The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee outraised the National Republican Congressional Committee in the third quarter by a little over $2 million after the GOP’s record-shattering off-year September.
The DCCC raised $26.2 million in the third quarter, with $11.5 million coming from September, leaving the committee with a $46 million war chest.
“While House Republicans refuse to come to work or negotiate with Democrats to address the healthcare crisis they created, it’s clear that there is a growing groundswell of support across the country powering House Democrats to take back the majority in 2026,” DCCC Chairwoman Suzan DelBene (D-WA) said in a statement.
The NRCC outraised the DCCC by $2.5 million in September, making for its best off-year September. It brought in $14 million for the month and $24 million for the quarter, leaving them with nearly $46 million cash on hand. The committee had 27% higher cash on hand compared to September 2023.
“House Republicans are firing on all cylinders. Our majority funded the federal government, and we’re delivering for working families and building unstoppable momentum heading into 2026,” NRCC Chairman Richard Hudson (R-NC) said in a press release.
“With President Trump leading the charge and voters rallying behind our conservative agenda, we’re raising record-breaking resources to hold the House and grow our majority,” he said.
MIKE JOHNSON GIVES DEMOCRATS A TASTE OF THEIR OWN MEDICINE AFTER ‘NO KINGS’ RALLIES
According to the Cook Political Report, 72 House seats are in play, with two Democratic seats expected to flip and one Republican seat expected to flip. The House map is up in the air with redistricting efforts exploding across the country following Texas’s push to draw out five Democratic seats earlier this year.
California will vote on Proposition 50, a measure that would change the map in the state to give Democrats five more congressional seats, on Nov. 4. The proposition would temporarily enact a new congressional map through 2030 that is an effort to strip Republicans of five seats in the blue state. The move was presented by Gov. Gavin Newsom (D-CA) in response to an aggressive Trump-backed redistricting move by Texas Republicans in August, which granted them five seats.