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What About 2026?

Posted on Thursday, November 21, 2024
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by Barry Casselman
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17 Comments
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The 2024 election cycle has ended, but national politics have no real ending, and the next national campaign cycle is about to begin.

Of particular interest going forward is the 2026 midterm elections when the current narrow Republican majorities in the U.S. House and Senate will be challenged by the Democrats, who will be especially eager to take back control of at least one house of Congress so that they can block the ongoing Trump administration’s agenda.

Looking at the 2026 Senate races at this very early stage, only a general assessment of seats that might be vulnerable and those  likely to be safe is possible. Many incumbent senators are over 70 years old, some even in their 80s, so a number of retirements are probable — perhaps even more so in the current bitter political environment. Additional retirement incentives occur when majority party incumbents suddenly go into the minority and lose their committee chairmanships and other perks, as just happened.

The four incumbents who are more than 80 years old, and one who is 77, represent likely safe seats in 2026. Five incumbents who will be between 70 and 75 years old also hold likely safe seats. One Democrat (John Hickenlooper of Colorado) and one Republican (Susan Collins of Maine) in that age group are potentially vulnerable.

Of course, voluntary retirements or other departures of younger incumbents are always possible.

Looking at 2026 races in which the incumbent represents a state carried by the other party in 2024, Senator Gary Peters of Michigan and Senator Jon Ossoff of Georgia are potentially vulnerable in the midterms. Both are Democrats.

Although their party carried their respective home states in 2024, Senator Tina Smith of Minnesota and Senator Jeanne Shaheen of New Hampshire, both Democrats, and Senator Thom Tillis of North Carolina, a Republican, could face serious challengers two years from now.

I now list most senior incumbents as holding safe seats, but two of them, Virginia Senator Mark Warner, a Democrat; and Iowa Senator Joni Ernst, a Republican, could be in competitive races in 2026.

With a new administration taking office in a matter of weeks, there are important questions about what the state of the economy will be in two years’ time. First term administrations which falter in the first two years often come back in the next two years – for example, Ronald Reagan in 1983-84 and Bill Clinton in

1995-96 – but the first two years are often problematic and result in mid-term losses by the party in power.

President Trump, however, is a unique modern case in that his current upcoming term is actually his second term. He is only the second president, and the first in more than 100 years, to serve non-consecutive terms. An automatic so-called “lame duck,” he is motivated much more than usual to pass his agenda and keep his campaign promises as quickly as possible, and has a further incentive because his party controls, albeit narrowly, both houses of Congress.

If his promised tax cuts are made, and (importantly) he can also reduce government spending, he has an opportunity to avoid an economic downturn or recession in 2026, and thus also not lose control of Congress in his final two years.

With regard to the Senate midterms, an initial look at these upcoming races indicates that, despite the GOP numerical disadvantage of the seats up in 2026, very few now appear as vulnerable, and it seems that more Democrat seats could be competitive.

Every cycle also brings new political figures, either as challengers or as replacements for retiring incumbents.

The Trump administration, with the appointments announced so far, appears determined to make more dramatic changes than usual. The global environment appears to be more uncertain and volatile than usual. Unexpected circumstances might change any 2026 outlook, but as of now Senate conservatives seem to have some more wind at their backs than usual.

Barry Casselman is a a contributor for AMAC Newsline.

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Michael J
Michael J
2 hours ago

Term limits would make the midterms more interesting. The founding fathers probably had no idea that career lifetime politicians would be the demise of their masterpiece government.

Max
Max
3 hours ago

True representation for the people never ends. There is hope that Pres. Trump will be able to honor his commitments to the people with a true support of the Congress. Again, it will not be an easy road. The upcoming 2026 midterm elections will be once again a battlefield with good versus evil.

PaulE
PaulE
2 hours ago

The Trump team seems to fully understand that they have to get as much done as possible before the midterms, because the one constant in Congress is it loses its will and spine to act the closer the next election cycle is. There are already a couple of so-called Republicans in Congress making the usual “We may have to moderate some of Trump’s agenda to ensure continuity.” noises in recent TV interviews. Translation: That is political speak for “It’s great we have majorities in both houses of Congress, now we have to NOT rock the boat and return to business as usual. That of course is NOT acceptable to the majority of Americans that voted for Trump and the Republicans in general, so the American people have to make their voices heard loud and clear and often, that we didn’t vote for business as usual in Washington, D.C. Congress needs to be reminded of the fact each and every day.

Robert Zuccaro
Robert Zuccaro
2 hours ago

Success will be hard fought both by Trump and the “resistance” he faces. Biden is trying to escalate the Ukraine War to both eliminate Trumps ability at a negotiated peace and to provide a negative diatraction to his administration’s goals.

kathy w
kathy w
2 hours ago

SC voters: W must get our primaries closed before 2026. Dems keep voting for Lindsey Graham in the primary and he wins, giving us no other choice in the national election. Please contact your state reps and state senators. I’m told the RINOs keep blocking the closed primary legislation.

Joearcher
Joearcher
2 hours ago

AMAC, I wish an ADMIN would oversee and block the haters on OUR website. We conservatives have so little compared to the MSM and the Hollywierd elites that are the mouthpieces for the Dems. Mike Z and his hateful comments needs to go.

Felix
Felix
2 hours ago

Hopefully President DGT’s administration will successfully expose more RINOs, and wake up voters to a MAGA government, restoring common sense, and vote out all the woke far left Democrats.

Stephen Russell
Stephen Russell
2 hours ago

No 2022 reruns

anna hubert
anna hubert
2 hours ago

Put them all out and introduce term limit, no more lifers

Leslie
Leslie
2 hours ago

Term limits are critical to keep the new younger voting bloc!! They will be more likely to vote with economics in mind (and what democrat could ever win in that category) if they know in 6 or 12 years, that person will be out. Whichever Congress member puts forward a term limits bill ASAP will be forever a hero, so let it be a Republican!!

Thinking
Thinking
1 hour ago

Lets not think about 2026. The people are campaigned out. These elections in America should be narrowed to 3 months. Not 3 years. We should enjoy the next 4 years. And revel in the antics of the dems who are drowning and don’t seem to know why. It’s your policies people. Like Bidens latest loosening immigration laws. And let 1.4 million invaders loose in this country while their visa has expired. Sending long range missiles to the Ukraine and allowing them to be shot into Russia. Sending another 237 billion to the Ukraine . Just destroying the country and planning failure for Trump. The people won’t allow it. Look what the commissioners in PA county tried to do, count ineligible ballots, and how many people showed up and said no you don’t. The dems don’t accept the peoples choice for they don’t see the people but only elites and destroying America just to destroy Trump and his supporters. Only they miscalculated the people won’t stay quiet this time. Their continued obstinance will be their downfall in 2026.

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