Matt Van Epps celebrates Republican victory in Tennessee 7th District special election over Democrat Aftyn Behn.
Image generated by AI

Republican Matt Van Epps defeats Democrat Aftyn Behn in Tennessee special election

Image generated by AI
Fact checked

Republican Matt Van Epps won Tennessee’s 7th Congressional District special election, defeating Democrat Aftyn Behn by roughly nine points and narrowing, but not erasing, the GOP’s prior edge in the solidly conservative district. Republican strategists say the outcome underscores the risks they see for Democrats in nominating candidates they describe as too far to the left in competitive races.

The special election in Tennessee’s 7th Congressional District, held on December 2, 2025, saw Republican Matt Van Epps defeat Democratic state Rep. Aftyn Behn in a closely watched contest that drew national attention.

According to official results reported by PBS and summarized in race tallies, Van Epps received about 53.9% of the vote, while Behn took about 45.1%, an 8.9‑point margin. (en.wikipedia.org) The outcome keeps the seat in Republican hands after the resignation of Rep. Mark Green, a Republican, who stepped down in July 2025 to take a private‑sector job. (en.wikipedia.org) Van Epps was sworn into office on the Thursday following the election, filling the vacancy for the remainder of the current Congress. (en.wikipedia.org)

Green had previously carried the district by about 21 percentage points in 2024, and former President Donald Trump also won there by roughly 22 points, underscoring the district’s Republican lean. (en.wikipedia.org) Van Epps’ smaller margin has been read by some analysts as evidence that Democrats modestly improved their performance, even as Republicans retained the seat. (apnews.com)

The race featured heavy involvement from national political figures. President Trump endorsed Van Epps and, according to The Daily Wire, phoned into a rally with House Speaker Mike Johnson (R‑La.) to energize Republican voters. (dailywire.com) Democratic leaders also invested in the contest: outlets including the Associated Press and The Washington Post have reported that high‑profile Democrats such as Vice President Kamala Harris campaigned or recorded messages in support of Behn, as part of a broader effort to test national messaging on economic issues in red states. (apnews.com)

Behn, a state lawmaker who has emphasized affordability and cost‑of‑living issues, framed her campaign as proof that Democrats can compete even in deep‑red territory. The Daily Wire reported that she posted on X after the race, writing: “Tonight, we did something everyone counted out. We proved to a nation that states like Tennessee are still worth fighting for. The margin was close, and that can only be attributed to the thousands of volunteers who showed out. This is just the beginning.” (dailywire.com)

Behn emerged as the Democratic nominee from a crowded primary that included consultant Darden Copeland and state Reps. Bo Mitchell and Vincent Dixie. She won that October 7 primary by a relatively narrow margin, according to local election results and subsequent reporting. (en.wikipedia.org) Republican strategists interviewed by The Daily Wire characterized her as the most progressive candidate in the field and argued that such a profile made it harder for Democrats to win in the district. (dailywire.com)

In an analysis published by The Daily Wire, Colin Reed of South & Hill Strategies called Van Epps’ 8.9‑point victory “nearly a double digit win” and described him as the “type of candidate the GOP needs more of,” while warning that the broader midterm political climate “remains challenging” for Republicans. Reed argued that Democrats “need to nominate less extreme candidates if they want to compete beyond the deep blue bastions of America,” reflecting a common GOP view of Behn’s politics. (dailywire.com)

Chris Burger of Rotunda Public Affairs told The Daily Wire that “voters weren’t buying what she’s selling,” labeling Behn a “far‑left socialist” and contending that she was out of step with district values. An additional Republican operative, speaking on background to the outlet, called the nearly nine‑point margin “very encouraging” but cautioned that special elections often differ from standard general elections because of turnout patterns. (dailywire.com)

Those GOP assessments came as both parties parsed what the Tennessee result might signal for the 2026 midterms. The Daily Wire noted that Republicans currently hold 220 seats in the U.S. House, compared with 213 for Democrats, with two vacancies, leaving the narrow majority hinging on the 218 votes needed to control the chamber. (dailywire.com) Other outlets, including The Washington Post and The Week, have similarly described the 7th District race as a potential early indicator of how each party’s messaging on issues such as inflation, affordability and Trump’s influence may play in competitive districts next cycle. (washingtonpost.com)

While Republicans celebrated holding the seat, Democrats pointed to the roughly 13‑point shift toward their party compared with 2024 margins as evidence that even a loss could offer a template for making inroads in historically safe Republican districts. (apnews.com)

What people are saying

Republicans on X celebrated Matt Van Epps' nine-point victory in Tennessee's 7th Congressional District special election as a key hold for the slim House majority and a rejection of far-left Democrat Aftyn Behn. Democrats praised Behn's overperformance compared to Trump's 2024 margin in the district as encouraging despite the loss. Conservatives warned that the narrower win signals risks ahead of 2026 midterms if messaging on affordability and other issues falters. Analysts pointed to strong Democratic gains in Nashville as a factor in the closer race.

Related Articles

Illustration of Matt Van Epps's close win in Tennessee's 7th District House special election, raising GOP alarms for 2026 midterms.
Image generated by AI

Republican Matt Van Epps wins Tennessee special House race by single digits, alarming GOP

Reported by AI Image generated by AI Fact checked

Republican Matt Van Epps held on to Tennessee’s 7th Congressional District in a special election on December 2, 2025, winning by just under nine points in a district Donald Trump carried by roughly 22 points in 2024. The sharper‑than‑expected swing toward Democrats has stirred concern among Republicans about the 2026 midterms, even as Democrats cast the result as evidence of growing strength in traditionally red territory.

Democrat Aftyn Behn narrowed Republicans’ longstanding advantage in Tennessee’s 7th Congressional District special election on December 2, 2025, a result Democrats are touting as evidence they can compete more aggressively in GOP-leaning territory ahead of the 2026 midterms, even as internal debates continue over the party’s ideological direction.

Reported by AI Fact checked

Voters in Tennessee’s 7th Congressional District headed to the polls on December 2, 2025, for a special election between Republican Matt Van Epps and Democrat Aftyn Behn to replace resigned Rep. Mark Green. The race, in a district Donald Trump carried by more than 20 points in 2024, has drawn national attention and millions of dollars in outside interest as polls suggested a competitive contest, with one recent survey showing Van Epps leading by 2 points, within the margin of error.

Republicans are expressing growing concerns about the 2026 midterm elections following shifts in recent special elections and unfavorable polling data. Special races in traditionally Republican strongholds like Texas, Mississippi, and Georgia have trended toward Democrats, signaling potential vulnerabilities. Market predictions and surveys indicate Democrats could regain control of both the House and Senate.

Reported by AI Fact checked

Across off-year and special elections in 2025, Democrats notched a series of local wins in rural and small-town communities—from county offices in Pennsylvania to mayoral races in Montana—and also benefited from rural-area shifts in statewide contests, according to reporting and data cited by The Nation and other outlets.

Republicans in Texas approved new congressional maps in 2025 designed to secure as many as five additional U.S. House seats in 2026, a plan the U.S. Supreme Court reinstated this month. While Democrats have suffered a string of statewide losses, some analysts argue the state could still move toward greater competitiveness over time, drawing cautious parallels to California’s political realignment in the 1990s.

Reported by AI Fact checked

After the Indiana Senate voted 31-19 to reject a Trump-backed congressional redistricting plan that would likely have erased the state’s two Democratic U.S. House seats, Republican lawmakers who opposed the measure faced threats of primary challenges from Trump and Gov. Mike Braun, while analysts noted that the defeat underscored limits on mid-decade map changes even in conservative states.

 

 

 

This website uses cookies

We use cookies for analytics to improve our site. Read our privacy policy for more information.
Decline