On Tuesday, the last act of the 2022 midterms will play out as Georgia voters decide between Democrat Raphael Warnock and Republican Herschel Walker. No matter the result, it will bring to an end an election cycle that saw close to $17 billion in campaign expenditures and apocalyptic warnings of democracy on death’s door. Yet with the smoke all but cleared, the end result is a country as hopelessly divided as it was before Election Day.
It’s true, of course, that control of the House of Representatives will have shifted from Democrats to Republicans, but the GOP’s gain will be around 10 seats. Indeed, the main takeaway from the midterm results was frustration for Republicans and a sigh of relief from Democrats that the results didn’t turn out worse.
It’s easy to say that America has never been this divided but less noted is that we’ve never been so narrowly divided.
In the Senate, the top five midterm races (Pennsylvania, Georgia, Arizona, Wisconsin and Ohio) saw an estimated $1.3 billion in campaign spending. If Warnock prevails in Georgia, only one of those five seats will have changed parties. In the governor’s races, Democrats picked up three states and lost another, creating a close-to-even 26-24 divide.
As Walter Shapiro points out in The New Republic, “Since the Civil War, there never have been back-to-back congressional elections in which the margins in both the House and the Senate were this tight.” It’s easy to say that America has never been this divided, but less noted is that we’ve never been so narrowly divided. Ironically, that precarious balance is breeding more division and worsening the gridlock.
Take, for example, what’s playing out in the halls of Congress right now — Republican House leader Kevin McCarthy’s desperate effort to get the 218 votes he needs to become speaker of the House. With a razor-thin majority, McCarthy needs every vote he can get, including from the party’s most extreme members. Already, a handful have publicly refused to support McCarthy.
That has put McCarthy in the unenviable position of having to negotiate with the extremists. He’s threatened to impeach Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas and vowed to throw Democratic Reps. Eric Swalwell, Ilhan Omar and Adam Schiff off their congressional committees to win over Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene. (He’s also pledged to restore Greene’s committee assignments.) McCarthy has also promised to lift all COVID restrictions in the House, end proxy voting and even remove the metal detectors installed off the House floor after Jan. 6. And while Senate Republicans were happy to criticize Trump’s recent meeting with a pair of antisemitic cretins, McCarthy refused to do so — no doubt in part because most of his members reside in districts where Trump remains popular.
Even if McCarthy is successful — and considering the lack of speaker alternatives, he probably will be — he will have overcome one obstacle only to find a larger minefield in front of him. The coddling of Republican extremists will not end with one vote. It will continue for as long as McCarthy is speaker. On practically every issue, he will have to navigate the same choppy waters. This will be bad for McCarthy, but it will be worse for the country because when McCarthy is held hostage by GOP extremists, that means the House is held hostage by GOP extremists, which means all of Congress will be held hostage, which in turn means … well, you get the idea. And even if Senate Democrats, with a possible one-seat majority, are able to find common ground it won’t matter much because little of the legislation they pass will go anywhere in the House.
After three straight national elections, each of which has been called the “most important of our lifetimes,” neither party has gained any significant advantage.
Of course, McCarthy could ignore the extremists and cut deals with Democrats, but see the point above about the country’s bitter political divisions. McCarthy will lose more than just the far right if he starts negotiating with the enemy. And with most congressional Republicans holding seats in solidly red districts, where rank-and-file GOP voters view Democrats as a notch above Satan, there isn’t much incentive for his caucus to go along with him.









