The Republican-controlled Congress has a monumental task ahead of it: Passing the agenda that elected President-elect Donald Trump and gave Republicans control of both the House and Senate. It will be trial by fire for the newest members of the Republican House like Rep. Brandon Gill, R-Texas.
This week on “The Signal Sitdown,” I interviewed the newly-minted congressman. Gill gives us an inside look into how new members of Congress go about setting up their offices and getting up to speed on the legislature’s rules and procedures. All the while, these new members are poised to play important roles in the House Republican Conference’s dynamics and in passing the Trump agenda.
“Everybody recognizes President Trump’s leadership, and he’s got the ability to sort of bring people in line—to put it nicely—in a way that I don’t think our party has had in decades, if ever,” Gill said of the Republican trifecta.
“I think we all recognize this is his mandate,” Gill continued. “We have a majority in the House because of President Trump, not because of anybody else. We have a majority in the Senate because of President Trump. So that is the vision that President Trump has cast for the party, which is an America-first agenda. That’s what we’re going to be focused on passing.”
With slim majorities, Republicans in Congress will have to pass large swaths of this agenda through a process called budget reconciliation. Reconciliation is exempt from the 60-vote threshold in the Senate to prevent a filibuster and get legislation passed, but it also to a certain degree limits what can be included in the budget legislation.
The razor-thin majority in the House makes the path to success even more narrow and marred with potential pitfalls. House Speaker Mike Johnson is working to guide his energetic and rambunctious Republican conference down this path.
“There is no harder job in politics than being a Republican speaker of the House,” Gill claimed.
“You’ve got, in the Republican Party, multiple distinct and often irreconcilable ideological factions that he’s got to coalesce into a real political movement that can move legislation. And whenever you have a majority of one or two or three or four, there’s almost no room for error,” Gill explained.
“Think about these different factions. You’ve got libertarians, you’ve got the paleoconservatives, you’ve got the neoconservatives, you’ve got the traditional Reagan conservatives, you’ve got variations of that. And there are issues—think of social issues, think of immigration, for instance—where these different factions don’t agree.”
“It’s the speaker’s job to bring all of them together and be able to move legislation and at least advance the ball up the field,” Gill said. “That’s going to be particularly difficult with this reconciliation bill.”
Nevertheless, Gill has been impressed with Johnson’s leadership in the early days of the 119th Congress and believes Republicans can deliver on a reconciliation bill that passes Trump’s agenda in one fell swoop.
But it is new members like Gill who will be keeping GOP mainstays and Republican leadership accountable for delivering the agenda that earned Republicans their trifecta.
“This could be the most consequential piece of conservative legislation we’ve seen in decades,” Gill told me.
Passing a bold budget reconciliation bill, for example, could mean “real border security,” he said.
“We had border security under President Trump. Joe Biden got rid of it. Why is that? It’s because everything’s been done through executive order. Now, I’m thrilled to see President Trump go in and bring back ‘Remain in Mexico’ and bring back all of these executive orders that stopped this flood of—this deluge of—illegal aliens from pouring into the country, but what we really need is to codify those into law so that the next time a Democrat gets elected, which hopefully isn’t for a very long time, they don’t undo all of the progress that Republicans have made.”
“That’s what we’ve got to do, and a lot of that can be done in this reconciliation bill. That is enormous—enormously consequential for the trajectory of our country,” Gill said. It could be one of Republican’s last chances before immigration fundamentally changes the nation.
“Joe Biden and the Democrats are bringing these people into our country. They’re committing crimes. They’re bringing fentanyl that’s slaughtering American citizens, but they’re also depressing wages and ripping apart our cultural fabric. And if we want to take our country back, we’ve got to send them back to where they came from,” Gill explained.
But it’s not just second-order effects of immigration that cause problems. The problem with immigration strikes at the very core of the republic’s representative government.
“The purpose for why Democrats are importing these people [is] because they ultimately want these people to be voting for them in future elections. You hear Chuck Schumer talking about, and other Senate Democrats, you hear Democrats in the House occasionally reference that the goal of bringing in illegal aliens is to give them amnesty. And whenever you get amnesty, you become a voter. And that’s what the Democrats want.”
Success in budget reconciliation and beyond, Gill suggested, will determine if Republicans are still in control of the House come 2027.
“If we want to have a fighting chance at winning the midterms in 2026, we better deliver on the things we said we were going to do,” Gill told me.
“And we have to ask ourselves, do we really believe that these tax cuts are going to be beneficial for the economy? Do we really believe that unleashing American energy is going to be good for the working-class American people? Is that going to bring down energy prices? Is that going to create jobs for American citizens? Do we really believe that the American people are against the woke, crazy trans[gender] agenda? Do we really believe that they want border security? I certainly do. And I think most Republicans agree,” Gill explained.
“I think that if we want to keep the majority in 2026, we have to do all the things we said we were going to do,” Gill concluded.