to work with House Republican­s to deliver results for working families.”

“Last week’s elections demonstrat­ed the strength and resilience of American democracy. There was a strong rejection of election deniers, political violence, and intimidati­on,” Biden said in a statement. “There was an emphatic statement that, in America, the will of the people prevails.”

He added, that “the future is too promising to be trapped in political warfare.”

The narrow margins have upended Republican politics and prompted finger-pointing about what went wrong. Some in the GOP have blamed Donald Trump for the worse-thanexpect­ed outcome.

The former president, who announced his third White House bid Tuesday, lifted candidates during this year’s Republican primaries who often questioned the results of the 2020 election or downplayed the mob attack on the U.S. Capitol last year. Many of those struggled to win during the general election.

Despite the GOP’S underwhelm­ing showing, the party will still have notable power. Republican­s will take control of key committees, giving them the ability to shape legislatio­n and launch probes of Biden, his family and his administra­tion.

There’s particular interest in investigat­ing the overseas business dealings of the president’s son Hunter Biden. Some of the most conservati­ve lawmakers have raised the prospect of impeaching Biden, though that will be much harder for the party to accomplish with a tight majority.

Any legislatio­n that emerges from the House could face steep odds in the Senate, where Democrats won the barest of majorities Saturday. Both parties are looking to a Dec. 6 Senate runoff in Georgia as a last chance to pad their ranks.

With such a potentiall­y slim House majority, there’s also potential for legislativ­e chaos. The dynamic essentiall­y gives an individual member enormous sway over shaping what happens in the chamber. That could lead to particular­ly tricky circumstan­ces for GOP leaders as they try to win support for must-pass measures that keep the government funded or raise the debt ceiling.

The GOP’S failure to notch more wins — they needed a net gain of five seats to take the majority — was especially surprising because the party went into the election benefiting from congressio­nal maps that were redrawn by Republican legislatur­es.

History was also on Republican­s’ side: The party that holds the White House had lost congressio­nal seats during virtually every new president’s first midterm of the modern era.

The new majority will usher in a new group of leaders in Washington. If elected to succeed House Speaker Nancy Pelosi in the top post, Mccarthy would lead what will likely be a rowdy conference of House Republican­s, most of whom are aligned with Trump’s bare-knuckle brand of politics. Many Republican­s in the incoming Congress rejected the results of the 2020 presidenti­al election, even though claims of widespread fraud were refuted by courts, elections officials and Trump’s own attorney general.

Mccarthy won the nomination for House speaker on Tuesday, with a formal vote to come when the new Congress convenes in January.

“I’m proud to announce the era of one-party Democrat rule in Washington is over,” Mccarthy said after winning the nomination.

Republican candidates pledged on the campaign trail to cut taxes and tighten border security. GOP lawmakers also could withhold aid to Ukraine as it fights a war with Russia or use the threat of defaulting on the nation’s debt as leverage to extract cuts from social spending and entitlemen­ts — though all such pursuits will be tougher given how small the GOP majority may end up being.

As a senator and then vice president, Biden spent a career crafting legislativ­e compromise­s with Republican­s. But as president, he was clear about what he viewed as the threats posed by the current Republican Party.

Biden said the midterms show voters want Democrats and Republican­s to find ways to cooperate and govern in a bipartisan manner, but also noted that Republican­s didn’t achieve the electoral surge they’d been betting on and vowed, “I’m not going to change anything in any fundamenta­l way.”

AP Votecast, a broad survey of the national electorate, showed that high inflation and concerns about the fragility of democracy had heavily influenced voters. Half of voters said inflation factored significan­tly, with groceries, gasoline, housing, food and other costs that have shot up in the past year. Slightly fewer — 44% — said the future of democracy was their primary considerat­ion.

Counter to the GOP’S expectatio­ns, Biden didn’t entirely shoulder the blame for inflation, with close to half of voters saying the higher-than-usual prices were more because of factors outside his control. And despite the president bearing criticism from a pessimisti­c electorate, some of those voters backed Democratic candidates.

Democrats also likely benefited from anger over the Supreme Court overturnin­g the landmark Roe v. Wade decision cementing a woman’s constituti­onal right to an abortion. Voters in Michigan voted to amend their state constituti­on to protect abortion rights while far more reliably Republican Kentucky rejected a constituti­onal amendment declaring no right to an abortion.

Overall, 7 in 10 voters said the high court’s ruling overturnin­g the 1973 decision enshrining abortion rights was an important factor in their midterm decisions. Votecast also showed the reversal was broadly unpopular. About 6 in 10 say they are angry or dissatisfi­ed by it. And roughly 6 in 10 say they favor a law guaranteei­ng access to legal abortion nationwide.

 ?? PATRICK SEMANSKY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? House Minority Leader Kevin Mccarthy of Calif., speaks with journalist­s after winning the House Speaker nomination at a House Republican leadership meeting Tuesday on Capitol Hill in Washington.
PATRICK SEMANSKY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS House Minority Leader Kevin Mccarthy of Calif., speaks with journalist­s after winning the House Speaker nomination at a House Republican leadership meeting Tuesday on Capitol Hill in Washington.

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