A handful of tight races within the Golden State might assist decide whether or not Democrats can preserve some floor amid sudden GOP victories.
LOS ANGELES—As Trump was projected to win the presidential election late Tuesday night time following a sequence of essential swing state wins, it was additionally clear that Republicans had retaken the Senate, the place they gained two seats for a majority of 51.
Beneath a second Trump administration, a GOP-led Senate would play an important position in shaping coverage and the judiciary.
“America has given us an unprecedented and highly effective mandate. We’ve got taken again management of the Senate—wow that’s good,” Mr. Trump informed his supporters in a speech from his house in Mar-a-Lago.
However in keeping with preliminary election outcomes as of early Wednesday morning, there was nonetheless no clear winner within the battle to regulate the Home, with greater than 100 races but to be referred to as.
Notably in California, the place the overwhelming majority of voters—greater than 80 %—use vote-by-mail ballots, outcomes can usually take days and even weeks for a ultimate depend.
That left a narrowing however nonetheless viable path for Democrats to carry floor in a dramatically shifting panorama.
The state’s Congressional delegation consists of 40 Democrat and 12 Republican representatives. Democrats must win a complete of 5 seats on this election with a view to wrest the bulk away from Republicans.
As of Nov. 1, Prepare dinner Political Report analysts had deemed the race for management of the U.S. Home “as shut because it’s ever been,” with neither celebration having a transparent benefit in a majority of seats.
Rep. John Duarte (R-Calif.) is amongst seven California GOP Home incumbents that Democrats focused in 2024. J. Scott Applewhite/AP Picture
California Heartland
The San Joaquin Valley—California’s closely Latino heartland and hyper-productive agricultural heart—was the battleground for 2 such races.
Within the thirteenth District, which covers a big swath of the Valley after redistricting moved it inland, incumbent John Duarte flipped the seat crimson for the primary time for the reason that Seventies in one of many closest races within the nation in 2022—with a margin of lower than 600 votes out of 133,600—making him probably the most susceptible Home Republicans in 2024.
Duarte was forward almost 10 % within the primaries, whereas Grey had a slight benefit within the district, the place 41 % of registered voters are Democrats, in comparison with about 30 % Republicans.
However by early Wednesday morning, the 2 candidates have been nonetheless neck-and-neck, with Duarte exhibiting a slight lead at 51.0 % with 49 % of votes counted, in keeping with The Related Press.
In 2022, the race between Republican incumbent David Valadao and Democrat Rudy Salas was determined by lower than 3,200 votes.
With a background in dairy and agriculture, Valadao campaigned as a “proud son of the Central Valley,” whereas Salas, who beforehand served 5 phrases within the state meeting, pointed to his personal beginnings laboring in agricultural fields together with his father earlier than attending UCLA.
Valadao held the seat on-and-off since 2012, shedding it in 2018 after which recapturing it in 2020. He was one in all few Republicans who voted to question Trump after the Jan. 6 riot on the Capitol.
However by Tuesday night time, with 46 % of votes counted, Valadao had pulled forward with 54.1 % of the vote.
In northern Los Angeles County, Republican incumbent Mike Garcia and his Democrat challenger George Whitesides remained in a lifeless warmth into Wednesday morning—each had almost 50 % of the vote, with about 57 % of ballots counted, in keeping with The AP.
Garcia first received a congressional seat in a 2020 particular election to interchange former Democratic Congresswoman Katie Hill, who resigned following an inappropriate conduct scandal. He managed to fend off challenges from Democrat Christy Smith, beating her in November 2020 by a 333-vote margin, and once more in 2022.
Throughout his marketing campaign in District 27, which incorporates the high-desert communities of Lancaster, Palmdale and Santa Clarita, Garcia, the son of Mexican immigrants and former Navy fighter pilot, painted Whitesides, a former chief of employees for NASA, as an “excessive liberal” who had solely lately moved to the world. Whitesides vowed to tackle crime and assist legislation enforcement, signaling a extra reasonable break together with his celebration’s progressive platform.

Rep. Michelle Metal (R-Calif.) throughout a information convention on the U.S. Capitol in Washington on Oct. 20, 2021. Chip Somodevilla/Getty Pictures
Different Races
On the Senate facet, longtime Democratic Rep. Adam Schiff handily fended off a fading problem from former Main League baseball participant Steve Garvey, a Republican, for the prime U.S. Senate seat lengthy held by the late Dianne Feinstein.
As of early Wednesday morning, Metal led Tran by greater than 5 share factors, with 65 % of ballots counted.
Metal is searching for her third time period within the district, which runs by Los Angeles and Orange Counties and is house to a big Asian American inhabitants—round 38 %—together with Little Saigon, the most important Vietnamese group exterior of Vietnam.
As election day neared, most polls had the candidates neck-and-neck, whereas high-wattage Democrats, together with Invoice Clinton and Adam Schiff, got here out in assist of Tran in an effort to pry the seat from Metal, who was endorsed by Trump in October and campaigned with Steve Garvey.
Each have shut ties with the Asian American immigrant group. Metal, who was first elected to Congress in 2020 after serving on the Orange County Board of Supervisors, got here to the U.S. from South Korea, whereas Tran, a veteran and private damage lawyer who has by no means held political workplace, mentioned his household fled communist Vietnam.
Tensions have flared because the candidates questioned one another’s health to signify the district’s massive Vietnamese inhabitants, and extra broadly, its highly effective Asian American voting bloc.
Each candidates assist Prop. 36, the statewide poll measure that may reintroduce harsher penalties for some crimes together with laborious drug possession and retail theft.
In Riverside County, east of Los Angeles, Republican incumbent Ken Calvert confronted a stiff problem from Democrat Will Rollins in a rematch of a 2022 battle that he received with lower than 5 % of the vote.
Within the primaries, Calvert led Rollins 53 to 38 %, whereas polling main as much as the election confirmed a tied race in District 41, which leans Republican however consists of staunchly blue enclaves like Palm Springs.
By early Wednesday morning with 63 % of ballots counted, the race remained tight as Rollins emerged with a slim lead of 51 % of the vote, a distinction of some thousand votes between them.
In one other Congressional race that was not thought of a toss-up and was anticipated to guide Democrat, Republican Scott Baugh is unexpectedly main the race in opposition to California state Sen. Dave Min with 50.6 % of the vote in California’s forty seventh Congressional District in Orange County, in keeping with preliminary outcomes.
Within the March 5 state main, Baugh received the highest spot with 32.1 % of the vote over Min’s 25.9 % within the 10-candidate race. Democrat Katie Porter presently represents the district, however she didn’t search reelection to the Home. As a substitute, she selected to run for the vacant Senate seat however misplaced within the main to Schiff.
Travis Gillmore contributed to this report.