We the People — Still Showing Up

The Midterms: 2026 Blue Wave Tracker

Since January 2025, voters have delivered a message in every special election they could. Democrats 9, Republicans 0. Here's the scoreboard.

00
Seats Flipped
Dem vs. GOP
+0
Avg. Dem Swing
vs. 2024 Results
D+0
Generic Ballot
Fox News Poll
0%
Trump Approval
Pew Research
You're seeing the full analysis. Switch to "At a Glance" for a quick overview.

Something unprecedented is happening in American elections. Since Donald Trump took office in January 2025, Democrats have won every competitive special election held in the United States — flipping 9 seats while Republicans have flipped zero. The average Democratic swing is +13 points compared to 2024 presidential margins, outperforming even the 2017 resistance wave that preceded the 2018 blue wave. With the 2026 midterm elections approaching, the generic congressional ballot, battleground Senate polling in Texas, Georgia, and South Carolina, and Trump's historically low approval ratings all point in the same direction. This tracker follows every data point in real time.

The Scoreboard

Every special election since Trump took office in January 2025

Democrats
9
Seats flipped from red to blue
vs.
Republicans
0
Seats flipped from blue to red

In 60 special elections across 2025, Democrats outperformed their 2024 results in 50 of 60 races.

The Flips

Georgia
HD-121
D+1.7 swing
Eric Gisler won by 200 votes in northeast Georgia.
Trump won district by 10+ pts in 2024
Iowa
SD-1
Flipped
Broke Republican supermajority in Iowa Senate.
Deep red territory
Iowa
SD-35
Flipped
Second Iowa Senate flip, cementing broken supermajority.
Solidly Republican district
Pennsylvania
SD-36
Flipped
Deeply Republican region of PA flipped to Democratic control.
Trump won handily in 2024
Mississippi
3 Senate seats
Flipped (redistricting)
Court-ordered special elections broke GOP supermajority in MS Senate.
Deep South — historic flip
Texas
HD-18 (runoff)
D vs. D runoff
Two Democrats advanced to runoff — no Republican made the cut.
Historically Republican district

The Bigger Picture: 2025 Elections

Beyond special elections, Democrats swept the 2025 cycle. They secured their largest Virginia House majority since the 1980s, expanded control of the New Jersey Assembly, and flipped 21% of all GOP-held seats that were on the ballot — outperforming even the 2017 cycle that preceded the 2018 blue wave. Republicans did not flip a single Democratic-held seat anywhere in the country.

Sources

NBC News (Feb 2026) · Bolts Magazine (Dec 2025) · Ballotpedia Special Election Tracker · Democratic Legislative Campaign Committee

The Turnout Gap

Democrats are showing up. Republicans aren't.

In special elections, Democrats retained 10 percentage points more of their 2024 voter turnout than Republicans. The median swing across all special elections: D+11 — the largest for either party in the Trump era.

Average Swing from 2024 Presidential Results

Iowa SD-1
D+18
Georgia HD-121
D+14
Pennsylvania SD-36
D+13
Mississippi (avg)
D+11
Virginia (avg)
D+10
NJ Assembly (avg)
D+9
"The Democratic coalition is increasingly made up of high-engagement, high-propensity voters, while Republicans have become the coalition of the less engaged — strongest in presidential years, weakest in off-cycles." — Ballotpedia, Feb 2026

2017 vs. 2025: The Déjà Vu

In 2017, Democrats flipped 20% of GOP-held seats up for election. That foreshadowed the 2018 blue wave that flipped 40 House seats and gave Democrats the majority. In 2025, Democrats flipped 21% of GOP-held seats — outperforming the 2017 pace. The median swing of D+11 exceeds even 2018's D+9. Every historical indicator suggests a wave is building.

Sources

Ballotpedia Special Election Analysis (Feb 2026) · Brookings Institution (Dec 2025) · Bolts Magazine (Dec 2025)

The Battleground Map

Key 2026 Senate races — and why red states are suddenly competitive

🤠 Texas
Senate — Open Runoff
James Talarico D
47%
Ken Paxton R
45%
Talarico leads Paxton by 2 and Cornyn by 1. Cornyn forced into runoff after getting just 42% in the Mar 4 primary — a humiliation for a former majority whip. GOP primary runoff May 26 — a bruising intra-party fight before the general.
PPP, March 2026
🍑 Georgia
Senate — Ossoff (D) Incumbent
Jon Ossoff D
48%
Mike Collins R
43%
Ossoff leads all GOP challengers by 3–8 points. Kemp declined to run, weakening the Republican bench. Leads independents by +16.
Emerson College, March 2026
🌴 South Carolina
Senate — Graham (R) Incumbent
Annie Andrews D
36%
Lindsey Graham R
42%
Graham leads by only 6 in a state Trump won by 18. Against a generic Democrat: Graham leads just 41–39. His approval: 34%.
PPP / Winthrop University, 2026
📊 Generic Ballot
National — House of Representatives
Democrats D
52%
Republicans R
46%
D+6 — the highest Democratic support recorded in Fox News generic ballot polling. Morning Consult tracker: D+3.
Fox News, Jan 2026 / Morning Consult, Feb 2026

Sources

Emerson College Polling · Public Policy Polling · Fox News Polling · Morning Consult · Winthrop University · RealClearPolitics

The GOP Exodus

A record number of House Republicans are abandoning their seats before voters can fire them

35
House Republicans will not seek re-election in 2026 — the most GOP retirements in any cycle this century, surpassing even the 2018 pre-blue-wave exodus. Rep. Darrell Issa (R-CA) became the 35th on March 10, 2026. In total, 55 House members (35 Republicans, 21 Democrats) are leaving — but the Republican departures are historically lopsided.

This follows a pattern: the president's party hemorrhages incumbents before midterms they expect to lose. Of the 35 departing Republicans, 15 are retiring from public office entirely, 8 are running for Senate, and 10 are running for governor — fleeing the House for higher ground before the wave hits.

Notable Departures

Tony Gonzales (TX-23)
Texas
Retired after House Ethics Committee announced investigation into sexual harassment allegations involving a former staffer.
Darrell Issa (CA-48)
California
35th Republican to announce, prompted by California redistricting that made his district unwinnable.
Burgess Owens (UT-4)
Utah
Withdrew amid ongoing redistricting battle in Utah.
Andy Biggs (AZ-5)
Arizona
Leaving to run for governor — one of 10 Republicans seeking executive office instead of defending their House seat.
Elise Stefanik (NY-21)
New York
Former GOP Conference Chair departing Congress.
Ryan Zinke (MT-1)
Montana
Former Interior Secretary retiring from Congress.
Dan Crenshaw (TX-2) — LOST PRIMARY
Texas
First congressman unseated in 2026. Lost to MAGA-aligned Steve Toth by 15 points (55.8% to 40.6%) after being the only Texas GOP incumbent without Trump's endorsement. Crenshaw had mocked the Freedom Caucus and distanced himself from election denialism — "he wasn't MAGA" enough.

Historical Comparison

2026
35
GOP House retirements
2018
34
GOP retirements (blue wave)
2024
23
GOP retirements (normal)

Why this matters

Open seats are far easier to flip than incumbents. Every Republican retirement creates a pick-up opportunity for Democrats. In 2018, the last time GOP retirements hit these levels, Democrats gained 40 House seats and flipped the majority. The combination of record retirements, a D+6 generic ballot, 37% presidential approval, an unpopular war (56% oppose), and gas surging 17.4% is the strongest set of wave indicators since Watergate. Dan Crenshaw's primary loss shows even incumbents who aren't MAGA enough are being purged — weakening the GOP bench further.

Sources

Ballotpedia · Newsweek · NBC News · The Hill · Rolling Stone · NPR · Vote Save America

The Approval Drag

Trump's approval ratings are pulling every Republican candidate down with him

37%
Trump Job Approval — Pew Research, Jan 2026
Down from 40% in fall 2025. Disapproval at 57%.
37%
Trump Job Approval — Quinnipiac, Mar 6–8, 2026
57% disapprove. Net approval: −20. Lowest of the second term.
−13
Net Approval — Polling Average
Aggregate net approval. Second-term low was −15 in mid-February.
36%
Iran War Approval — NPR/PBS/Marist, Mar 11, 2026
56% oppose the war. Only 36% approve of Trump's handling. 55% see Iran as only a minor threat or no threat at all. 61% disapprove of his economic management. The war is dragging the party down heading into midterms.

Key demographic break: Independents disapprove by a wide margin — CNN found Trump hit a new low with independents ahead of the State of the Union. Women disapprove at higher rates than men, and voters under 50 disapprove by double digits in most surveys. The Iran war has introduced a new dimension: gas prices up 17.4% since inauguration ($3.79/gal nationally) are making affordability the dominant issue, and 60% disapprove of military action in Iran (CNN, Mar 2).

Sources

Pew Research Center (Jan 2026) · Quinnipiac University (Mar 2026) · Emerson College (Feb 2026) · CNN (Mar 2026) · NPR/PBS/Marist (Mar 2026) · Nate Silver / Silver Bulletin

The Historical Precedent

The last time the numbers looked like this, Democrats flipped 40 House seats

2017 (pre-wave)
D+9
Median special election swing
2025 (now)
D+11
Median special election swing

In 2017, Democratic overperformances in Virginia, New Jersey, and special elections foreshadowed the 2018 "blue wave" — a net gain of 40 House seats that returned the majority to Democrats. The current environment is running ahead of that pace:

Metric
2017 2025
% of GOP seats flipped
20% 21%
Median swing
D+9 D+11
GOP seats flipped to Dem
~15 25
Dem seats flipped to GOP
~3 0

The Caveat

The path to replicating 2018 faces headwinds. Redistricting has made the House map narrower — fewer truly competitive districts exist. Polarization means fewer voters cross party lines. And the Senate map requires Democrats to defend seats in purple territory while flipping red states. The environment is strong, but the map is harder. That said, Texas, Georgia, and South Carolina weren't supposed to be competitive at all.

Sources

PBS News (2025) · Bolts Magazine (Dec 2025) · CNN House Roundup (Feb 2026) · Slate (Jan 2026) · Washington Post (May 2025)

Think this matters? Share the midterm scoreboard.

Share Now
Continue exploring
🦅 Back to Home