U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson, a Louisiana Republican, answers reporters’ questions inside the Capitol building on Tuesday, Nov. 12, 2024. (Photo by Jennifer Shutt/States Newsroom)
WASHINGTON — U.S. House Republican leaders said Tuesday voters have given them a “mandate” to enact as much conservative policy as possible once they gain unified control of the federal government in January, but declined to provide details about exactly what policies they’d seek to enact.
“The American people want us to implement and deliver that America first agenda,” said Speaker Mike Johnson. “And we have to do that while we have that energy and that excitement, beginning on the very first day of the Congress in the new year.”
The Louisiana Republican said the election results showed that Americans want lawmakers to focus their attention on “secure borders” and preventing “terrorists and criminals from entering the country.”
“They want and deserve low costs for groceries and gasoline,” Johnson said. “They want us to project strength on the world stage again and not the weakness that we have projected for the last four years. They want an end to the wokeness and the radical gender ideology and a return to common sense in our children’s classrooms and corporate boardrooms and government agencies. We’re going to ensure all that’s true.”
Not at 218 quite yet
The Associated Press, the news organization that States Newsroom relies upon for race calls based on decades of experience, hadn’t called the House for Republicans as of Tuesday, but was expected to in the coming days.
GOP politicians have won 214 seats so far, just short of the 218 minimum needed to hold the majority, though they’ll need a few more seats for safe margins after President-elect Donald Trump nominated a few of their colleagues to posts in his next administration.
Democrats are projected to hold at least 205 seats in the House, with 16 races yet to be called by the AP. That will give Republicans a slim majority when the next Congress begins in January and not much room to lose votes from either centrist or far-right members.
GOP lawmakers will hold 53 seats in the U.S. Senate next year after flipping seats previously held by Democrats in Montana, Ohio, Pennsylvania and West Virginia, according to the AP.
Johnson said during the press conference on the steps of the Capitol building that he expected the GOP will hold a larger majority during the next Congress than the 220 seats it currently has.
But he cautioned that every Republican vote will matter since the party isn’t likely to have a large majority.
“Every single vote will count because if someone gets ill or has a car accident or a late flight on their plane, then it affects the votes on the floor,” Johnson said.
Republicans in Congress, he said, are coordinating closely with Trump, who is expected to meet with lawmakers on Wednesday at the Capitol before Johnson heads to Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida this weekend to hash out details of a legislative agenda with him.
“President Trump is going to meet with President Biden at the White House. And so it was suggested … that he wanted to come and visit with House Republicans,” Johnson said. “So we’re working out the details of him gathering with us, potentially tomorrow morning, before he goes to the White House. And that would be a great meeting and a moment for all of us. There’s a lot of excitement, a lot of energy here.”
Details on reforms to come
Holding unified control of government will allow Republicans to use the complicated budget reconciliation process to pass legislation without needing the bipartisan support that’s typically required to get past the Senate’s 60-vote legislative filibuster.
Johnson said the party is looking to employ that process for any policy areas that comply with the instructions, which allow lawmakers to make changes to revenue, spending, or the debt that are not “merely incidental” as part of the $6 trillion federal budget.
“We have lots of very specific plans to kind of do that, and the details of that will come together in the coming week,” he said.
Johnson said he didn’t want to “get into any details about any specifics with regards to reforms,” after being asked if Republicans would get rid of the Department of Education, one of Trump’s campaign promises.
“There’s lots of ideas on the table, but we got to work together, build consensus, work in coordination with the Trump administration on the order of the reforms and how we do it,” Johnson said. “So I’m not getting ready to give you details on that. But you can stay tuned.”