Fresh off the second weekend of nationwide protests against President Donald Trump, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee has released its initial list of Republican-held seats it plans to target in 2018.

The House Democrats’ campaign arm is banking on Trump’s unpopularity being a drag on down-ballot Republicans, even though many GOP incumbents proved resilient to efforts to tie them to Trump in 2016. Democrats gained a net of six seats last November.

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Of the 59 seats the DCCC says it is targeting as of now, Trump carried at least eight of them by 15 points or more, according to calculations by Daily Kos Elections.

That includes deep-red territory like Alabama’s 2nd District, currently held by Rep. Martha Roby, which Trump won by 32 points. Roby could be interested in replacing Sen. Jeff Sessions if he’s confirmed as attorney general. Her opposition to Trump last fall and her relatively close re-election, thanks to a write-in challenger from the right, sparked early chatter about a possible contested GOP primary in 2018.