You’ve been elect­ed to Con­gress. Now what? Fresh­man Repub­li­can reveals what it’s like to enter office

Rep.-elect Ryan Macken­zie, R‑Penn., says enter­ing office is like a “whirl­wind” as Repub­li­can lead­er­ship pre­pare the fresh­man class of law­mak­ers to hit the ground run­ning in Jan­u­ary.

Macken­zie, who oust­ed Demo­c­ra­t­ic incum­bent Rep. Susan Wild to gain his seat, told Fox News Dig­i­tal in an inter­view that his expe­ri­ence from mul­ti­ple terms in the Penn­syl­va­nia House of Rep­re­sen­ta­tives has proven invalu­able in these open­ing weeks.

Incom­ing House mem­bers of both par­ties – this cycle it’s 57 new mem­bers – vis­it Wash­ing­ton bare­ly a week after win­ning their elec­tions for a fresh­man ori­en­ta­tion that Macken­zie says makes it seem “just like it’s any oth­er job.”

“You go through ethics train­ing, HR train­ing, cyber­se­cu­ri­ty train­ing to make sure that you’re gonna pro­tect your infor­ma­tion and the data that is so crit­i­cal and sen­si­tive for our­selves and our con­stituents and every­body else,” Macken­zie said.

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Macken­zie said new law­mak­ers also have to get up to speed on leg­is­la­tion pass­ing through Con­gress or leg­is­la­tion that soon will be, all while set­ting up and staffing their Capi­tol Hill offices.

“Some peo­ple have called it that you’re build­ing a small busi­ness when you’re run­ning a con­gres­sion­al staff and office net­worked across your dis­trict and in Wash­ing­ton, D.C., but you’re build­ing that in a very short peri­od of time,” he said.

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Macken­zie also offered a look at the Repub­li­can game plan for when they take over Con­gress in Jan­u­ary, say­ing the par­ty is set to be far more effec­tive than the open­ing months of the first Trump admin­is­tra­tion.

Repub­li­can law­mak­ers heard from both their con­gres­sion­al lead­er­ship and Pres­i­dent-elect Trump about what the par­ty’s pri­or­i­ties will be come Jan­u­ary.

“With the House, the Sen­ate and the White House all lined up, we have a great oppor­tu­ni­ty, but it’s still incred­i­bly dif­fi­cult to get things done,” Macken­zie said, not­ing that law­mak­ers have to come to an agree­ment on the spe­cif­ic solu­tions to the cam­paign issues they ran on, name­ly low­er­ing the cost of liv­ing and stem­ming the flow of ille­gal immi­gra­tion.

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“I feel very con­fi­dent that we’re going to hit the ground run­ning in those first 30–100 days in Con­gress,” he said. “It’s not going to be like it was the first time when Don­ald Trump came into office and peo­ple were maybe shocked and did­n’t real­ly have their act togeth­er. It’s much dif­fer­ent this time around.”

Macken­zie went on to argue that han­dling the issues of cost of liv­ing and ille­gal immi­gra­tion “go hand-in-hand in a lot of ways.” He stat­ed that mass ille­gal immi­gra­tion dri­ves up the cost of hous­ing and health care. He nev­er­the­less not­ed that low­er­ing costs was con­sis­tent­ly the top pri­or­i­ty for vot­ers in polls, fol­lowed close­ly by the bor­der cri­sis.

“We need to make sure we’re address­ing these things in tan­dem,” he said. “It’s about how can we best get both of these things actu­al­ly across the goal line and through a House, a Sen­ate and signed into law by the pres­i­dent.”