Republicans win how many seats




















Utah's 1st. Alyse Galvin. Don Young. Andy Biggs. Joan Greene. Audrey Denney. Doug LaMalfa. Justin Aguilera. Zoe Lofgren. Jared Huffman.

Dale Mensing. Mark Reed. Brad Sherman. Joshua Scott. Grace Napolitano. Aja Smith. Mark Takano. John Briscoe. Alan Lowenthal. Juan Hidalgo. Juan Vargas. Dana Cottrell. Daniel Webster. Greg Steube. Allen Ellison. Tabitha Johnson-Green. Jody Hice. Michael K. Aaron Swisher. Betsy Londrigan. Rodney Davis. Tom Hanson. Mike Quigley. Danny K. Craig Cameron. Greg Pence. Jeannine Lee Lake. Hank Linderman.

Brett Guthrie. John Sarbanes. Charles Anthony. George McDermott. Anthony G. Tracy Lovvorn. Jim McGovern. Jeff Jones. Debbie Dingell. Jerry Hilliard. John Moolenaar. Gretchen Driskell. Tim Walberg. Dan Feehan. Kathy Ellis.

Jason Smith. Don Bacon. Kara Eastman. Joyce Bentley. Dina Titus. Annie Kuster. Steve Negron. Tedra Cobb. Elise Stefanik. Tom Reed. Tracy Mitrano. Dana Balter.

John Katko. Bill Johnson. Shawna Roberts. Warren Davidson. Vanessa Enoch. Mary Brannon. Tom Cole. Brendan Boyle. David Torres. Renee Hoyos. Tim Burchett. Erika Stotts Pearson. David Kustoff. Charlotte Bergmann. Steve Cohen. Mike Siegel. Michael McCaul. Randy Weber. Adrienne Bell. Julie Oliver. Roger Williams. Filemon Vela. Rey Gonzalez Jr. Suzan DelBene. Jeffrey Beeler. Carolyn Long. Jaime Herrera Beutler. Pramila Jayapal. Craig Keller. Tim Rogers. Gwen Moore.

Arizona's 6th. David Schweikert. Arkansas' 2nd. French Hill. Mike Garcia. Illinois' 13th. Susan Brooks. Michigan's 6th. Fred Upton. Minnesota's 7th. Missouri's 2nd. Ann Wagner. Nebraska's 2nd. Jeff Van Drew.

Andrew Kim. Peter King. Ohio's 1st. Steve Chabot. Pennsylvania's 10th. Scott Perry. Texas' 21st. Chip Roy. Pete Olson. Will Hurd. Kenny Marchant. Texas' 25th. Alaska At-Large. California's 22nd. Devin Nunes. California's 50th. Florida's 16th. Vern Buchanan. Florida's 18th. Brian Mast. Victoria Spartz. Kentucky's 6th. Andy Barr. Montana's At-Large. Matt Rosendale. North Carolina's 8th. North Carolina's 9th. Dan Bishop. North Carolina's 13th. Ted Budd.

New York's 1st. Lee Zeldin. Andrew Garbarino. New York's 24th. New York's 27th. Christopher Jacobs. Ohio's 10th. Michael Turner. Ohio's 12th. Troy Balderson. Pennsylvania's 1st. Brian Fitzpatrick. Pennsylvania's 16th. Mike Kelly. Texas' 2nd. Daniel Crenshaw. Texas' 10th. Troy Nehls.

Tony Gonzales. Beth Van Duyne. Texas' 31st. John Carter. Washington's 3rd. Arizona's 1st. Connecticut's 5th. New Hampshire's 1st. New Jersey's 5th. Nevada's 3rd. Nevada's 4th. Pennsylvania's 8th. Alaska at-large. Joyce Elliott. Hiral Tipirneni. Christy Smith. Ammar Campa-Najjar. Vacant previously Duncan Hunter.

Diane Mitsch Bush. Alan Cohn. Margaret Good. Christina Hale. Rita Hart. Michelle De La Isla. Hillary Scholten. Jon Hoadley. Jill Schupp.

Montana at-large. Kathleen Williams. Greg Gianforte. Amy Kennedy. Nancy Goroff. Jackie Gordon. Patricia Timmons-Goodson.

Richard Hudson. Kate Schroder. Desiree Tims. House Speaker David Osborne said the results underscores Republican support in the state. Senate President Robert Stivers congratulated senator-elect Douglas in a statement.

Share on Twitter Share on Facebook. Ryland Barton RylandKY. Sign up. All Rights Reserved. Among the outstanding contests, only California Rep. Mike Garcia, who won a May special election, appears to be in danger of losing. Open-seat races have also been friendly to Republicans, despite the large number of GOP incumbents who retired or left office ahead of the election. And two of those Democratic wins were in North Carolina seats that the GOP had written off after a court-ordered redistricting made the districts heavily Democratic.

While the majority of the Republican caucus will still be men come , there will be far more Republican women in Congress than there were this year. So far, it looks like at least 26 GOP women will be in the House next year , surpassing the record of 25 from the th Congress.

As of this writing, seven of them have won. That came within one Senate seat of being the case. While the second most likely scenario a Democratic sweep ended up being the final result, it was in the same general direction of the first one. The elections maintained their trajectory for 12 months, even through a pandemic. While the election would be more of a repudiation of Trump, Democrats could declare a legislative mandate for their most polarizing policies.

Republicans are well-positioned to win back the House and the Senate, although the latter is more difficult. Democrats are poised to gain seats, but the most likely outcome ranges from a modest gain in the teens to a more dramatic political wave. Indeed, it was the wave that developed as Democrats saw a net gain of 41 seats a year later and regained the House majority.

The Senate picture was always a bit murkier considering the GOP lean of the battleground states. This was the right sentiment considering Republicans gained two seats and held their majority. But there is a broad range of outcomes from minimal net change to significant Democratic gains.



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