The election is a week from now. It is virtually certain the Republicans will pick up seats in the Senate
and House as well as a few governorships. The question is how many. The key states in the Senate are Nevada,
Colorado, Illinois, West Virginia, and Pennsylvania. Depending on these, the Democrats could end up with
anywhere between 50 and 55 seats in the Senate.
If they lose Washington or California (unlikely at this point), they could dip below the magic 50.
The House is much harder to predict because so many districts
have not been polled at all, and, of those which have been, many of the polls are very old. Predictions from
experienced observers say the GOP will gain between 30 to 50 seats (net). It would take a (net) switch of 39
to flip the House. The "net" is important because the Democrats are likely to win 5 or 6 Republican seats.
Enthusiasm Gap Hard to Measure
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A new poll
conducted for Newsweek by Princeton Survey Research Associates shows that among likely voters
48% prefer
Democrats and 45% prefer Republicans. This result is completely different from all other recent polls, which show an
advantage for generic Republicans over generic Democrats. It is not clear if this is a genuine change in
voter feelings due to intense Democratic campaigning the past few weeks, bad methodology in this poll, or a
meaningless statistical outlier. The same poll also put President Obama's approval rating at 54% (vs. 40%
disapproval). An earlier poll by the same organization put his approval at 48%. This change is more likely to be
genuine since comparing polls from the same organization over time is like comparing pineapples to pineapples,
not pineapples to kumquats (due to the use of the same techniques and methodology). Nevertheless, one poll does
not make a trend.
On the other hand, late in the day, Gallup released a
poll
showing the Republicans ahead among likely voters 9% to 14%. These two polls are hard to reconcile. At least one
of them is clearly wrong, presumably due to poor methodology or a bad demographic model.
Prof. Alan Abramowitz, a professor of political science, has
examined
the crosstabs on recent Gallup polls and found some very implausible data there, such as Republicans leading
Democrats among minority groups. He concludes that Gallup's demographic model may be off.
Preview of 2012 Senate Races
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It's never too early to think about 2012 (or even 2014 or 2016), but let's stop at 2012 for now.
As usual, 1/3 of the Senate
is up for reelection. Here is the list of senators who will face the voters then,
assuming there are no retirements. This is a surprisingly young class, with the
only potential retirement due to age being Sen. Daniel Akaka (D-HI), who will be 88
on election day in 2012. But Hawaii is a fairly dependably Democratic state, so
if he retires, the Democrats are likely to hold the seat anyway.
The list is sorted by the percentage of the vote the senator got at his or her
most recent election.
Montana |
Jon Tester (D) |
49% |
Connecticut |
Joe Lieberman (I) |
50% |
Missouri |
Claire McCaskill (D) |
50% |
Virginia |
Jim Webb (D) |
50% |
Tennessee |
Bob Corker (R) |
51% |
Massachusetts |
Scott Brown (R) |
52% |
Arizona |
Jon Kyl (R) |
53% |
New Jersey |
Bob Menendez (D) |
53% |
Rhode Island |
Sheldon Whitehouse (D) |
53% |
Maryland |
Ben Cardin (D) |
54% |
Mississippi |
Roger Wicker (R) |
55% |
Nevada |
John Ensign (R) |
55% |
Ohio |
Sherrod Brown (D) |
56% |
Michigan |
Debbie Stabenow (D) |
57% |
Washington |
Maria Cantwell (D) |
57% |
Minnesota |
Amy Klobuchar (D) |
58% |
California |
Dianne Feinstein (D) |
59% |
Pennsylvania |
Bob Casey, Jr. (D) |
59% |
Florida |
Bill Nelson (D) |
60% |
Hawaii |
Daniel Akaka (D) |
61% |
Texas |
Kay Bailey Hutchison (R) |
62% |
Utah |
Orrin Hatch (R) |
62% |
Nebraska |
Ben Nelson (D) |
64% |
Vermont |
Bernie Sanders (I) |
65% |
Wisconsin |
Herb Kohl (D) |
67% |
North Dakota |
Kent Conrad (D) |
69% |
Delaware |
Tom Carper (D) |
70% |
New Mexico |
Jeff Bingaman (D) |
71% |
Wyoming |
John Barrasso (R) |
73% |
Maine |
Olympia Snowe (R) |
74% |
Indiana |
Richard Lugar (R) |
87% |
|
New York |
Kirsten Gillibrand (D) or Joe DioGuardi (R) |
? |
West Virginia |
Joe Manchin (D) or John Raese (R) |
? |
Statistically, the Democrats have a problem since they have 19 seats up for sure
(21 if you count Sanders and Lieberman) whereas the Republicans have only 10).
If Kirsten Gillibrand and Joe Manchin win their races, the Democratic caucus
will have 23 seats to defend vs. the Republicans only 10.
All things being equal, the DSCC will have to spread its money much more thinly
than the NRSC.
But another way to look at this is to focus only on the senators who were under 60%
last time. The ones who won in a landslide are probably safe. In the 59-and-under club,
we find 12 Democrats (13 if you count Lieberman) and only 5 Republicans. This means the Republicans have 12 or 13 potential
pickups and the Democrats only 5.
However, 2012 is a presidential year, and Democratic turnout is high then, so the Democratic incumbents
will be running in a good environment. Furthermore, all of them did win last time, so they
have demonstrated they can win, albeit by a small margin in some cases.
Today's Polls: AZ CO CT FL GA IL IN SC WV CA-20 HI-01 HI-02 MA-04 MA-10 MI-01 OR-01 OR-05 SD-AL
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Arizona |
Rodney Glassman |
38% |
John McCain* |
56% |
|
|
Oct 23 |
Oct 24 |
PPP |
Colorado |
Michael Bennet* |
47% |
Ken Buck |
47% |
|
|
Oct 21 |
Oct 23 |
PPP |
Connecticut |
Richard Blumenthal |
56% |
Linda McMahon |
43% |
|
|
Oct 24 |
Oct 24 |
Rasmussen |
Florida |
Kendrick Meek |
18% |
Marco Rubio |
40% |
Charlie Crist |
33% |
Oct 18 |
Oct 21 |
Zogby |
Georgia |
Mike Thurmond |
34% |
Johnny Isakson* |
58% |
|
|
Oct 21 |
Oct 24 |
SurveyUSA |
Illinois |
Alexi Giannoulias |
41% |
Mark Kirk |
44% |
|
|
Oct 18 |
Oct 22 |
Chicago Tribune |
Indiana |
Brad Ellsworth |
35% |
Dan Coats |
53% |
|
|
Oct 19 |
Oct 21 |
EPIC MRA |
South Carolina |
Alvin Greene |
21% |
Jim DeMint* |
58% |
|
|
Oct 19 |
Oct 19 |
Rasmussen |
West Virginia |
Joe Manchin |
50% |
John Raese |
44% |
|
|
Oct 23 |
Oct 24 |
PPP |
CA-20 |
Jim Costa* |
42% |
Andy Vidak |
52% |
|
|
Oct 21 |
Oct 24 |
SurveyUSA |
HI-01 |
Colleen Hanabusa |
45% |
Charles Djou* |
48% |
|
|
Oct 12 |
Oct 19 |
Ward Research |
HI-02 |
Mazie Hirono* |
77% |
John Willoughby |
16% |
|
|
Oct 12 |
Oct 19 |
Ward Research |
MA-04 |
Barney Frank* |
46% |
Sean Bielat |
33% |
|
|
Oct 17 |
Oct 22 |
U. of New Hampshire |
MA-10 |
Bill Keating |
37% |
Jeff Perry |
33% |
|
|
Oct 17 |
Oct 22 |
U. of New Hampshire |
MI-01 |
Gary McDowell |
40% |
Dan Benishek |
42% |
|
|
Oct 17 |
Oct 18 |
EPIC MRA |
OR-01 |
David Wu* |
51% |
Rob Cornilles |
38% |
|
|
Oct 18 |
Oct 21 |
Elway Poll |
OR-05 |
Kurt Schrader* |
50% |
Scott Bruun |
38% |
|
|
Oct 18 |
Oct 21 |
Elway Poll |
SD-AL |
Stephanie Herseth Sandlin* |
42% |
Kristi Noem |
40% |
|
|
Oct 20 |
Oct 22 |
Nelson Brothers |
SD-AL |
Stephanie Herseth Sandlin* |
43% |
Kristi Noem |
45% |
|
|
Oct 20 |
Oct 21 |
Mason Dixon |
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