At the time of his presidential inauguration, Donald Trump benefited from a Republican majority in the Senate, where there were 52 GOP members. When the next Congress gets underway, there will be another Republican majority in the upper chamber, this time with 53 GOP members.
Evidently, the president thinks that’s “epic.”
“People are not being told that the Republican Party is on track to pick up two seats in the U.S. Senate, and [sic] epic victory: 53 to 47,” Trump wrote on Twitter. “The Fake News Media only wants to speak of the House, were [sic] the Midterm results were better than other sitting Presidents.”
I suppose “epic” is a subjective term, but as a rule, two isn’t a large number. Senate Republicans enjoyed a map so heavily tilted in their favor that some thought the GOP might be able to reach a 60-seat majority in this cycle. A month before Election Day, the National Republican Senatorial Committee expected to end up with as many as 55 seats. The party obviously fell short of both thresholds.
In fact, the standard for success keeps falling. Last week, Trump said Republicans had won 55 seats. Earlier this week, it was 54. Now, it’s 53.
A cynic might wonder if the president is simply pretending to be impressed with a two-seat pickup because Democrats fared so well in every other area of the election cycle.
But in terms of the public-relations offensive, Trump seems quite serious. In his interview with The Daily Caller argued:
“So we picked up three or four Senate seats depending on how it all goes — it’s a big pickup. In fact, they say in 80 years I think the presidential party’s only picked up two Senate seats, I picked up three.”
He actually picked up two, and the White House’s party has now added Senate seats in midterm cycles three times in the last 56 years.









