President Trump isn’t literally on the ballot this cycle—but we have to act like he is. Because everything we’ve fought for—his agenda, our mandate, the battle against the deep state—is on the line. Most voters only show up for presidential elections, and the Democrats are counting on that. They’re quietly targeting overlooked races, pouring money into vulnerable districts, and working to take back the House and Senate.
I won’t go back. I won’t hand this country back to Jeffries, Schumer, and the Neo-Marxists and a more powerful control by the uni-party—all stifling our voice, and back to the mockery. I refuse to do it, and I’ll do whatever I have to do to prevent that from happening. We hustled to return the White House back to Trump—we kept the majority, but we must fight to keep it. If we lose either chamber, we lose the ability to govern, to legislate, and to finish what we started.
Politics is a cruel reality. Trump may have endorsed incumbents like Lindsey Graham, Tim Scott, and others—but I trust Steve Bannon and the WarRoom Posse, along with leaders like Charlie Kirk, to keep a sharp eye on the administration and elected officials. They’re not afraid to speak up and won’t let anything derail the America First agenda. Their mission is to keep Trump and his team laser-focused on delivering what was promised. That doesn’t mean we ignore the RINOs—there are strong America First challengers out there—but I’m not willing to lose seats just to make a point.
Based on everything I’ve researched, here’s where we need to stay sharp: pouring too much grassroots energy into taking down high-profile RINOs—no matter how justified—could risk real legislative power. Both the Senate and the House are being held on by a thread. Fighting for a stronger majority means protecting every Republican seat that barely held on—and gaining the power we need to deliver the America First agenda.
Awareness and knowledge is key—and from there, we mobilize: flip vulnerable Democrat seats, reinforce our razor-thin Republican wins, and FIGHT to fill every open seat with America First voices.
This isn’t just about winning—it’s about winning big enough to govern. This is about strategy, not sentiment. We’re not surrendering principle—we’re securing power. There are absolutely some RINOs we can and should challenge, but we must time those fights carefully. Not when it puts the entire movement at risk.
The Democrats are disciplined. They understand how to win—not just emotionally, but strategically. While they focus on tight margins and overlooked districts that decide power, Republicans waste time and resources on flashy infighting and headline drama. We can’t afford that. Not now. Not with this much on the line.
The Democrats aren’t waiting — they’re already targeting Republican vulnerabilities, organizing volunteers, and knocking on doors. They are seriously out for the kill. That’s how Cliff Maloney, founder of PA Chase and Citizens Alliance understands it. That’s how Caroline Wren and Alex DeGrasse see it, as well. This is no walk in the park — it’s a fight that demands grit.
The battle for 2026 is already underway. According to Inside Elections, in "The 7,309-Vote Election: How Republicans Held the House” by Jacob Rubashkin (Dec. 11, 2024), the combined margin in the three closest GOP House wins was just 7,309 votes — roughly 0.005% of the more than 147 million votes cast nationwide—less than the size of a Texas high school football crowd. Every call, door knock, and postcard matters. And do what you can to follow up—offer white glove service to help people vote early. Overcome their objections, answer their questions, and take them to the polls, if you have to.
In previous years, Republicans often won the majority of close races. But not in 2024. For the first time in years, the 10 closest races split evenly—five Republican wins, five Democrat wins. If we don’t focus early, next time we may not be so lucky.
This is no time to assume we’re safe. The enemy is organized. The margins are microscopic. And the work must start NOW.
A majority of voters in battleground House districts still believe Democrats in Congress are "more focused on helping other people than people like me,” according to Politico’s March 11, 2025 article "Dems’ Own Polling Shows Massive Brand Problem Ahead of 2026” by Elena Schneider.
These aren’t just vulnerable seats — they’re the keys to protecting President Trump’s mandate and growing an America First majority.
⚠️ House: Republicans hold 219 seats, Democrats 212, plus 4 vacanies. Just 2 flips could cost control.
🔹️Democrat Held (Razor-Thin Wins 2024 House Wins ≤ 1% – 2%)
- CA-45: Derek Tran: Asian (38%), Hispanic (30%), White (25%)🔗 [Click for Republican Challengers]
- CA-47: Dave Min 🔗 [Click for Republican Challengers]
- FL-23: Jared Moskowitz 🔗 [Click for Republican Challengers]
- NV-01: Dina Titus 🔗 [Click for Republican Challengers]
- NV-03: Susie Lee 🔗 [Click for Republican Challengers]
- NV-04: Steven Horsford 🔗 [Click for Republican Challengers]
🔸️Districts where a few 1,000 votes could FLIP to Republican Control
- CA-13: Adam Gray 🔗 [Click for Republican Challengers]
- ME-2: Jared Golden 🔗 [Click for Republican Challengers]
- NC-1: Don Davis 🔗 [Click for Republican Challengers]
- OH-9: Marcy Kaptur 🔗 [Click for Republican Challengers]
- VA-7: Eugene Vindman 🔗 [Click for Republican Challengers]
🔹️Trump-Won Districts Still Held by Democrats Clinging to Seats:
- NY-03: Tom Suozzi – Republican Challengers TBA
- NJ-09: Nellie Pou 🔗 [Click for Republican Challengers]
- OH-13: Emilia Sykes 🔗 [Click for Republican Challengers]
- ME-02: Jared Golden 🔗 [Click for Republican Challengers]
- TX-28: Henry Cuellar 🔗 [Click for Republican Challengers]
- TX-34: Vicente Gonzalez 🔗 [Click for Republican Challengers]
🔹️Hispanic-Majority Districts Swinging Right
Latino voters are shifting red, and these districts are now in play. Some already have Republican challengers, while others remain open—creating a window for recruitment, fundraising, and early grassroots action. These districts weren’t headline targets before, but now they are, and Democrats are on defense.
- FL-09: Darren Soto 🔗 [Click for Republican Challengers]
- TX-28: Henry Cuellar 🔗 [Click for Republican Challengers]
- TX-34: Vicente Gonzalez 🔗 [Click for Republican Challengers]
🔸️New Frontlines
These districts weren’t headline targets before, but now they are. Some already have declared GOP challengers, while others are still wide open. That means opportunity—whether recruiting candidates, rallying volunteers, or launching early fundraising. Democrats are now on defense in territory they didn’t expect to fight for.
- CA-27: George Whitesides 🔗 [Click for Republican Challengers]
- IN-01: Frank Mrvan 🔗 [Click for Republican Challengers]
- MI-08: Kristen McDonald Rivet 🔗 [Click for Republican Challengers]
- NH-01: Chris Pappas 🔗 [Click for Republican Challengers]
- NM-02: Gabe Vasquez 🔗 [Click for Republican Challengers]
- NY-04: Laura Gillen 🔗 [Click for Republican Challengers]
- NY-19: Josh Riley 🔗 [Click for Republican Challengers]
- WA-03: Marie Gluesenkamp Perez 🔗 [Click for Republican Challengers]
Some of these races already have Republicans on the field. Others are prime targets for strong candidates and early involvement. These aren’t the usual headline districts—but they’re now firmly on the map.
These are the battlegrounds. If we don’t engage in them now, the Democrats will hold the line and block Trump’s entire legislative agenda. Flip the House. Secure the future.
🏛️ Senate: Vulnerable Democrat-Held Seats (2026 Midterms)
⚠️ Senate: Republicans lead 53–47. We can’t lose ONE seat. This slim margin shifts the power directly to the RINOs, by caucusing with Democrats. That hands control of the chamber back to the Left.
🔸️ Democrat Senator (Vulnerable Hold)
- Georgia – Ossoff (2026) 🔗 [Click for Republican Challengers]
🔹️ Retiring Democrat Senators (Open Seats)
1. Michigan – Gary Peters (not seeking re-election) 🔗 [Click for Republican Challengers]
2. Minnesota – Tina Smith (not seeking re-election) 🔗 [Click for Republican Challengers]
3. New Hampshire – Jeanne Shaheen (not seeking re-election) 🔗 [Click for Republican Challengers]
4. Illinois – Dick Durbin (not seeking re-election) 🔗 [Click for Republican Challengers]
🔻 Retiring Republican Senators (Retiring Seats)
⚠️ These GOP-held seats MUST be protected to maintain the majority:
- Kentucky – Mitch McConnell 🔗 [Click for Republican Challengers]
- North Carolina – Thom Tillis 🔗 [Click for Republican Challengers]
🔻 Republican Held (Vacating/Open House Seats)
- Arizona – AZ-10 (Andy Biggs): Rep. Andy Biggs is running for Governor, leaving this strong Republican district open. In 2022, Biggs won re-election with 56.7% to 43.3%, a 13‑point margin. 🔗 [Click for 2026 Republican Candidates]
- Florida – FL-19 (Byron Donalds) Rep. Byron Donalds is running for Governor, leaving this deep-red district open. In 2022, Donalds won 68% to 32%, a 36‑point margin. It’s safely Republican.🔗 [Click for 2026 Republican Candidates]
- Michigan – MI-10 (John James): ⚠️Rep. John James is now running for Governor, opening up this key battleground seat. He won his last race in 2022 by less than 1%, making it one of the most vulnerable Republican-held districts. 🔗 [Click for 2026 Republican Candidates]
- Nebraska – NE-2 (Don Bacon retiring): ⚠️ Rep. Don Bacon is stepping down, leaving this swing district open. It leans Republican but has flipped before, so we need a strong America First candidate to keep it red. 🔗 [Click for 2026 Republican Candidates]
- South Carolina – SC-5 (Ralph Norman): Rep. Ralph Norman is running for Governor, creating an open seat in a reliably GOP district. In 2022, he secured 64.0% to 34.5%, a 30‑point margin. 🔗 [Campaign Website]
- South Carolina – SC-1 (Nancy Mace): Rep. Nancy Mace is running for Governor, leaving her Lowcountry district open. In 2022, she won re-election with 56.5% to 42.9%, a 13.6-point margin.🔗 [Campaign Website]
- Tennessee – U.S. Senate (Marsha Blackburn): Sen. Marsha Blackburn is running for Governor, creating an open Senate seat in a state that leans heavily Republican. She won her 2018 Senate race by nearly 11 points and is considered a strong GOP figure statewide. 🔗 [Campaign Website]
Several key Republicans are vacating their seats—John James, Byron Donalds, Andy Biggs, Ralph Norman, Nancy Mace, and, now, Marsha Blackburn. If even a few of these slip, we lose the foundation of the legislative majority. Trump will walk into the second half of his second term with no leverage—a lame duck fighting uphill.
Any compromise made under that pressure will weaken his approval, damage campaign momentum, and fracture the movement. Worse, they will use it against him forever.
With just sixteen months to go, the Posse must act — now. Volunteer for campaigns. Organize by district. Build toward victory. Every seat we hold must be protected.
Stay alert. Check the MAGA LIONS’ Lists of America First candidates by state on Gettr @BikerforTrump1968 and @CCMiddleton1967 and on X @Lions4Maga
Know the candidates. "Adopt-a-candidate” in your state—and help across state lines to push them over the finish line. We earned the mandate. We won the popular vote. But without the majority, that mandate is paralyzed.
It’s the majority that gives Trump the power to govern—and finish what he started.
So yes—Trump is on the ballot. He’s fighting day and night to deliver what we voted for. But without a majority, his agenda dies in committee. The Democrats know this—and they’re already mobilizing to stop him.
We MUST rise to meet the moment. Volunteer. Knock on doors. Make the calls. Write postcards. Rally your community. Fight district by district to grow the majority. This is our battlefield now.
Let’s prove we want the agenda. Shoulder to the wheel, Posse—no whining, no excuses.
Victory or death!
*** Next Man Up ***
A special “Thank You” to Strategist Alex DeGrasse for directing me through the many moving parts of this election cycle. His insight and knowledge have kept me focused, informed, and ready to zero in where it counts, with the clarity and data needed to hopefully make an impact.