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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsRepublicans In Congress Have Been Very Loyal To Trump. Will It Last?
Its the first day of business for the newly sworn-in 116th Congress, and House Democrats have already held several votes on a bill to fund the government and a package of rule changes to House procedures. Both passed, but not without some intraparty tension. As the freshly minted majority party in the House, Democrats must wrestle with the question of how they will vote in this era of divided government. Will they vote together against President Trumps agenda, or will tensions arise between the more progressive and centrist factions of the party, splintering the Democrats newfound power?
Time will tell. But with the 115th Congress now in the books, lets take a step back and look to it for clues. Last session, House Republicans, then in the majority, were largely aligned with Trump very few broke ranks.
Over the first two years of Trumps presidency, the average GOP member overwhelmingly sided with Trump 93 percent of the time in the House and 91 percent of the time in the Senate, according to FiveThirtyEights Trump score metric, which tracks how often each member of Congress votes with the president. Trumps position isnt clear on every vote, so this analysis covers only 96 votes in the House and 84 in the Senate. This is only a small subset of the more than 1,800 votes cast in Congress during the 115th session.
Democrats largely voted against the presidents positions, but they werent quite as unified against Trump as Republicans were for him: In the House, the average Democratic member agreed with Trump 23 percent of the time; in the Senate, 31 percent of the time.
The voting behavior we saw in the 115th is pretty much what wed expect. Because Republicans controlled both the executive and legislative branches, they were more likely to vote in unison on issues and avoid bringing votes to the floor that would be divisive or unsuccessful although that certainly wasnt always the case. Times when Republicans broke ranks and voted against the president like a few did in July 2017 on legislation that would have repealed parts of the Affordable Care Act drew attention, but votes like those werent the norm. The three GOP senators who sank the health insurance bill Susan Collins of Maine, the late John McCain of Arizona and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska all had Trump scores of 75 percent by the end of the 115th Congress.
Now that Democrats control the House and which bills come to the floor wed expect to see more party cohesion.2 Theres also the possibility, now that government is divided and House Republicans are no longer responsible for passing bills, that more GOP members will step out of sync with the president.
But Trumps approval rating might have to take a nose dive before Republicans defect. While its unclear how voting patterns will shift in the new Congress, what is particularly striking is just how effective Trump has been in securing party loyalty in the first two years of his presidency. As you can see in the chart below, Senate Democrats didnt coalesce as neatly around Obama during his first two years in office as Senate Republicans did around Trump.
https://fivethirtyeight.com/features/republicans-in-congress-have-been-very-loyal-to-trump-will-it-last/
emulatorloo
(44,063 posts)Jarqui
(10,122 posts)erlewyne
(1,115 posts)It has nothing to do with a wall. Trump is in deep doo-doo.
The G.O.P. has a track record and Trump's doo-doo is a tip
of the iceberg, Just ask Lindsey.
C_U_L8R
(44,987 posts)I wouldn't bet on Republicans suddenly and miraculously becoming smart. At all.