The 2016 Congressional elections are less likely to be about which party will control the House and more about whether Democrats can eat into the GOP’s sizable majority.
Since their seismic landslide in the 1994 midterm elections, the Republican Party has held control of the House of Representatives for all but four years, between 2007 and 2011.
And that balance of power is unlikely to shift in 2016 with the GOP holding an historically large majority – their largest since the 1929 Congress – that it is difficult to imagine a scenario where Democrats will take back control of the House. Even Democrats admit that.
But in order to have a chance of winning back control in subsequent election cycles, Democrats need an impressive year.
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Republicans hold 247 seats compared to 188 Democratic seats. Democrats need a net gain of 29 seats to win back the majority but their sights are on picking up a substantial number in a general election where the political winds are far more favorable.
The most obvious opportunities for Democrats to win are in the districts currently represented by a Republican that President Obama won in his 2012 re-election bid. That number is 25.
The next logical place for possible Democratic pick up is in seats that are evenly split among Republicans and Democrats or lean slightly more Republican. Democrats are often more confident in presidential election cycles because Democratic voters are more likely to vote in presidential years.








