From NYT/Yahoo:
“Who Will Win the Battle for
Congress? Four Scenarios.”
Just about anything is still
possible in this year’s midterm elections. Everything from a Democratic hold in
the Senate and a fairly close race for the House to something like a Republican
rout is well within the range of realistic possibilities on Tuesday. Why such a
wide range? With so many races on edge, it wouldn’t take much for the final
outcome to feel very good, or very bad, for either party. In the Senate, the
races likeliest to decide control remain exceptionally close, with the poll
averages showing essentially a dead-heat in Georgia, Pennsylvania, Nevada,
Arizona and even New Hampshire. With just a few lucky breaks, either party
could win control. There’s a similar story in the House. While Republicans are
favored to win the chamber, dozens of races are tossups. It wouldn’t take much
for Democrats to keep the race fairly close, perhaps delaying a call on House
control for many hours or perhaps even days. On the other hand, it wouldn’t
take much for Republicans to pick up dozens of seats, leaving the impression
that 2022 was something like a wave election. There is also the possibility of
more surprising outcomes: a true Republican landslide or a Democratic hold on
Congress. The polls have been wrong before. The voters, after all, have the
final say. Here’s an overview of what might still happen — how it might happen,
why so much remains possible, and what signs to look for on election night.
Scenario 1: The Clear
Republican Win With five critical Senate races and dozens of House races
looking like tossups, even some random breaks could give Republicans something
that feels like a rout: control of the Senate and a big gain in the House. The
election could still be fairly close. It might still take days to resolve. But
it wouldn’t take much for the final scoreboard to look more like a rout than a
close and competitive race. In almost every critical race, the final New York
Times/Siena College polls suggested that voters preferred Republican control of
Congress and disapproved of President Joe Biden’s performance, but Democrats
often had the advantage of incumbency or Republicans had the disadvantage of an
unpopular candidate. But Republicans could quickly have a great night if
even a small share of voters swallows their doubts about unpopular nominees or
discards their warm feelings about longtime Democratic incumbents. Another
factor is turnout, especially in the House races in states with less
competitive races at the top of the ticket. It might be enough for Republicans
to scratch out a few extra wins. It might take a long time before a
clear Republican success becomes a certainty. It might take days before
critical races in Arizona, Pennsylvania and Nevada are resolved. Georgia might
take until December, if no candidate clears the 50% necessary to avoid a
runoff. But on Tuesday night, the signs of a clear Republican win might
start to pile up. Republicans would quickly register comfortable wins in North
Carolina, Florida and Ohio. New Hampshire might be close, even if the Democrats
pull it out. Wisconsin would be in the Republican column by bedtime. A series
of crucial House districts in the Southeast, like North Carolina’s 13th
Congressional District and Virginia’s 2nd, might swing into the Republican
column. The odds of Democrats holding on in the pivotal but slower-counting
states would start to look pretty bleak.
Scenario 2: The
Feels-Like-a-Win for Democrats Democrats cling to a five-seat majority in
the House, but if they get a few breaks, the night might leave them with a lot
to feel good about — even if the scoreboard shows the Republicans gaining seats
and taking the House. It might even feel like a Democratic win, given how the
polls have trended toward Republicans in recent weeks. This
feels-like-a-win mainly comes down to holding control of the Senate. To hold
the chamber, the party will probably need to win three of the four most
critical races: Pennsylvania, Georgia, Arizona and Nevada. Democrats
would start to feel a lot better if they could add a few more feel-good wins to
the ledger, like beating “stop the steal” Republican candidates for governor in
Pennsylvania and Arizona, or a victory for abortion rights in Michigan. It
might just be enough for Democrats to take a glass-half-full perspective on the
2022 election, provided the party also holds down its House losses and can save
face by avoiding embarrassingly close races in blue states and districts, such
as for governor of New York or for the Senate from Washington. The
Democratic path to an acceptable night counts on voters who will back the
candidate they know and like most, even if they don’t love the idea of having
Democrats control the Senate. Staving off embarrassment will also require
Democrats to turn out in states far removed from the national spotlight — the
states where the Senate isn’t at stake, where abortion is not on the ballot,
and where no stop-the-steal candidate has a realistic chance of winning
statewide. It will take a long time before it becomes clear that
Democrats are on track for a feels-like-a-win. There’s a distinct chance that
none of the key Senate races will be called on election night. Democrats will
start to feel optimistic on Tuesday night if they can stay close in states such
as Ohio, Wisconsin and North Carolina, and hold the key East Coast House races.
They might even get outright excited if Mark Kelly opens up a wide lead in
Arizona’s increasingly Democratic early mail vote.
Scenario 3: The Republican
Landslide If the polls underestimate the Republicans again, the result of
this year’s midterms won’t just feel like a Republican landslide — it will be a
Republican landslide. A “red wave” election would not be a surprise; nor
would it be hard to explain. Biden’s approval ratings are stuck in the low 40s,
a figure as low or lower than Donald Trump’s approval ratings in 2018, Bill
Clinton’s in 1994 and Barack Obama’s in 2010. In each case, the party out of
power gained 40 or more House seats and won the House national popular vote by
around 7 percentage points or more. With Republicans making steady gains in the
polls, it does not take any great imagination to see them stretching out a more
decisive lead. It’s tempting to think a decisive Republican victory
isn’t possible in such a polarized country, especially because Democrats have
won the national vote in seven of the last eight presidential elections. But
just last November, Republicans won the Virginia governor’s race by 2
percentage points — exactly the kind of showing that would be equivalent to a
red wave nationwide. The red wave doesn’t necessarily require the
surveys to be systematically biased in the same ways they were two years ago,
although that very well might happen. It may require only that undecided voters
decide, as they often have, to use their vote as a check on the party of the
president, regardless of their feelings about individual Democratic incumbents.
Or maybe it would take an unexpectedly strong Republican turnout on Election
Day, while young, Black and Hispanic voters stay home in greater numbers than
they did in 2018. On Tuesday night, if Republicans are headed for a
landslide, the signs would be obvious from the start. Not only would Sen. Marco
Rubio and Gov. Ron DeSantis cruise to victory in Florida, where votes are
counted quickly, but safe Democratic House incumbents in South Florida — even
the well-known former Democratic National Committee chair Debbie
Wasserman-Schultz — might find themselves in surprisingly close races. Farther
north, Republicans would easily flip the key tossup districts in Virginia and
North Carolina, but also advance even further into blue territory — flipping
Virginia’s 7th, held by Abigail Spanberger, while endangering the next tier of
safer Democratic incumbents, such as Jennifer Wexton. The Senate races in North
Carolina and Ohio would not be close. It might still be a long time
until we see a call in the Senate, but in this scenario Herschel Walker would
have a chance to clear the 50% necessary to win outright and avoid a runoff in
Georgia. A Republican win in the Senate race in New Hampshire would seal the
deal.
Scenario 4: A Democratic
Surprise A surprising Democratic night — a hold in the House and the Senate
— is unlikely. With polls trending toward Republicans, the outcome feels even
harder to imagine than the word “unlikely” suggests. But it does remain
within the realm of possibility: Democrats are still within striking distance
of a good night. Unlike in previous cycles, they remain competitive in enough
races to win control of the House. And not only do Democrats remain competitive
in the race for the Senate, but they also have upside potential for a good
night: Upsets remain possible in states such as Wisconsin, Ohio and North
Carolina, even if Republicans are plainly favored. By any historical
perspective, it would be hard to explain if the Democrats managed to hold both
chambers of Congress. No president with an approval rating under 50% has seen
his party gain House seats in a midterm election, dating to the dawn of modern
polling. But this is not an ordinary moment in American history. Partisan
polarization is extreme. Many Democratic voters perceive that democracy is
under threat. Others are furious about the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn
Roe v. Wade. In another midterm election, these voters might have stayed home.
This cycle, they may well vote. And a critical sliver of voters dissatisfied
with Biden and Democrats might feel they have no choice but to vote against
Republicans. Democratic strength among highly educated voters would most
likely be a critical part of any upset. Not only are these voters well
represented in key battleground districts, but they’re also likelier to make up
a larger share of the electorate in a low-turnout midterm election. It’s a
tendency that might cut against the usual pattern for the president’s party to
suffer from low turnout. At the same time, Democrats would need relatively
disaffected elements of their party’s base — Black, Hispanic and young voters —
to come home down the stretch. The possibility of the polls erring in
this way might also seem hard to imagine. After all, polls have underestimated
Republicans in recent cycles. But historically, there isn’t much of a
relationship between polling error in one election and the next. The pollsters
who did poorly either adjust or drop out. The pollsters who did well one year
feel emboldened the next. And that does seem to be happening this cycle. The
traditional pollsters who underestimated Republicans the most in 2020 have
significantly reduced their polling this cycle or stopped altogether. Other
pollsters are doing everything they can to ensure a more Republican-leaning
sample, including by means that would have been scorned a few years ago. And
then there’s the flood of state polls by Republican firms, showing eye-popping
results such as a Republican lead for New York governor. All of this may
add up to far more accurate polling averages than in 2020. But if pollsters
overcorrect — or if the balance of pollsters has shifted too far toward the
Republican-leaning outfits — there would be a chance that the polls
underestimate Democrats. Indeed, many traditional polls still show signs
of Democratic strength. To take one recent example: Marist College released
polls showing Democrats ahead in Pennsylvania and Arizona, and leading among
registered voters in Georgia. Siena College showed Democrats faring quite well
in several critical House races in New York state that one might have thought
were leaning toward Republicans in this national environment. On Tuesday
night, if Democrats are on track to greatly exceed expectations, the signs
would show up pretty early. The Senate races in North Carolina, Wisconsin and
Ohio will all largely be decided on election night. If Democrats remain highly
competitive in all three or even win one, it will be a clear sign that this
isn’t the simple Republican win that analysts long expected.
^ I hope that whomever wins
tomorrow, whomever carries the US Senate, whomever carries the US House, whomever
runs the States will do one thing: help the American People. That is the most important
thing. After that I hope we continue to help Ukraine and stop countries like:
Russia, China, North Korea, Syria and Iran from continuing to wreck havoc around
the globe. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/news/win-battle-congress-four-scenarios-133111571.html
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