While Democrats pulled off a better than expected night on Nov. 8th, the party will face tremendous headwinds in maintaining their razor-thin Senate majority come 2024. Democrats will be defending 23 of the 34 Senate seats up for grabs next cycle. Of their 23 seats up for election, seven are in states won by former President Donald Trump in either 2016 or 2020.
Opportunities for Democrats to flip Republican-held seats are less encouraging. Sen. Rick Scott of Florida is considered one of Democrats’ best pickup opportunities in 2024, along with Republican Sen. Ted Cruz’s Texas seat. Both senators won by narrow margins in 2018.
While Florida has been swing state territory in the past, Republicans won big in the Sunshine State on Election Day. Gov. Ron DeSantis’ decisive victory, flipping historically blue counties like Miami-Dade and Palm Beach, suggests Florida is increasingly Republican ground – not to mention Sen. Marco Rubio’s 16-point win over Democrat Val Demings.
Next election cycle, the GOP will not be defending any seat in a state won by President Biden. Unlike this year’s midterms where the most competitive races were in states Biden won – Nevada, Pennsylvania, Georgia and Arizona.
As the midterms slowly come to a close and political hopefuls shift their sights to 2024, here is where Republicans eye big pickup opportunities in the Senate next cycle.
DEMOCRATS’ POLICIES, ECONOMIC ISSUES LED TO LOSING HOUSE MAJORITY, POLITICAL INSIDERS SAY
West Virginia – Sen. Joe Manchin (D)
Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin, perhaps the most vulnerable senator in 2024, has not yet announced his intentions to run for re-election. Then-President Trump won the state by a whopping 39 percentage points in the last election, making this seat ripe for a Republican pickup.
Manchin played an instrumental role in getting the Inflation Reduction Act across the finish line and may face a political price for his perceived capitulation in a predominantly working-class state with one of the leading coal industries in the nation.
Rep. Alex Mooney, the five-term West Virginia congressman, announced his intent to run for the Senate seat just a week after the midterm elections.
West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey has also been eyeing Manchin’s seat for quite some time, and hinted that he was considering running again. He narrowly lost to Manchin in the state’s 2018 Senate race by just 3 percentage points.
Ohio – Sen. Sherrod Brown (D)
Ohio is increasingly becoming solid Republican territory. Trump won the state in 2016 and 2020, and JD Vance won his Senate race this year by a 7-point margin, despite an underwhelming performance from Republicans elsewhere in the 2022 midterm elections.
Sen. Sherrod Brown, first elected in 2006 and currently the only Democratic statewide office-holder, announced he would seek reelection last week.
Republican State Sen. Matt Dolan, who challenged Vance in the GOP primary earlier this year, has hinted at a possible run against the Democratic senator, though Dolan has not committed to a run officially, telling Fox News Digital he’s still “thinking about it.”
“Are we as a party looking forward or backwards? And I want to be a part of the Republican Party that is looking forward,” Dolan told Fox News Digital, echoing sentiments from former Vice President Mike Pence this week who blames the GOP’s lackluster midterm performance on his party’s hyper-focus on “relitigating the last election.”
MOVE ON, MAGA: PENCE REBUKES TRUMP CANDIDATES STUCK ON 2020, PUSHES GOP TO FOCUS ON THE FUTURE
Montana – Sen Jon Tester (D)
Sen. Jon Tester, the three-term Democratic senator from Montana, is up for re-election in 2024, though he won’t make a final determination on whether to run again until early next year.
Tester’s seat is considered one of the most vulnerable Democrat-held seats in 2024. Montana overwhelmingly voted for Trump by +16 points in 2020 and saw a string of GOP victories in the 2022 midterm elections.
Rep. Matt Rosendale, who has represented Montana’s 2nd Congressional District since 2021, ran for Senate against Tester in 2018 and lost by a narrow margin. Rosendale has communicated interest in a rematch with Tester, but has not yet announced his candidacy.
Rep. Ryan Zinke, elected to Montana’s 1st Congressional District in 2022, has also hinted interest in the seat, but will not decide on a Senate run until next year, he said in an interview with The Associated Press.
Arizona – Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D)
Democratic Sen. Kyrsten Sinema will be up for re-election in Arizona. An unabashed centrist and staunch defender of the filibuster, Sinema has, along with Manchin, exercised outsized influence in the Senate throughout Biden’s first two years in office.
Sinema’s propensity to rein in the Biden agenda has earned the senator pushback from her own party. Rep. Ruben Gallego, D-Ariz., in an appearance on MSNBC on Sunday, said the Arizona senator has “done nothing” for Democrats. Gallego is expected to challenge Sinema in the Democratic primary, though the congressman has not publicly announced a Senate bid.
Arizona has become a key swing state in recent elections. It was won by Trump in 2016 and Biden in 2020, though Democrats’ narrow victories in the midterm elections suggest a hard-fought battle is on the horizon for the Senate seat.
CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP
Fox News Digital reached out to the Democrat-aligned Senate Majority PAC and Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee for comment on the Senate 2024 map. Both organizations reiterated their current focus on Georgia’s runoff race currently underway.