“We cannot leave anything to chance,” Pelosi said in a letter to colleagues, emphasizing the importance of winning House seats for Democrats — not just to expand their majority but to prepare for the possibility that the House must settle the presidential race.
But if the Electoral College is deadlocked or unable to reach a majority outcome, the question goes to the House as a “contingent election."
Each state’s congressional delegation, consisting of the newly elected House lawmakers, casts one vote to determine the presidential outcome, according to the House history website.
But as of now, Pelosi explained, Republicans have a “razor thin” margin — 26 of the state delegations, compared with 22 for Democrats.
“We must achieve that majority of delegations or keep the Republicans from doing so,” Pelosi wrote.