Posted on 10/27/2014 6:18:48 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
Election Day 2014 is just eight days away, but control of the Senate may not be known for two more months.
Observers and pundits on both sides expect Louisiana's Senate race to go to a December runoff between Democratic Sen. Mary Landrieu and GOP Rep. Bill Cassidy.
However, less attention is being paid to Amanda Swafford, the Georgia Libertarian who could deny Senate candidates in her state a required 50-percent majority on Election Day.
Georgia's runoff wouldn't occur until Jan. 6, the day after the new Congress is set to meet. Could these Southern states block the one thing every election watcher truly wants: a clear answer on the morning of Nov. 5?
The runoffs pose challenges for both parties not just coordinating logistics and new spending, but motivating volunteers and voters all over again along with crafting an effective message and strategy under untested and unusual circumstances.
The uncertainty, however, is a nightmare scenario that could throw the Senate into chaos and cause continued gridlock at a time when Congress must again pass a government funding bill to pick up when the current stopgap measure expires on Dec. 11.
With Landrieu failing to break 50 percent in every single public poll of the race, Democrats have been forced to confront reality and recently placed a $2.1 million buy for after the midterms. Major Democratic groups, like Senate Majority PAC, EMILYs List and SEIU, are all expected to play in the runoff as well.
Republicans, meanwhile have laid down at least $10.5 million in runoff airtime reservations. The National Republican Senatorial Committee reserved $3.4 million for the runoff, and a number of major GOP spending groups have put down reservations as well, including the NRA, which reserved over $1 million; Ending Spending, which has $2.5 million for the runoff; Crossroads GPS, with another $2.1 million reserved and Freedom Partners, which made another $1.5 million reservation.
Landrieus best bet in the runoff is if Democrats hold the Senate without her.
If the Senate is going to be in Democratic hands regardless, then she's got a case to make Do you want to fire the chair of Energy Committee? said Bob Mann, a Louisiana State University political analyst and former Senate staffer.
But if her party has already lost control, that question central in Landrieus pitch to voters will ring hollow.
If Louisiana is the deciding vote, Republicans say it will become even easier to make the race about President Obama and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.), an outcome Landrieus long been trying to avoid.
She wants this race not to be nationalized, about her clout for Louisiana, not the national climate, said Louisiana Republican Party Executive Director Jason Dore.
Both parties in Georgia say they're aiming for an outright win, though Republicans feel better than Democrats about what would happen in a runoff.
It was difficult to win a runoff in Georgia for a Democrat. Its even worse now because the runoff period has become so extended, former Georgia Secretary of State Cathy Cox (D) told The Hill on Thursday, saying there was no question that Nunn has a better shot winning on Nov. 4 than she would on Jan. 6.
Strategists in both parties also expect Libertarian Amanda Swafford's share of the vote to shrink to between 2 and 3 percent by election day, which Republicans say benefits them.
"The Libertarian's going to poll some votes. But I know this: I've been on the statewide ballot four times, been in four statewide races, the last two for the Senate, where 2.4 or 2.5 percent of the vote was Libertarian and the rest was Democrat and Republican," Sen. Johnny Isakson (R-Ga.) told The Hill on Friday.
"The Libertarian vote tends to compress as it gets closer to the election. As that happens it's going to be which way people break. And more often than not, they break to the more conservative side rather than to the liberal side, the senator argued.
But if the margin separating Nunn and Perdue is slimmer than the margin of votes Swafford draws which is what every poll out last week showed the top two will meet again three months after Election Day.
Unlike Louisiana, neither party has yet begun serious preparations for a runoff in Georgia.
"We are focused on November 4th, we are doing everything we can to win," said Nunn spokesman Nathan Click. "All of our energy is focused on November 4."
Both parties have said theyll keep their ground operations and volunteer armies in place for however long it takes. Georgia Republican Party spokesman Ryan Mahoney said their 17 field offices and 1,000 grassroots leaders throughout the state will remain up and running
When they signed up they knew it was victory at all costs, he said.
But Republicans are somewhat less confident of a runoff victory in Georgia than they are in Louisiana.
Past precedent favors Perdue in the runoff Republicans have always tended to expand their margin significantly in the second round of voting in the Peach State.
But Democrats note that Perdue has been his own worst enemy in the race, making multiple gaffes about his business career that have contributed to his drop in popularity. They believe three more months on the campaign trail only offers more opportunity for missteps, and more time for them to educate Georgians on Perdues background.
Wed happily welcome three more months to tell voters about how proud David Perdue is of his career spent outsourcing jobs and laying off workers, one Georgia Democratic operative said.
Republicans admit while their supporters are more enthusiastic than Democrats, turning them out to the polls during an oddly-scheduled runoff election may be more of a challenge.
Ford OConnell, a GOP strategist who worked on Sen. Saxby Chambliss (R-Ga.) 2008 runoff, noted Democratic voters are typically consolidated around urban centers, but Republicans are scattered throughout the states rural areas.
It's probably easier if you're a Democrat to round up the voters than it is for Republicans, he said.
Thats where enthusiasm for Republicans, in both states, becomes paramount. OConnell noted that in 2002 Chambliss brought in high-powered surrogates to draw attention to his candidacy, a tactic that becomes even more important when the fight is drawn out over three months.
No matter what happens on Nov. 4, however, both parties will keep up a fierce fight for the remaining one or two seats.
Even if theyve already lost the majority, Democrats will still want to narrow any GOP gains to make their path back to control easier in two years. Republicans, meanwhile, are already looking towards the 2016 Senate fight, when presidential-level turnout and a tougher map make it possible that they'll lose control of the Senate just one cycle after they won it back.
If you look going forward in 2016, the map is very different, Dore said. From everything I've been told, [national Republicans] are committed to winning regardless of what the opportunity is for Senate control.
Cameron Joseph contributed reporting from Atlanta, Ga.
Libertarians are the Democrats’ allies. Bill Clinton wouldn’t have been president without the Independent candidacy of Roll Perot.
Senate control in limbo until 2015? [we need to lock this down NOW!]
The GOP would be doing themselves a big favor if the had a moratorium on all talk of 2016 until after this election.
Need those two, 2016 will be difficult to hold. We need some cushion.
Libertarians helping Democrats win elections?? Say it isn’t so!!! /sarc
Louisiana is headed for a runoff and a likely pork-laden Landrieu “comeback” if Rob Maness continues his presence on the ballot.
exactly
So, Thad Cochran in Mississippi gets the go-ahead?
I recall a lot of hand wringing after the primary. Oh, but now all is forgotten.
In 2002, Mary Landrieu was in a “Run-off”. She was outspent, out polled and the under dog. She pulled out a victory. We do NOT need a Run-off. The way to avoid a LA run-off is for the phony RINO, Bill Cassidy, to drop out and endorse the Conservative candidate, Lt. Col. Rob Maness.
How The Ferguson Effect Could Tip The Balance In The U.S. Senate
http://thinkprogress.org/election/2014/10/27/3584572/how-ferguson-is-influencing-georgias-elections/
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