Newshub
Jan 06, 2026

Johnson Says House Will Surge in January, Push ‘Aggressive Affordability Agenda’-lllllll

Speaker Mike Johnson announced that House Republicans are going to “hit the ground running” in January to codify into law up to 150 of President Donald Trump’s executive orders.

 

 

 

 

“You’re going to see an aggressive affordability agenda, and we’re going to see continued codification of the President’s executive orders. A very aggressive legislative agenda coming right out of the gates in January. We’re going to continue to work, for example, on health care to continue to bring costs down for the American people, to bring down the cost of living overall,” Johnson declared.

“He’s up to about 200 of those [orders], probably about 150 of them are codifiable by Congress and we’re working steadily through that list. You’re going to see us delivering for the American people while the effects of that giant piece of legislation that we did on July 4th, got signed on July 4th, comes into implementation,” Johnson added.

“So much more, much more yet to do and the President and I talk about that almost every day and he’s excited about it and I am,” the Speaker added.This comes as a new poll from the Napolitan News Service, conducted online by Scott Rasmussen with fieldwork by RMG Research, Inc., found Republicans leading Democrats by four percentage points on the generic congressional ballot. The survey focused primarily on voter preferences ahead of the 2026 midterm elections.

“If the election were held today, would you vote for the Republican from your district or the Democrat from your district?” respondents were asked.

The poll also examined voter enthusiasm, policy priorities and demographic factors that may influence turnout, though full cross-tabulated results were not publicly released.

Among registered voters surveyed, 45 percent said they would support the Republican candidate in their district, while 41 percent said they would vote for the Democratic candidate, giving Republicans a four-point advantage. When independent “leaners” were included, the margin remained the same, with Republicans at 48 percent and Democrats at 44 percent.

Other posts