Senate elections In the Senate elections, Republicans successfully defended all of their seats and won eight from the Democrats, defeating incumbent Senators
Harris Wofford (Pennsylvania) and
Jim Sasser (Tennessee), in addition to picking up six open seats in Arizona, Maine, Michigan, Ohio, Oklahoma, and Tennessee. Notably, since Sasser's defeat coincided with a Republican victory in the special election to replace
Al Gore, Tennessee's Senate delegation switched from entirely Democratic to entirely Republican in a single election. Minority leader
Robert J. Dole became Majority Leader, while on the Democratic side,
Tom Daschle became Minority Leader after the retirement of the previous Democratic leader,
George J. Mitchell. Initially, the balance was 52–48 in favor of the Republicans, but after the power change, Democrats
Richard Shelby and
Ben Nighthorse Campbell switched parties, bringing the balance to 54–46. The Democrats took back a seat in January 1996 in a special election in Oregon when
Ron Wyden won an open seat left vacated by Republican
Bob Packwood.
House of Representatives elections Republicans won the national popular vote for the House of Representatives by a margin of 6.8 percentage points and picked up 54 seats. The South underwent a drastic transformation, as Republicans picked up 19 Southern seats, leaving them with more seats than Democrats in the South, last achieved during
Reconstruction. 34 incumbents, all Democrats, were defeated. The incumbent Speaker, Democrat
Tom Foley, lost re-election in his district, becoming the first Speaker of the House to lose re-election since
Galusha Grow in
1863. Other major upsets included the defeat of House Ways and Means Chairman
Dan Rostenkowski and House Judiciary Chairman
Jack Brooks. The incumbent Republican Minority whip,
Newt Gingrich, was re-elected in the Republican landslide and became Speaker as the incumbent Republican Minority Leader,
Robert H. Michel, retired. The incumbent Democratic Majority Leader,
Dick Gephardt, became Minority Leader. ==State elections==