Control of the US House is up for grabs – and may hinge on two blue states

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California and New York are reliably Democratic – so no suspense there for Tuesday’s election, right?

Wrong. These two states may well determine control of the U.S. House of Representatives, where Republicans currently hold a whisker-thin majority. If Democrats can flip just four seats, they will retake control. And California and New York have more swing districts than anywhere else – including many GOP-held seats in districts Joe Biden won in 2020. Between them, they may well determine whether the House acts as a brake or gas pedal for the next president.

Why We Wrote This

With partisan gerrymandering reducing the number of competitive House districts across the U.S., some analysts see just 15 pure toss-ups, five of which are in New York and California. The top of the ticket will likely have a big impact.

In this era of tight margins, it’s not a given that Democrats will get what they need in these blue bastions. And even if they do, the gains could be canceled out in states where Republicans are trying to flip seats, such as Pennsylvania, Michigan, Alaska, and Maine. 

“The fight for the House is as close as the fight for the presidency, and I don’t think either party has a clear advantage in either one of those races,” says Nathan Gonzales, editor and publisher of the nonpartisan Inside Elections.

California and New York are reliably Democratic – so no suspense there for Tuesday’s election, right?

Wrong. These two states may well determine control of the U.S. House of Representatives, where Republicans currently hold a whisker-thin majority. If Democrats can flip just four seats, they will retake control. And California and New York have more swing districts than anywhere else – including many GOP-held seats in districts Joe Biden won in 2020. Between them, they may well determine whether the House acts as a brake or gas pedal for the next president.

In this era of tight margins, it’s not a given that Democrats will get what they need in these blue bastions. And even if they do, the gains could be canceled out in other states where Republicans are trying to flip seats, such as Pennsylvania, Michigan, Alaska, and Maine.

Why We Wrote This

With partisan gerrymandering reducing the number of competitive House districts across the U.S., some analysts see just 15 pure toss-ups, five of which are in New York and California. The top of the ticket will likely have a big impact.

“The fight for the House is as close as the fight for the presidency, and I don’t think either party has a clear advantage in either one of those races,” says Nathan Gonzales, editor and publisher of the nonpartisan Inside Elections.

With partisan gerrymandering greatly reducing the number of competitive districts across the United States, Mr. Gonzales’ nationwide rankings list just 15 pure toss-ups, five of which are in New York and California. Four more seats in those states are rated as competitive, but slightly favoring either Democrats or Republicans.

The coattail effect

House races are notoriously hard to poll. And in an era of nationalized politics, the top of the ticket in a presidential year can have a huge impact. Democrats feel they got a reprieve when President Biden dropped out of the race last summer and Vice President Kamala Harris became the nominee. They’re hoping she’ll draw more voters to the polls, and that those voters will pick Democrats all the way down the ballot.

Francine Kiefer/The Christian Science Monitor

Volunteer Mark Richardson poses in front of a house where he has just talked with a voter as he knocks on doors for Democratic congressional candidate George Whitesides in Santa Clarita, California, Oct. 27, 2024.

California is Ms. Harris’ home state, and she has support from 59% of voters there. That strength could be the difference in competitive districts like CA-13 in the agricultural Central Valley, where Republican Rep. John Duarte beat his Democrat opponent by a mere 564 votes in 2022. Similarly, Republican Rep. Mike Garcia eked out a win in CA-27, in northern Los Angeles County, by 333 votes in 2020.

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