Democracy Dies in Darkness

Republicans can blame themselves for what happened in Tuesday’s elections

Donald Trump’s chaotic leadership, the divided House Republican conference and the Supreme Court’s abortion decision have produced untold damage to the Republican Party

Analysis by
Chief correspondent|
November 8, 2023 at 1:22 p.m. EST
Voters fill out their ballots at a polling station on Tuesday in Midlothian, Va. (Julia Nikhinson for The Washington Post)
7 min

Eight years of Donald Trump’s chaotic leadership, a House Republican conference in turmoil and one very big Supreme Court decision on abortion rights have combined to produce untold damage to the Republican Party, a reality that hit home with special force in elections on Tuesday.

Voters delivered very few bright spots for Republicans and much to worry about. Once again, Democrats outperformed expectations, as they did in the 2022 midterm elections. If not a blue wave on Tuesday night, the results reinforced the worries among some Republicans that their brand has become too toxic to many voters and that whatever weaknesses they see in President Biden, their own problems are acute.