For most of the 2026 cycle, Republicans have been all but certain they will hold the Senate after November.
The confidence was structural. Republicans hold a 53-47 majority in the chamber. They have a favorable map: To win 51 seats, Democrats would need to hold all their current seats, flip North Carolina and Maine — and still win another two states that Trump carried by at least 13 points in 2024. The geography was so forbidding to Democrats that analysts with the Cook Political Report last August called the party’s path to a majority “herculean.”
Now, just over six months out from Election Day, the herculean suddenly seems plausible.
“There’s a storm coming,” Matt Rexroad, a Republican consultant, told MS NOW. “This is the time to hold what you’ve got, get good candidates and just try to hold on to the seats we have.”
Some Republican strategists caution that the emerging red flags of a more competitive map will force the party to stretch its resources.
“There are warning signs in some races,” Evan Siegfried, a Republican strategist, told MS NOW. “The concerns right now are if we’re seeing an expanded map, that means we’re going to need to go and play defense … in more places.”
Some of that is the result of the war with Iran. Gas prices have soared since the start of Operation Epic Fury at the end of February, and 65% of voters blame Trump for their pain at the pump, according to the latest Quinnipiac poll. Those higher fuel prices are likely to ripple through the rest of the economy in a lasting way, economists say. Trump sits at 38% approval in the Quinnipiac survey.
“We have to acknowledge the reality that it is still economically very tough to exist at this point in time in the United States for most Americans,” Siegfried said.
For Democrats, that has scrambled a cycle they have spent the last year bracing for.
“We’re seeing the American people, frankly, sounding the alarm on executive leadership right now,” said Mari Manoogian, a Democratic strategist and executive director of The Next 50, an organization that invests in “next-generation” Democratic candidates. “The next time that they have an opportunity to voice their opinion about this is at the ballot box here in November, and they’re looking for new leadership in the Senate to be a check on the president.”
The numbers have started to match the mood. Democratic Senate candidates outraised Republicans across nearly every battleground in the first quarter of 2026, including James Talarico’s reported $27 million haul in Texas, Sen. Jon Ossoff’s $14 million quarter in Georgia and former North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper’s $13.8 million in the Tar Heel State. On Monday, Cook Political Report moved four Senate races in Democrats’ direction, including shifting Georgia and North Carolina from “toss up” to “lean Democratic,” and downgrading Ohio from “lean Republican” to “toss up.”
Democrats are starting to act like it.
One of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee’s biggest strategic shifts has been broadening the number of Senate races it is targeting. Early in the cycle, Democrats were eyeing a small set of states like Maine and North Carolina, but the committee has since worked to expand the map and create multiple paths to a majority.
That includes putting traditionally Republican-leaning states into play. Alaska offers an instructive example: The DSCC has spent $1 million to boost the party’s on-the-ground infrastructure. The recruitment of former Rep. Mary Peltola has also been central to that shift, giving Democrats a credible challenger to incumbent GOP Sen. Dan Sullivan. Peltola raised four times as much as her opponent in the first quarter.
None of it looks quite yet like the behavior of a party that expects to win, but it does look like a party that has stopped ruling it out.
Republicans are preparing moving in the opposite direction.
“The White House isn’t really popular right now. It’s going to cause problems for Republicans all over the country,” said Rexroad, the Republican consultant. “We are facing some really difficult headwinds this year, and you can say it’s still months away, but I don’t see that changing between now and November.”
Siegfried acknowledged the momentum for Democrats nationwide and said Republicans must match it with energy in their own base.
“There is energy on the ground among the grassroots of Democrats. We’ve seen it all across the country,” Siegfried said. “Republicans need to find a way to energize their base and make sure they turn out and that they can match the intensity in terms of turnout.”
Manoogian is not taking the shift for granted. “I would be under no illusions about how the Republicans will raise an enormous sum of money and deploy it strategically across the battlegrounds,” she said. “You can’t take your foot off the gas on any of this.”
The Democratic candidates running strongest, Manoogian added, are the ones “who are speaking to the issues that matter most to our voters and are meeting the moment, and not just being anti-Trump.” Similarly, Rexroad noted that while the White House is unlikely to significantly alter its national messaging, individual GOP candidates have more flexibility to tailor their approach to voters in their states. “The Democrats are doing the exact same thing,” he said.
None of this guarantees anything. The map is still tilted. Republican super PACs are still sitting on enormous reserves. A ceasefire that holds, a market that rallies, a Democratic misstep in the right state at the wrong time — any of them could change the trajectory. Six months is a long time, and the party that is bracing for impact in April is not always the party that loses in November.
But for the first time this cycle, Republicans are the ones bracing. And Democrats are starting to allow themselves to count seats.
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