Friday, November 15, 2024

The House may soon belong to the GOP. Here’s what party leaders say they’ll do first.

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The House of Representatives is highly likely to be under GOP rule next year and cement Republicans’ unified control of power across Washington.

The party currently needs just 4 seats to maintain its lower chamber majority, and current vote totals show Republicans ahead in 8 of the 18 still undecided contests, according to the latest Associated Press tabulations.

With the drama slowly fading away, party leaders have turned to openly planning their agenda in recent days in expectation of what some observers have termed a GOP trifecta — alongside already established party control of the Senate and White House — or, more bluntly, a “full Trump” scenario.

“The American people have spoken and given us a mandate,” House Speaker Mike Johnson recently posted. “We will be prepared to deliver on day one.”

But it will also be an exceedingly narrow House majority when the final tallies are in, likely less than five seats in the 435-seat chamber even as leaders lay out plans to push through an aggressive second Trump economic agenda quickly.

Speaker of the House Mike Johnson applauds on stage as Donald Trump held an election night event in West Palm Beach, Fla. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images) · Chip Somodevilla via Getty Images

And the stakes are high.

“Next year is really an inflection point on fiscal policy,” Bipartisan Policy Center executive director of economic policy Shai Akabas said in a recent Yahoo Finance appearance.

It could be an opportunity to begin to correct the US government’s fiscal imbalance, Akabas added, “but there’s also a chance that things go south and we keep digging the hole deeper.”

House Speaker Johnson is seen as the frontrunner to keep his position atop the House GOP caucus after President-elect Trump said Johnson is doing a “terrific job” when he spoke last week as the votes were coming in.

“We will operate from our well-designed playbook, and execute those plays with precision,” Johnson himself wrote to his colleagues this week.

Here is a closer look at what Johnson and his colleagues hope to accomplish in the months ahead:

“Our Republican conference has spent the last two years preparing for this moment,” House Majority Leader Steve Scalise wrote in his own post-election letter to colleagues.

And indeed they have, with House leadership and members meeting as early as last summer to begin organizing a massive tax bill — and making a plan to get it over the finish line in perhaps the first 100 days of Trump’s second term.

It will still be a heavy lift to move that quickly.

There are unresolved debates within the GOP on how to approach key provisions, not to mention a complex and arcane reconciliation process. It is a process filled with procedural traps that Democrats could exploit but is needed to allow the Senate to pass the bill without Democratic votes.

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