The control of Congress hung in the balance on Wednesday as Democrats showed surprising strength, defeating Republicans in a series of competitive races and defying expectations that high inflation and President Joe Biden’s low approval ratings would drag the party down.
According to data from the University of California Santa Barbara, the likelihood of a President's party maintaining or increasing control of both the U.S. House AND Senate is historically low.
In the years after a president's election, the first midterms are historically bad for the party that the president represents. Going back to 2000, only once has the president's party gained seats in both the U.S. House and Senate – that was in 2002 under George W. Bush when the GOP added 8 House seats and two Senates.
Going back even further, that's the only time since 1934 that the President's party gained seats. For nearly 100 years, the President's party has lost seats in one of the chambers two years after the presidential race.
In 2006, Republicans lost 30 seats in the House and six in the Senate. In 2010, under President Barack Obama, Democrats lost 63 in the House and six in the Senate. Four years later, they lost 13 in the House and nine in the Senate. In 2018, under President Donald Trump, the GOP lost 40 House seats but gained two House seats.
That 2018 midterm was the first time since 2002 that either party gained seats in either house.
This midterm is going to be pivotal to what happens next in the United States Congress and the term of President Joe Biden, who was elected with Democratic control of the House and a statistical tie in the Senate – though West Virginia Democrat Joe Manchin has often sided with Republicans on key issues.
Approximately 470 seats in Congress (35 Senate seats and all 435 House seats) were up for election on Nov. 8.
The seats of five of the six non-voting members of the House were up for election as well, according to Ballotpedia.org.
Ballotpedia notes that two special elections for the Senate were also happening. One special election was held to fill the final four years of Sen. Jim Inhofe's (R-Okla.) six-year term that began in 2021. Inhofe announced his resignation effective January 3, 2023.
Democrats collected three seats in the 2020 Senate elections bringing the party's caucus total to 50, including two independents who caucus with Democrats. Republicans held the other 50 seats following the elections.
Two days after Election Day, the balance of power still remains unclear. Republicans are expected to gain control of the House but the fate of the Senate is even less certain after the Democrats' surprisingly strong showing in nearly every state not named Florida.
Key races include the race for Senate in Georgia between incumbent Democrat Sen. Raphael Warnock and his Republican challenger Herschel Walker. Neither candidate could claim outright majority and that race is now headed for a run-off in a race that means Georgia, for the second consecutive election cycle, will determine the balance of power in the Senate.
Georgia law requires a candidate to surpass 50% of the vote to win an election, so a runoff between the top two vote-getters will be held on Dec. 6.
While Georgia may be the most prolific, there are races in Arizona and Nevada that we're still waiting on.
Arizona Democratic Sen. Mark Kelly leads his Republican rival, venture capitalist Blake Masters. Kelly's lead is due in large part to mail-in ballots returned before Election Day. Mail-in ballots received on Monday and Tuesday have not yet been counted. Maricopa County officials say more than 200,000 early ballots and probably up to 500,000 total ballots need to be tabulated over the coming days.
RELATED: Why is it taking so long for Arizona to count ballots?
Nevada's race between Democratic U.S. Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto and Republican challenger Adam Laxalt remains too close to call. The tight race will take several days to be finalized and Nevada has a high percentage of paper mail-in ballots, which historically have taken days to tally. Votes there are updated once per day.
As for the House, Republicans have been favored to flip the House for months but it has grown increasingly tough to do so due to a strong showing of support of Democratic candidates. one of the races that the GOP had pushed for was Michigan's 7th District, which Democratic Congresswoman Elissa Slotkin won.
If the GOP gains control of the House, the Washington Post explains that the party could disband the Jan. 6 Committee. GOP leadership hasn’t shown interest in investigating the Capitol riot attack on Jan. 6, 2021, with some members of the party considering investigations against the Jan. 6 committee members.
The Post noted that Republican leaders may be under pressure by some, including Trump, to use their power in the House to investigate Biden and his administration on several policy items including the FBI search at Mar-a-Lago and the investigation into Trump's false election fraud claims.
House GOP Leader Kevin McCarthy has already unveiled his "Commitment to America," a broad outline of economic, border security and other policies that the GOP would propose in the early days of the next Congress, the Associated Press reported.
If Democrats were to hold the Senate and Republicans win the House, the two chambers would struggle to find common ground on issues. But Republicans could try to win over Democratic Senate moderates on some legislation, the Associated Press reported.
In that case, if Republicans decided to launch an investigation into Biden and his administration, there’s not much Democrats could do to stop them. But the Washington Post reported that Democrats could continue approving Biden’s nominations for judges, which could be the only thing the party could do in a split Congress.
Biden and Senate Democrats have worked to fill empty slots on federal courts nationwide. Appointing judges will impact investigations into Trump and policy disputes, including the president being forced to continue a Trump-era deportation policy, according to the Post.
Republicans only need five (out of 435) in the House to grab the majority and only one out of 35 seats in the Senate. Despite the Roe v. Wade decision, it's still possible for the GOP to control both chambers of Congress, according to the Washington Post.
Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) introduced a law to ban abortion across the country after 15 weeks. Senate Republican leaders weren’t on board with the idea. However, if the GOP controls the House and Senate, there will likely be a push by Republicans to bring an abortion ban up for a vote, the Washington Post reported.
But with two years to go before a presidential election, Republicans have more incentive to block Biden’s agenda. That means Biden can expect Republicans to block any of his spending requests for pandemic aid, climate change, and anything else that comes up. There could even be shutdown threats as both parties try to gain leverage in spending bills.
The Associated Press reports that a Republican-led Senate could pass bills sent over by a GOP House, putting political pressure on Biden. And the GOP would regain control of committees and, with it, the power to conduct investigations and oversight of the administration. According to the AP, a Republican Senate could also make life difficult for Biden by blocking or delaying passage of the president’s judicial and executive branch nominees.
If Democrats kept the House and the Senate, they would likely restart negotiations on some of Biden’s agenda items that were not passed, including his new package of social and economic programs that stalled amid internal Democratic disagreements, the Associated Press reported.
The party in power almost always loses seats in Congress in midterms, and Democrats wouldn’t be affected if they lost a couple of House seats and a Senate seat. If Democrats gained control of the House and Senate, the Washington Post reported that they would have another opportunity to pass national protections for abortion, same-sex marriage, and voting rights. Democrats could also pass laws related to the president’s Build Back Better plan.
Another scenario if Democrats gain control of both chambers is finding a way to prevent former President Donald J. Trump from running in 2024 following the Jan. 6 riot. The New York Times reported in September that Democrats are preparing different ways to disqualify him, including new legislation and preparing lawsuits looking to use a clause in Constitution to label him an insurrectionist.
According to the New York Times, some anti-Trump Republicans and Democrats are worried that Attorney General Merrick Garland won’t pursue criminal action against the former commander-in-chief for his efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election. The Times explains that even if Trump were indicted and convicted, there isn’t a law banning even him from becoming president.
Democratic priorities like access to abortion, addressing climate change, and stricter gun control would immediately be sidelined. And most, if not all, of Biden’s agenda, would be effectively eliminated for the final two years of his term, the Associated Press reported.
Still, nothing becomes law without Biden's signature. Bills to fund the government, raise the debt ceiling, and deal with military issues are necessary for the government to function, the AP noted. Those bills are likely to become flashpoints in negotiations between the GOP, Democrats, and the White House.
Biden, who served in the Senate for decades, has often touted his bipartisan credentials and said he wants to work with Republicans. But there would be little interest in a GOP Congress that opposes Biden, according to the AP.
The Associated Press contributed to this story. This story was reported from Washington, D.C.
Information from the Associated Press and FOX News was used in this report.
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