US Republicans complete power takeover with House majority
The Republicans were declared the majority party in the U.S. House of Representatives Wednesday (November 13, 2024), completing a clean sweep of Congress and the White House in last week’s elections and handing incoming President Donald Trump vast legislative power.
After more than a week of vote counting, CNN and NBC projected that Mr. Trump’s party had reached the 218 seats needed to retain their majority in the 435-seat lower chamber, having already seized the Senate from the Democrats.
“It is a beautiful morning in Washington. It is a new day in America,” said House Speaker Mike Johnson, who held a press conference to celebrate victory Tuesday (Nov. 12, 2024) before the result was official.
“The sun is shining, and that’s a reflection about how we all feel. This is a very, very important moment for the country and we do not take it lightly.”
Mr. Trump triumphed in every swing state in the November 5 presidential election and also looked to have won the national popular vote, with preliminary figures showing him ahead of Democratic Party challenger Kamala Harris by 3.2 million votes.
Having control of both chambers of Congress will clear the way for him to confirm his nominations for key administration positions and will also allow him to push through his radical agenda of mass deportations, tax cuts and slashing regulations.
“We need positions filled IMMEDIATELY!” Mr. Trump wrote on the X social media network on Sunday (November 10, 2024), referring to the need for the Republican-majority Senate to quickly approve his cabinet picks.
He is also seen by analysts as facing fewer judicial constraints than previous presidents, with his nominations to the Supreme Court during his first term, from 2017-2021, having given the high court a heavily conservative tilt.
The Republicans’ sweep of the presidency and Congress is not unusual, with Mr. Trump in his first term and Democratic predecessors Joe Biden and Barack Obama also benefiting from majorities at the start of their presidencies.
But the loss of the House extinguishes any remaining hope among Democrats that they might be able to stand in the way of Mr. Trump’s agenda for now.