California Democrats with lots of seniority are expected to dominate the leadership of the U.S. House of Representatives if their party flips 23 Republican House seats on Tuesday.

Despite the shocking news that the Rasmussen Reports Generic Congressional Ballot on Monday rated Republicans leading with “likely midterm voters” for the first time by 46 percent to the Democrats’ 45 percent, California’s Democrat House delegation is busy jockeying to gain powerful leadership positions if the Democrats flip House control.

The average of the top ten polls still shows Democrats with a +7.3 point lead in the last 24 hours before the polls close. Polls show Democrats favored in 202 House seats and Republican favored in 194 seats. House control of 218 seats is expected to be resolved by the outcome in 33 Republican and 6 Democrat seats that are rated a “toss-up.”

California Democrats hold 39 of their Party’s 193 House seats, or over 20 percent. The polls favor the California Democrat delegation expanding by flipping one to five GOP seats.

The San Francisco Chronicle predicts the state’s leadership in a Democrat House to include:

The other powerful position that California Democrats will lobby their Party to fill is Chair of the House Foreign Relations Committee, which is being vacated by retiring 13-term Republican member Ed Royce (R-Fullerton).

The wild card in the 2018 U.S. House midterm elections is the spillover from President Trump’s wildly successful 40-day barnstorming tour to pick up U.S. Senate Seats. Despite the conventional wisdom that the President should have campaigned on strong jobs and wage growth, Trump has successfully pounded away at Democrats’ support of sanctuary cities and the Central American caravans moving toward the U.S border as a wedge issue to speak to the concerns of suburban women in seven tight U.S. Senate races.

Polls show Republicans favored to gain one to three U.S. Senate seats. Control of the U.S. House will depend on the effectiveness of the spillover from the President’s message to suburban women voters in districts where he did not campaign.