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Companies should prepare now for 2027 oversight
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Companies should prepare now for 2027 oversight

The Hill · Jun 30, 2026, 4:30 PM

Key takeaways

  • Capitol dome on Capitol Hill in Washington, Monday, April 13, 2026.
  • It may be tempting to look back to late 2018, when the House flipped after two years of the first Trump administration.
  • We were on the Hill then, working for committee and subcommittee chairs with ambitious aims, and we remember how it went.

Why this matters: political developments that affect policy direction and public trust.

A view of the U.S. Capitol dome on Capitol Hill in Washington, Monday, April 13, 2026. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite) Should control of Congress change hands in this election, expect a rapid shift in oversight priorities at the start of 2027. A Democratic majority in either chamber will throttle up investigations of the administration and anyone doing business with it, alongside a legislative agenda broad enough to pull in a range of other industries. We say this drawing on our years designing and implementing oversight efforts and advising the members who led them.

It may be tempting to look back to late 2018, when the House flipped after two years of the first Trump administration. But count on big differences in how a Democratic majority carries out its agenda this time.

We were on the Hill then, working for committee and subcommittee chairs with ambitious aims, and we remember how it went. New chairs ran an outdated playbook, pressing ahead with their own agendas, on their own schedules with overlapping topics, often competing for coverage. Subpoenas to administration officials met stiff resistance, languished in litigation, or were ignored outright. The result? Nearly a year of oversight attempts that gained little ground until the revelations leading to the first impeachment forced committees to align around one investigative priority.

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