In the days following Election Day 2024, it was clear that Republicans would control the White House and the U.S. Senate, but there was still some lingering ambiguity about the U.S. House. As of last week, those doubts were resolved, and it became clear that the GOP would control all of the levers of federal power.
For Republicans, that’s the good news. The bad news is that the party’s majority in the lower chamber is poised to be frustratingly small.
As things stand, the House GOP will have 219 seats in the new Congress — one more than is necessary for a majority — though there are still three races that have not yet been decided. As a result, we know that the Republican majority will be between one and four seats. (If I had to guess, I’d say that the GOP will eventually end up with 221 seats, but don’t hold me to that.)
At first blush, while Republican leaders are no doubt pleased to keep their majority, they have reason to be discouraged by the numbers: As of last week, the party had 221 seats in a chamber that has struggled to complete even the most basic legislative tasks. Indeed, thanks to its vanishingly small majority, the GOP hasn’t even been able to pass some of its own bills, which House Democrats were powerless to stop.
But let’s take a step further and note that while House Republicans have currently won 219 seats for the next Congress, that total includes:








