Republicans on verge of flipping 14 U.S. House seats

While Republicans had a great election night in U.S. House races across the country, surprisingly their most successful state was the one Harris represents.

Capitol Hill (Elliot P/Flickr)

Joe Biden’s decision to tap Kamala Harris as his running mate did not help Democrats down-ballot in California three weeks ago. We already know Harris is unpopular, even within her own party, as evidenced by her epic 2019 primary failure. We now know she lacks coattails.

While Republicans had a great election night in U.S. House races across the country, surprisingly their most successful state was the one Harris represents.

Republicans flipped more House seats (three) in the Golden State than anywhere else, with victories by Young Kim, Michelle Steel and David Valadao. It also looks likely that Republican Mike Garcia will hold on to the Los Angeles-area district he took in a special election earlier this year. Make it four triumphs.

Additionally, the GOP won two Democrat seats in Florida, and possibly two more in Iowa, once the razor thin Second District race is called. And for good measure, all Republican winners, including Michelle Fishbach in Minnesota, are women or minorities.

Biden’s puppet masters told him to pick the junior senator, even though they had better options. If Biden steps aside, as many feel is likely, a potential Harris presidency could be worse down ticket for the party than Barack Obama, who left office with Democrats in the worst shape since 1928.

Recall, in her first race to serve as California attorney general, Harris sneaked by the Republican district attorney of Los Angeles County by less than one percentage point. The Democrat atop the ticket that year was elected governor by 13 points.

 

A.J. Kaufman

A.J. Kaufman is an Alpha News columnist. His work has appeared in the Baltimore Sun, Florida Sun-Sentinel, Indianapolis Star, Israel National News, Orange County Register, St. Cloud Times, Star-Tribune, and across AIM Media Midwest and the Internet. Kaufman previously worked as a school teacher and military historian.