If you listen to the pundits, you’d think that the @HouseGOP did very well during the 2020 elections.
That’s not quite true.
Here’s what actually happened.
That’s not quite true.
Here’s what actually happened.
The only state in the country where the GOP had a net gain in House seats since Trump took office in 2017 is Minnesota. The party gained one seat there in 2020.
In the following states, the GOP gained seats in 2020 - but - only gained the same number of seats that it lost in 2018:
Florida
(Lost 2 seats in 2018, gained 2 seats in 2020)
Iowa
(Lost 2 seats in 2018, gained 2 seats in 2020)
Florida
(Lost 2 seats in 2018, gained 2 seats in 2020)
Iowa
(Lost 2 seats in 2018, gained 2 seats in 2020)
New Mexico
(Lost 1 seat in 2018, gained 1 seat in 2020)
Oklahoma
(Lost 1 seat in 2018, gained 1 seat in 2020)
South Carolina
(Lost 1 seat in 2018, gained 1 seat in 2020)
(Lost 1 seat in 2018, gained 1 seat in 2020)
Oklahoma
(Lost 1 seat in 2018, gained 1 seat in 2020)
South Carolina
(Lost 1 seat in 2018, gained 1 seat in 2020)
In the following states, the GOP gained some seats in 2020 - but - not as many seats as the number of seats it lost in 2018, leaving a net loss of seats in the Trump era:
California
(Lost 7 seats in 2018, gained back 3 of them in 2020. GOP now holds 11 of CA’s 53 House seats)
California
(Lost 7 seats in 2018, gained back 3 of them in 2020. GOP now holds 11 of CA’s 53 House seats)
New York
(Lost 3 seats in 2018, gained back 1 of them in 2020. GOP now holds 7 of NY’s 27 House seats)
(Lost 3 seats in 2018, gained back 1 of them in 2020. GOP now holds 7 of NY’s 27 House seats)