Which party controls the house 2018




















Cathy McMorris Rodgers. Washington's 8th. Dave Reichert. Kim Schrier. Washington's 9th. Adam Smith. West Virginia's 3rd. Evan Jenkins. Carol Miller. Wisconsin's 1st. Paul Ryan. Bryan Steil.

Carolyn Bourdeaux. Utah's 4th Congressional District. New York's 27th Congressional District. Nate McMurray. Texas' 23rd Congressional District. Gina Ortiz Jones. Minnesota's 1st Congressional District. Dan Feehan. California's 21st Congressional District. Illinois' 13th Congressional District. Betsy Londrigan. Kansas' 2nd Congressional District. Paul Davis. Georgia's 6th Congressional District. Maine's 2nd Congressional District.

New Jersey's 3rd Congressional District. Andrew Kim. South Carolina's 1st Congressional District. Katie Arrington. Oklahoma's 5th Congressional District. Florida's 26th Congressional District. New York's 22nd Congressional District.

New Mexico's 2nd Congressional District. Yvette Herrell. Virginia's 7th Congressional District. Nebraska's 2nd Congressional District. Kara Eastman. Iowa's 3rd Congressional District. Virginia's 2nd Congressional District. Pennsylvania's 1st Congressional District. Scott Wallace. Texas' 21st Congressional District. Chip Roy. Joseph Kopser. Pennsylvania's 10th Congressional District. Scott Perry. George Scott. Texas' 31st Congressional District.

John Carter. Texas' 24th Congressional District. Kenny Marchant. Jan McDowell. California's 39th Congressional District. Young Kim. Kentucky's 6th Congressional District. Amy McGrath. Iowa's 4th Congressional District. Steve King. California's 50th Congressional District. Ammar Campa-Najjar. Michigan's 8th Congressional District. Michael Bishop. Missouri's 2nd Congressional District.

Ann Wagner. Cort VanOstran. New York's 1st Congressional District. Lee Zeldin. Perry Gershon. California's 45th Congressional District. Ohio's 12th Congressional District. Danny O'Connor. Minnesota's 7th Congressional District. Collin Peterson. Dave Hughes. Texas' 10th Congressional District.

Michael McCaul. Mike Siegel. Pennsylvania's 16th Congressional District. Mike Kelly. Ronald DiNicola. Ohio's 1st Congressional District. Aftab Pureval. California's 10th Congressional District. Michigan's 6th Congressional District. Fred Upton. Matt Longjohn. Montana at-large. Kathleen Williams. Washington's 8th Congressional District. Dino Rossi. Texas' 22nd Congressional District. Pete Olson. Sri Preston Kulkarni.

Illinois' 14th Congressional District. New Jersey's 7th Congressional District. Iowa's 1st Congressional District. Texas' 7th Congressional District. New York's 19th Congressional District. New York's 24th Congressional District. John Katko. Dana Balter. Washington's 3rd Congressional District. Carolyn Long. California's 22nd Congressional District. Andrew Janz. Minnesota's 2nd Congressional District.

Minnesota's 8th Congressional District. Joe Radinovich. North Carolina's 2nd Congressional District. Linda Coleman. Florida's 27th Congressional District. Maria Elvira Salazar. Florida's 15th Congressional District.

Kristen Carlson. North Carolina's 13th Congressional District. Kathy Manning. Illinois' 12th Congressional District. Brendan Kelly. New York's 2nd Congressional District. Peter King.

Liuba Grechen Shirley. Arkansas' 2nd Congressional District. Clarke Tucker. New York's 11th Congressional District. Daniel Donovan. Texas' 32nd Congressional District. Virginia's 5th Congressional District. Leslie Cockburn.

Alaska at-large. Alyse Galvin. Michigan's 11th Congressional District. Lena Epstein. California's 48th Congressional District. Illinois' 6th Congressional District. Texas' 2nd Congressional District. Daniel Crenshaw. Todd Litton. Michigan's 7th Congressional District. Tim Walberg. Gretchen Driskell.

Texas' 6th Congressional District. Ronald Wright. Jana Lynne Sanchez. New Jersey's 2nd Congressional District. Seth Grossman. Arizona's 1st Congressional District. Wendy Rogers. Colorado's 3rd Congressional District.

Scott Tipton. Diane Mitsch Bush. Nevada's 4th Congressional District. Cresent Hardy. California's 4th Congressional District. Tom McClintock. Jessica Morse. New York's 23rd Congressional District. Tom Reed. Tracy Mitrano. New Hampshire's 1st Congressional District. Eddie Edwards. Florida's 18th Congressional District. Lauren Baer. California's 25th Congressional District. Texas' 25th Congressional District.

Roger Williams. Julie Oliver. Nevada's 3rd Congressional District. Danny Tarkanian. Florida's 16th Congressional District. David Shapiro. Pennsylvania's 8th Congressional District. Matt Cartwright. John Chrin. Arizona's 2nd Congressional District. Lea Marquez Peterson. Washington's 5th Congressional District. Lisa Brown. Kansas' 3rd Congressional District. Indiana's 2nd Congressional District.

Jackie Walorski. Mel Hall. California's 1st Congressional District. Doug LaMalfa. Audrey Denney. Texas' 3rd Congressional District. Van Taylor. Lorie Burch. Pennsylvania's 7th Congressional District. Marty Nothstein. California's 7th Congressional District. Ami Bera. Andrew Grant. Arizona's 6th Congressional District. David Schweikert. Anita Malik. Virginia's 1st Congressional District.

Rob Wittman. Vangie Williams. Ohio's 14th Congressional District. David Joyce. Betsy Rader. North Carolina's 8th Congressional District. Richard Hudson. Frank McNeill. Arizona's 8th Congressional District. Debbie Lesko. Hiral Tipirneni. New York's 18th Congressional District. Sean Maloney. James O'Donnell. West Virginia's 2nd Congressional District. Alexander Mooney.

Talley Sergent. Wisconsin's 6th Congressional District. Glenn Grothman. Dan Kohl. Colorado's 6th Congressional District. Michigan's 3rd Congressional District. Justin Amash. Cathy Albro. Minnesota's 3rd Congressional District. Connecticut's 5th Congressional District. Jahana Hayes. Manny Santos.

Iowa's 2nd Congressional District. Dave Loebsack. Chris Peters. Wisconsin's 1st Congressional District.

Randy Bryce. New Jersey's 4th Congressional District. Chris Smith. Josh Welle. Michigan's 2nd Congressional District. Bill Huizenga. Rob Davidson. Virginia's 10th Congressional District. Pennsylvania's 17th Congressional District. Florida's 6th Congressional District.

Michael Waltz. Nancy Soderberg. Michigan's 1st Congressional District. Jack Bergman. Matthew Morgan. West Virginia's 3rd Congressional District. Richard Ojeda. California's 49th Congressional District.

Diane Harkey. North Carolina's 7th Congressional District. We'll notify you here with news about. Turn on desktop notifications for breaking stories about interest?

MORE: Election live updates and results. Comments 0. Districts 14A and 19A were vacant at the convening of the Legislature due to resignations. He finished his term with the 87th Legislature. Steve Gottwalt R, 15A resigned to take a job in the private sector before serving in District 14A in the 88th legislative session. His seat was not filled by a special election. She was sworn in on January 19, She was sworn in on February 22, Mark Olson 16B changed from Republican to independent Republican.

He was sworn in on August 16, Ron Abrams R, 43B resigned effective June 21, He was sworn in on January 19, There was no special election. Eric Lipman R, 56A resigned to become the state sex-offender policy coordinator. There was no special election for his House seat. He was sworn in on January 8, He was sworn in around March 3, She was sworn in on February 17, He was sworn in on February 10, District 40A was vacant at the convening of the Legislature due to a resignation.

He was sworn in on March 8, He was sworn in on November 15, He was sworn in on November 12, He was sworn in on February 5, He was sworn in on January 29, Districts 23A and 51B were vacant at the convening of the legislature. He was sworn in on January 20, He was named on December 19, and resigned effective on January 15, She was sworn in on November 13, His swearing in date is unknown.

He was sworn in on April 10, He was sworn in on March 13, Warren Limmer IR, 33B resigned effective February 13, in order to take the Senate District 33 seat he won in a special election on February 2, By the eve of voting, the leading analysts all expected a Democratic edge. The question was how large it would be. The president said he was on the ballot, and voters appear to have agreed, according to exit polls.

While Democrats wrestled with how to speak about him on the campaign trail and in ads, his influence is visible in the results. Democrats competed in districts that Trump won handily in , including in the Rust Belt and even in deep-red Texas. Preliminary data show that turnout was exceptionally high among minorities and youth voters compared with recent midterm elections.

In others, his policies, especially his attempts to dismantle the Affordable Care Act, proved a powerful issue for Democratic candidates. Democrats also enjoyed exceptionally strong fund-raising. The president also called Pelosi to congratulate her. While Republicans scored big victories in the Senate and in several hotly contested gubernatorial races, the Democratic House is likely to be a particular irritation to the president himself.

The Democratic victory ends a brief period of unified Republican control of government, including the White House, the House, the Senate, and effectively the Supreme Court. The House has been in Republican hands since the Tea Party wave. As The Washington Post notes , this is the third time control of the chamber has flipped in the past 12 years, a level of vacillation not seen since the immediate post—World War II period. Republicans hand over the gavel with a decidedly mixed record.

Federal spending continues to grow; entitlements have not been cut; Obamacare remains in place, though scaled back; and after aiming for a tax-code overhaul, they had to settle for temporary tax cuts.



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