U.S. President Donald Trump offered some revisionist election recollections on Monday, while predicting that Republicans "will do well" in 2018 when all seats in the House of Representatives are at stake and a third of those in the Senate.
In a Twitter comment, Trump claimed that Republicans had gone 5-0 in congressional races this year and that "the media refuses to mention this." Actually, Republicans won five of six House races in 2017 and lost a Senate seat.
Trump claimed to have predicted that Virginia gubernatorial candidate Ed Gillespie and Alabama Senate candidate Roy Moore "would lose (for very different reasons) and they did." Trump supported both candidates with numerous Twitter remarks through their respective election days, but after they lost, he said he knew they would.
"I also predicted 'I' would win" the 2016 presidential election, Trump said. "Republicans will do well in 2018, very well!"
Republicans, with Trump in the White House and majorities in both the Senate and House, control the U.S. government. But with Trump's approval rating mired in the 30 to 40 percent range and Democrats winning two gubernatorial races and a Senate seat in the last six weeks, Republican control of Congress could be in play.
With the election of Democrat Doug Jones in last week's Alabama race, the Republican majority in the Senate will shrink to 51-49 when Jones is sworn in in early January, leaving control of the chamber up for grabs in next November's mid-presidential-term elections.
Democrats also are contending to take control of the House, where Republicans currently hold a 239-193 edge, with three vacancies. Democrats would need to win 25 more seats to control the chamber.