Republican Matt Van Epps has won Tennessee’s 7th Congressional District special election, preserving GOP control of a traditionally conservative House seat after a high-intensity rescue effort led by President Donald Trump and national Republican groups. The victory averts a major upset but the narrowed margin in a deep-red district is already being read as a warning sign for Republicans heading into the 2026 midterms.
A close call in Trump country
The special election was triggered by the resignation of Republican Representative Mark Green in July, opening up a seat that Trump carried by more than 20 points in the 2024 presidential race. Republican Matt Van Epps, a military veteran and former Tennessee state official, faced Democratic state representative Aftyn Behn in what was initially expected to be a routine GOP hold.
With nearly all votes counted, Van Epps secured roughly 53–54 percent of the vote to Behn’s mid-40s, a single‑digit win that dramatically narrowed the gap compared with recent Republican blowouts in the district. The race attracted millions of dollars in outside spending from both parties and was closely watched as a test of voter sentiment in a strongly pro-Trump region.
Trump-led rescue effort
In the final stretch, Republicans mounted an aggressive effort to shore up Van Epps as internal polling and public signals showed a surprisingly competitive contest. Trump endorsed Van Epps during the GOP primary and later headlined a series of tele-rallies and virtual events, urging conservative voters to turn out and framing the contest as a referendum on his agenda.
National Republican groups and pro-Trump super PACs poured money into the race, with one MAGA-aligned committee alone investing around seven figures to boost Van Epps in the closing weeks. Senior GOP figures, including House Speaker Mike Johnson and Tennessee Governor Bill Lee, also campaigned for Van Epps, underscoring how seriously party leaders took the risk of an embarrassing loss in a district long considered safe.
Democrats outperform expectations
Democrat Aftyn Behn, a progressive state lawmaker and former activist, ran on themes of affordability, hospital funding and abortion access, positioning herself as a sharp contrast to both Trump and the national Republican agenda. Backed by Democratic-aligned super PACs and national figures, she benefited from a surge of investment and attention as polls showed the race tightening in the final weeks.
Behn’s performance significantly exceeded Democrats’ historical showings in the district, cutting the GOP margin into single digits in an area where Republicans have routinely posted landslide wins. Party strategists are seizing on the result as another data point in a year when Democrats have consistently overperformed in special elections, arguing it signals potential momentum heading into 2026.
Implications for 2026
For Republicans, the outcome is a relief but also a warning: they keep the seat and slightly pad their narrow House majority, yet only after heavy spending and direct intervention from Trump in a district that should have been a straightforward hold. Some GOP operatives are already voicing concern that needing a full-scale national rescue in such a friendly district could foreshadow deeper vulnerabilities next year.
Democrats, meanwhile, are highlighting the closer-than-expected result in Tennessee alongside recent strong showings in other states as evidence that their coalition remains energized even in Republican-leaning territory. Both parties are likely to mine the Tennessee results for clues about turnout patterns, the enduring pull of Trump in conservative areas, and how cultural and economic issues are reshaping the battlefield ahead of the midterms.






