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Republicans likely to keep control of US House

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WASHINGTON (MCT) — Democrats need to gain 25 seats this year to regain control of the House of Representatives from the Republicans. The prospects are dim.

Even a strong showing by President Barack Obama would be unlikely to swing the House to the Democrats and return the majority they lost two years ago. Redistricting, in effect in most places for the first time since the 2010 census, is helping Republicans. So are problems faced by Democratic moderates in conservative and Southern states.

Then there’s history. The last time a previously elected president seeking re-election saw his party pick up more than 25 seats was in 1892, according to research from the Rothenberg Political Report — and that president, Benjamin Harrison, lost.

“It’s possible, but not likely” Democrats will get a majority, said Nathan Gonzales, a political analyst at nonpartisan Rothenberg.

Republicans now control 240 House seats. The Democrats hold 190. Five seats are vacant. Rothenberg projects anywhere from a nine-seat Democratic gain next month to a one-seat Republican pickup. The nonpartisan Cook Political Report projects Democrats could pick up as many as eight, or Republicans could score a net gain of two.

The bigger intrigue could involve whether the Republican caucus becomes less ideologically rigid. The party gained control of the House in 2010 and elected 87 freshmen, including many backed by the grassroots conservative tea party movement.

They read the election, which came soon after the Democratic-led Congress approved Obama’s health care overhaul, as a mandate for conservative change. Republicans suddenly had more seats than at any time in 62 years, and they were resolute to cut spending, block any tax increase and resist increases in the nation’s debt ceiling.

They held out to a striking degree, nearly sending the government into default last summer, but were usually thwarted by Obama and a Democratic-run Senate.

Still, less than one-fourth of the 87 Republican freshmen joined the House Tea Party Caucus, a sign that they were ready to be less doctrinaire. “That says these other freshmen want to stick around awhile,” said Davis Wasserman, analyst for the Cook report. And since 2010, the tea party movement, never a centralized political force, has fractured, making many House races more dependent on local issues — and how the federal government can help a local problem — as well as personalities.

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