Inside the Fight for the US House

iStock/Thinkstock(WASHINGTON) — Roughly two weeks from Election Day, the GOP is concerned that Donald Trump’s sagging campaign could endanger House Republicans’ largest majority since 1928.

Democrats are unlikely to flip the 30 seats needed to take control of the lower chamber, but significant losses would leave Republicans with a slimmer majority that would likely remain divided over the basics of governing.

Heading into the fall, House Republican leaders were cautiously optimistic that their candidates would avoid the worst of a down-ballot drag from Trump’s embattled presidential campaign.

As individual members in competitive races distanced themselves from Trump’s various controversies, Republican leaders boasted that internal party polling had shown incumbents’ running ahead of the GOP presidential candidate.

“We’re in a much stronger position than anybody thought,” House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., told reporters in September.

But Republicans were left scrambling by a Washington Post report earlier this month on a damning 2005 video showing Trump’s boasting of groping women without their consent, which he has defended as nothing more than “locker-room talk.”

Dozens of Republicans pulled their support for Trump; some even demanded he withdraw from the race. House Speaker Paul Ryan of Wisconsin, who criticized Trump but kept his endorsement, advised his conference to focus on their own races.

In the weeks since, Trump has been accused of sexual assault by at least 10 women (he denies their charges) and has refused to accept the results of the election unconditionally.

Democrats have launched a series of ads across the country — from Orange County, California to northern Wisconsin — tying Republicans to Trump’s hot-mic Access Hollywood comments.

“It’s clear that House Republicans are directly tied to Donald Trump and cannot separate from his toxic campaign this late in the game,” Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee spokeswoman Meredith Kelly said in an email to ABC News.

House Democrats’ campaign arm has run dozens of ads in House races across the country.

The Clinton campaign, along with outside Democratic groups, is also redirecting resources toward down-ballot races. Of particular focus to Democrats are the 26 districts President Obama won in 2012 that are either held by Republicans or open seats this year.

Republicans are also working hard to build their own firewall. As of this month, Ryan has raised nearly $50 million to protect the GOP majority, and has spent the month on a 17-state, 40-plus city campaign blitz. House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., has also raised and given nearly $25 million to Republican candidates this cycle.

Republican groups, including the National Republicans Congressional Committee, have also started running ads linking Democrats to a Clinton White House, calling on voters to support divided government and prevent a “rubber stamp” of Hillary Clinton’s agenda.

The GOP resources, along with Republicans’ efforts to distance themselves from Trump, could help limit losses in November.

In a recent Wall Street Journal/NBC News poll, generic congressional Republicans were down just 2 percentage points to Democrats, a sign to some Republicans that voters could distinguish between congressional Republicans and Trump.

But a continued Trump slide would be difficult for most Republicans to outpace.

Among likely voters, Trump trails Clinton 50 to 38 percent in a new ABC News poll released Sunday, his lowest level of support to date in an ABC News/Washington Post survey.

That same poll found the share of registered Republicans likely to vote is down 7 points since mid-October, a trend that could hurt down-ballot candidates who need the support of moderate suburban Republicans and Trump-supporting conservatives alike.

GOP operative Brian Walsh said Trump could be depressing GOP turnout with his unsubstantiated claims about the election being rigged.

“That language is not just harmful to the democratic process; it’s harmful to the Republican Party,” he told ABC News.

Still, Democrats would need a near-clean sweep of every competitive district to take back the House. Just 15 races are pure tossups, according to an ABC News analysis of the House races. (Another 24 lean Republican and 15 lean Democrat.)

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., told reporters last week she feels “pretty good” about the House map, predicting a “single-digit” majority either way.

A slim majority could spell trouble for Ryan and other GOP leaders, who would be leading a conference with a higher percentage of hardliners skeptical of compromising with Democrats on even the most routine pieces of legislation.

“We need to have a healthy majority and a strong majority,” Ryan recently told the Wall Street Journal’s editorial page. “If we have a razor-thin majority then every vote can be problematic. Every vote on everything can be difficult.”

Copyright © 2016, ABC Radio. All rights reserved.

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