
President Donald Trump on Thursday threw Congress for a loop — and potentially a lifeline — to Speaker Mike Johnson when he announced he would pull New York Rep. Elise Stefanik’s nomination to serve as ambassador to the United Nations.
The move came so abruptly that The Independent informed Democratic Sen. Chris Murphy of Connecticut, who sits on the Senate Foreign Affairs Committee, about the sudden change of plans.
The switch was also somewhat poetic, given that Stefanik made a dramatic shift from being a moderate New York Republican who in 2014 became the youngest woman elected to Congress, to becoming a pro-Trump Republican who vigorously defended him during his first impeachment in the House.
Stefanik would later say on Fox News that she was “proud to be a team player, the president knows that.”
Trump specifically thanked Stefanik, but noted: “I don’t want to take a chance on anyone else running for Elise’s seat.”
For someone as self-confident as Trump, who has regularly said that his return to the White House ushered in a new “Golden Age of America,” it was a surprising admission, especially given the fact that Stefanik overwhelmingly won re-election in her seat in 2024.
But the GOP got a big shock earlier this week when a Democrat won a special election for a state senate seat in a Pennsylvania district that voted for Trump by 15 points.
And next week, Florida will hold two special elections: One in Florida’s 1st congressional district to replace Matt Gaetz, who resigned to become attorney general before his nomination flamed out; and another in Florida’s 6th congressional district to replace National Security Adviser Michael Waltz.
Republicans face no real danger of losing the race in the first district, given how bright red it is. But polling has shown a tighter race between Republican Randy Fine and Democrat Josh Weil in the 6th district. For context, Ron Waltz won the seat when Ron DeSantis, the state’s arch-conservative governor, resigned to run for higher office.
As of right now, the GOP only has 218 seats, the exact magic number to have a majority in the body of 435, while Democrats have 213 seats due to the death of two members of their caucus.
This comes as Republicans begin the hard work of trying to pass Trump’s big domestic agenda spending bill, which would include extending the 2017 tax cuts he signed, ramping up spending at the border with Mexico, increasing military spending and drilling more for oil.
Republicans on Capitol Hill plan to accomplish this through a process called budget reconciliation, which allows them to avoid a filibuster from the Democrats and pass the bill with only 51 votes in the Senate.
But with such disparate parts within the GOP, both between the House and the Senate as well as internal disputes among Republicans in both chambers, they need almost complete uniformity.
Trump proved to be an effective whip this month when he got Republicans almost unanimously behind the stopgap spending bill that jammed the Democrats in the Senate and forced Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer to accept steep cuts.