2018 is shaping up to be a year of great uncertainty. What
will happen to Obamacare? Will tax reform become law? What of the myriad
investigations of Russian interference in the election? Along with these
questions, there is growing doubt about the Republican Party’s ability to hold
its congressional majorities in the 2018 elections.
Josh Kraushaar of National
Journal writes that many House Republicans are “increasingly alarmed” that Republican
congressmen in vulnerable seats are not doing the fundraising work that is
needed to defend themselves from Democrat challengers.
“Of the 53 House Republicans facing competitive races,
according to Cook Political Report ratings, a whopping 21 have been outraised
by at least one Democratic opponent in the just-completed fundraising quarter,”
Kraushaar writes. “That’s a stunningly high number this early in the cycle, one
that illustrates just how favorable the political environment is for House
Democrats.”
Among the Republicans Kraushaar mentions by name are Rodney
Frelinghuysen (R-N.J.), who only raised about a third as much as his leading
Democrat rival, John Culberson (R-Texas), Claudia Tenney (R-N.Y.) and Leonard
Lance (R-N.J.). These seats are all rated as “lean Republican” by the Cook Political
Report, but the incumbent Republicans are falling far behind Democrat
challengers in fundraising.
Rep. Dana Rohrabacher (R-Calif.), who has been criticized
for his support of Vladimir Putin and Russia, has only $600,000 in the bank
according to the report. His Orange County, California district is in an expensive
media market where much more advertising money will be needed. Rohrabacher’s
seat is currently rated as a tossup.
Adding to the Republican finance problems are primary
challenges from the right. Rohrabacher will be facing a Republican primary
challenger in addition to a Democrat in the general election. Former White
House strategist and sometimes Trump supporter Steve
Bannon is supporting primary challenges to many sitting Republicans.
Republicans currently hold a 46-seat majority in the House
of Representatives. If Democrats can win 23 seats, it would tip the balance of
power in the lower chamber. Per the Cook Political Report,
Republicans currently have 12 tossup seats in the House. This includes two open
seats in Washington and Michigan. An additional 23 seats lean Republican, but
this includes the four seats mentioned earlier where the Republican incumbent is
likely to be outspent by large margins.
In contrast, Cook only rates three Democrat seats as tossup.
These are all open due to retirements. Six seats lean Democrat and one of these
is Florida’s 27th congressional district where a Republican, Ileana
Ros-Lehtinen, is retiring.
In fact, Ros-Lehtinen is only one of 18 House Republicans
who have announced their plans to retire in 2018. Cook’s David
Wasserman notes that so far only four of these retirements are in
vulnerable districts, but, with a months to go before the primary season
starts, that could change.
In the Senate, things
are a bit more solid for Republicans. The only two tossup seats are Jeff Flake
(R-Ariz.) and Dean Heller (R-Nev.). Democrats have three seats rated as tossups
(Donnelly in Indiana, McCaskill in Missouri, and Manchin in West Virginia) so
they would have to run the table to bring the Senate to a tie. In that case,
Vice President Pence would cast the deciding vote on legislation, but
Republican bills would be even more vulnerable to defections by mavericks like
Rand Paul (R-Ky.), John McCain (R-Ariz.), Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) and Susan
Collins (R-Maine).
The reason for the Republican fundraising slump is likely
two-fold. Donald
Trump’s popularity is not good. This is especially true in swing districts
held by vulnerable Republicans. Some Republican incumbents may be tainted by
their association with the unpopular president.
Even among Republican voters, the current Congress is not
popular. The failure to pass any sort of Obamacare reform bill cemented the
perception of a do-nothing Congress. A CNN
poll last month showed that twice as many Republican voters support the
president as Republican congressional leaders.
As the congressional stalemate has become more apparent, Republican
donors have closed their wallets. The party is pinning its hopes for 2018 on
the success of tax reform since it has few other accomplishments to show for
its majority. A senior House Republican strategist said that he expects many
more Republicans to retire if tax reform fails.
It is far from certain that Democrats will take control of
the House in 2018, but current trends are not looking good for vulnerable
Republicans. If the Democrats win control of the House, it would fundamentally
change Donald Trump’s presidency as the Republican takeover of the House in
2010 did for Barack Obama. More ominously for President Trump, a Democratic
majority would open the door for a possible impeachment.
Originally published
on The Resurgent
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