Republicans win 218 House seats giving Trump and party control of US government
The Republicans have also gained control of the Senate from the Democrats.
The Republican Party has won enough seats to control the US House, completing the party’s sweep into power and securing their hold on the American government alongside president-elect Donald Trump.
A House Republican victory in Arizona, alongside a win in slow-counting California earlier on Wednesday, gave the Republicans the 218 House victories that make up the majority.
The Republicans have also gained control of the Senate from the Democrats.
The incoming president has promised to carry out the country’s largest-ever deportation operation, extend tax breaks, punish his political enemies, seize control of the federal government’s most powerful tools and reshape the US economy.
The Republican election victories ensure that Congress will be onboard for that agenda, and the Democrats will be almost powerless to check it.
When Mr Trump was first elected president in 2016, the Republican Party also swept Congress.
When he returns to the White House, Mr Trump will be working with a Republican Party that has been completely transformed by his Make America Great Again movement and a Supreme Court dominated by conservative justices, including three that he appointed.
Mr Trump rallied House Republicans at a Capitol Hill hotel on Wednesday morning, marking his first return to Washington since the election.
“I suspect I won’t be running again unless you say, ‘He’s good, we got to figure something else,’” Mr Trump said to the room full of politicians, who laughed in response.
The Louisiana Republican, an ardent conservative, has pulled the House Republican Conference closer to Mr Trump during the campaign season as they prepare an “ambitious” 100-day agenda.
“Republicans in the House and Senate have a mandate,” Mr Johnson said earlier this week.
“The American people want us to implement and deliver that ‘America First’ agenda.”
Mr Trump’s allies in the House are already signalling they will seek retribution for the legal troubles he faced while out of office.
The incoming president on Wednesday said he would nominate Matt Gaetz, a fierce loyalist, for attorney general.