A somewhat overlooked battle is raging in 14 states which
may determine the future of our country during the next 4 years. The United States Senate’s
composition will be determined on November 6th, not just
the Presidency. Simply stated if the Republicans
pick up a net of 3 Senate seats and Romney wins, Ryan, as vice president will
cast the deciding vote should a tie vote occur in the chamber; since each party
would tenuously control 50 senate seats.
More importantly a net of 4 Republican wins is needed to capture a
majority, ending the bifurcation of congress, and put the party in a strong
negotiating position should Obama win or in a substantial supporting role
should Romney prevail.
On the surface a Republican majority in
the 2012 election appeared likely.
Democrats had to defend 21 seats, Republicans 10, and Independents just
2. The Independents, Joe Lieberman of Connecticut
and Bernie Sanders of Vermont, caucus with Democrats giving them a 53 to 47
majority. Inside-the-beltway pundits
have voiced in their ‘elitist’ tone that Republican victories in 4 races
without a reversal elsewhere is heresy…Obama, the narratives speculate, will
lead a tsunami against Romney and Senate candidates down the ticket will be
anointed with his largesse. A similar
insistence, in the press, of the unraveling
of the Republican Senate takeover advantage is gaining steam. Numerous Senate race assessments have been
posited purporting objectivity without presenting a basis for the analysis or
conclusions (e.g. NYT-Battle for
the Senate).
Without media-like hyperventilation numerous
factors can be predictive of victory…a scarcity of variables certainly doesn’t
exist. This evaluation will focus on just
six, they include: (1) The national
economy & race’s state economy,
(2) The political nature of the state, i.e.
Red [Republican], Blue [Democrat], and TU [Tossup], (3) The President’s approval rating,
above 50% positive for a Democrat, below 50% positive for a Republican, (4) The
incumbent’s current
approval rating, >50% good, <50% not good, (5) Obama’s foreign policy/defense posture, and (6)
the RCP’s average Senate
poll ratings. The election will be influenced by whether an incumbent or open seat is being contested…the
difference should be obvious...the incumbent has the edge. In half of
the 14 races being reviewed the contested seat
is open and 9 of the states can be described as Red or TU, a slight
advantage for the minority party. Many
predictors include Arizona, Indiana and Hawaii in their Senate prediction models;
since an upset could impact control…this writer believes no upsets will occur.
High
confidence Republican wins:
Nebraska-Deb Fischer (R) benefits from
a solid state economy, very conservative attitudes, RCP polling at +13%, a
Republican governor, and high disapproval of Obama. This battle is a slam dunk for
Republicans.
North Dakota-Rick Berg (R) is jousting with Heidi Heitkamp (D) for
the open seat. Berg has the advantages;
a sizzling economy, an overwhelmingly Red state, a Republican governor, a
consistent RCP lead in excess of 5%, very high disapproval of Obama, consistent
personal approval above 50%…end of the discussion…Berg in a walk.
Wisconsin-The
state has garnered headlines due to deep divisions culminating in a recall
election which saw Scott Walker (R) prevail.
Paul Ryan has received his share of headlines too. The hubbub has masked the Senate contest
between former governor Tommy Thompson (R) and Tammy Baldwin (D), a first time
statewide candidate. Thompson has more
than a few advantages; Wisconsin’s improving economy, a decreasing unemployment rate,
past success as a very popular governor, a positive rating above 50%, while
Obama’s is 48%. Thompson leads in the
polls (recent declines while raising money), can call on a battle tested
Republican ground organization and has never lost a statewide election. Tommy Thompson wins going away.
Probable
Republican Wins:
Montana-Denny Rehberg (R) has shown
surprising strength against Jon Testor (D) the incumbent. Jon Testor has leveraged his incumbency through
moderation in a Red presidential and statehouse state. Rehberg has a down-to-earth, highly energetic
style. He has consistently led Testor in
the RCP polling averages by up to 5%; the state has a strong economy but a fear
of regulation and the EPA. Rehberg uses
Obama’s un-favorability (41%) and Romney’s popularity (52%) effectively, and
exhibits a deft touch citing foreign policy concerns. Rehberg will win but narrowly.
Nevada-An
insurrection is brewing in the state.
The state has a party registration favorable to Democrat Shelley Berkley,
yet the state’s unemployment rate leads the nation, has immigration issues,
budget and deficit problems. Dean Heller
(R) has led Berkley in the RCP average polls by up to 9% and now leads 47.3% to
42.0%. Berkley is under investigation
which gives Heller the edge. Heller wins in a pro-Obama, Democrat state.
Horse-races with possibilities:
Florida-The state put simply is up for
grabs. The incumbent is Senator Bill
Nelson (D) whose re-election is saddled with a troubled economy, high
unemployment, and foreclosures. The challenger,
Connie Mack (R), the son of a former popular Florida politician, is gaining momentum
based on recent RCP average polls. Obama’s
approval rating ranges from 45-48% well below his 2008 levels. This TU state has a TU senate contest.
Virginia-The
match pits George Allen (R), a former senator, against Tim Kaine (D), the
former governor. A victory will turn on
Obama’s policies and ideology. Unemployment
is quite low due to government, gradually the state has moved toward Red, Obama’s
approval is 46-49% but has not exceeded 50% since mid-2011, thus Allen’s miniscule
lead in the RCP polling average of .5%.
The race is leaning marginally Republican. Anyone’s guess…a tossup. Republicans are betting that either Florida
or Virginia adds a seat to their pickups.
Republican long shots:
Massachusetts-The
contest is a donnybrook; Scott Brown (R), the incumbent, verses Elizabeth
Warren (D). Elizabeth Warren, a devotee
of the very liberal/progressive left, has claimed Native American heritage to
gain an employment preference and subscribes to the ‘you didn’t build that’
philosophy. Nevertheless, Warren has a
4% lead in the RCP average polling…very volatile polling. Warren has a significant democrat registration
majority, an Obama approval rating over 55%, a decent economy and an anti-war/defense
constituency. Scott Brown needs a second
miracle…although he did it once…can lightning strike twice?
Connecticut-Linda
McMahon (R) is leading in the RCP average polling (after eliminating the
outliers) by 3-4% over Chris Murphy (D).
Murphy is running his 1st statewide race with personal
financial problems haunting him. The state has a stagnant
economy with high intractable unemployment, an unpopular Democrat
governor and exhibits a large democrat registration edge. Murphy’s approval rating is below 50%, but
Obama’s is 52%. McMahon’s campaign, which
is personally funded, has kept Murphy on the defensive, sells McMahon as a job creator
& grandmother and literally knocks on doors to ask for votes. Support to date has been steady and insiders
say growing slowly. In this writer’s judgment,
Bridgeport voter shenanigans aside, this is an ‘upset’ special in a very Blue
state.
Missouri-Claire McCaskill (D), whose approval rating is less than
50%, is leading Todd Akin (R) in a leaning Red state, with a less than robust
economy, an Obama approval rating hovering at 42-43%, and an unemployment rate
at roughly the national average…the reason is Akin’s well documented insensitive
comment. Before the comment McCaskill’s
epitaph was being written. McCaskill
wins…the Republicans give one away.
Republican loses:
Ohio-Sherrod
Brown (D) defeats Josh Mandell (R);
Michigan-Debbie
Stabenow (D) defeats Pete Hoekstra (R);
New
Mexico-Martin Heinrich (D) defeats Heather Wilson (R); and in
Maine-Angus King (I) defeats Charles
Summers (R).
All of these states are Blue except Ohio which is TU, The Democrat easily leads the Republican by
7-10% in the RCP average polls, unemployment is below the national mean
(Michigan excepted), the state economies have all improved slightly to
moderately (except Michigan), and Obama’s approval rating is 48-51%, in every
case higher than Romney’s.
The arithmetic is straight forward;
Republicans could conceivably gain 7 seats culminating in a reversal of their
present disadvantage of 53 to 47 seats.
A more coherent estimate of the election’s outcome is the attainment of
4-5 net seats. That means the congress
of the United States will be controlled by Republicans. But continue to pay attention…fluidity will
be the norm over the next 40 plus days.
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