Speaker Mike Johnson and House Republican leaders are navigating an extraordinarily precarious political situation, operating with the slimmest congressional majority since the 1930s and resorting to extraordinary measures — including summoning ill members and tracking flight schedules — just to maintain control of the chamber.
With just a one-vote margin for error, House Republicans cannot afford a single defection on critical votes, reported CNN. The margin is so tight that GOP leaders have called members with serious health conditions to return to Washington, asked grieving members to delay attending family funerals, and tracked flights with apps to ensure attendance.
In one instance, Republicans phoned a member recovering at home from a heart condition, whose doctor had advised against flying. The member flew anyway to prevent an impeachment vote failure.
“We have to watch every single flight to make sure every single member gets on that flight,” one source in GOP leadership told CNN.
When a Republican member learned of his mother’s death while he was in Washington, GOP leaders requested he remain for several additional hours to prevent a vote collapse. Last month, dozens of House Republicans attending a White House event were unable to return to the Capitol due to street closures from protests, prompting leadership to frantically direct members to abandon their transportation and use public transit instead.
“Earlier this year, Johnson recalled telling his members — and not in jest — ‘take your vitamins’ and avoid ‘adventure sports’ because he couldn’t afford anyone coming down with sickness or injury,” CNN reported.
The pressure intensifies as multiple Republican seats face potential vacancies. Rep. Tony Gonzales (R-TX) faces resignation calls following admissions of an affair with a staffer who later died by suicide. GOP leaders are monitoring the health status of Rep. Neal Dunn (R-FL) due to concerns he may need early departure. Additionally, several members who lost statewide races could threaten to stop attending votes altogether.
House Majority Whip Tom Emmer described the leverage dynamics bluntly, telling a Republican threatening defection: “If you do this, it ain’t your district that’s going to be a problem.” Yet Johnson has simultaneously had to bar members from Trump administration promotions and Senate appointments to maintain party discipline.
The logistical challenges prove equally daunting. GOP leadership has become expert in obscure rural airport flight schedules and campaign event calendars. During weather emergencies, the team monitors flight trackers and directs members to rent cars and drive. In one instance, House Republicans canceled a Trump priority bill — legislation to increase shower pressure levels—because insufficient members were present to defeat Democratic procedural motions.
Some members have internalized the grim obligations. Rep. Kat Cammack (R-FL) has not missed a single vote since giving birth last August, putting her daughter on a 16-hour train ride two weeks postpartum rather than risk flight complications. Rep. Steve Womack (R-AR) returned to vote days after his wife of 41 years died, before the family burial.
Democratic attendance represents the minority’s most powerful weapon. In the failed impeachment of former Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, Rep. Al Green (D-TX) returned in hospital garb and a wheelchair to defeat the measure, dealing Johnson a humiliating defeat. Democratic strategists recognize that losing a procedural vote would effectively cede floor control to the minority party.
“If we’re in the majority for a day, there are plenty of ways that we could make their lives very annoyingly difficult,” one House Democratic aide said. “We could make a lot of mischief.”
Former Democratic Leader Steny Hoyer, who led his party with majority margins of 50 votes, called Johnson’s situation dire.
“We had four. That’s a landslide compared to what he’s got now,” Hoyer said.
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