Posted on 10/20/2018 6:41:51 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
In my previous column, I walked through how the polls are breaking in this years Senate races. To do that, I looked not only at the margin by which candidates lead in the poll averages, but also at the dwindling number of undecided voters. I also noted a problem: Compared with years past, we have remarkably little current public polling in a lot of important races.
The governors races are worse. Many of these are crucial races, yet outside of the Texas governors race, there is not a single governors race in the country that has been polled more than twice this month by reliable public pollsters. And the only reason pollsters have been bothering to confirm Greg Abbotts 19-point lead is because they are already calling Texans to ask about Democratic Senate candidate Beto ORourke. So, as we walk through these races, bear in mind that any one of them could easily be off by a few points in either direction not a big deal if you want to know if heavy favorites Andrew Cuomo or Charlie Baker will be reelected, but a very big deal in neck-and-neck campaigns.
Given the stakes including the outsize role the winners will play in drawing the boundaries for Congress after the 2020 Census we are probably going to be flying half-blind into a lot of crucial races all the way to November 6. But it is still worth examining the data we have.
Red Shirts Everywhere
The first thing to understand about the 2018 governors races is that in sharp contrast to the Senate the map is very unforgiving for Republicans. The Obama presidency saw Republicans dominate governors races: Between 2009 and 2016, Republicans won 66 elections for governor in 38 different states (counting recall and special elections). Democrats won 41 elections in 23 states, and independents won two elections (in Alaska and Rhode Island). Heres a map of the states where only one party won governors races between 2009 and 2016, with the states in gray being won by both parties during that time:
Even after giving back New Jersey at the end of Chris Christies two terms in 2017, Republicans control the governorship in 33 of the 50 states.
If anything, that understates how overextended Republican governorships are. In closely divided Florida, where Rick Scott is running for Senate, theyve held the governorship continuously since Jeb Bush won it in 1998. In Georgia, which is nowhere near as solidly red as its neighbors and likewise has an open seat, the streak goes back to Sonny Perdue in 2002. In Arizona, the winning streak goes back to Jan Brewer in 2010; in Texas, it goes back to George W. Bush in 1994.
Two-term Republican governors are term-limited or retiring in several other purple-to-blue states: Maine, New Mexico, Michigan, Ohio, and Nevada. Republican governors are running for re-election in Massachusetts, Vermont, Illinois, Maryland, New Hampshire, Arizona, and Iowa, and Scott Walker is trying to win his fourth election (counting the 2012 recall) since 2010. None of these are races one would automatically rank as safe seats in a bad environment for the party, and Illinoiss Bruce Rauner faced a stiff primary challenge as well. By contrast, natural pickup opportunities are limited: Of the states Donald Trump won in 2016 that are electing governors this fall, only Alaska (with independent Bill Walker) and Pennsylvania do not already have Republican governors.
Three Republican incumbents (in Iowa, Alabama, and South Carolina) were lieutenant governors elevated to the job, and are seeking their first independent electoral mandate (Alabamas governor Kay Ivey got the job when the last Republican governor resigned ahead of impeachment proceedings). Even in typically safer territory, Republicans have to replace departing incumbents in Kansas, Tennessee, South Dakota, Oklahoma, Wyoming, and Idaho.
As in the Senate, each party has a couple of well-known recruits for these races, such as congresswoman Kristi Noem (R., S.D.), who already represents the entire state. But many of them have been dented politically. Mike DeWine (R., Ohio) and Mark Begich (D., Alaska) are both former senators who were booted by the voters. Ned Lamont (D., Conn.) lost a Senate race after beating Joe Lieberman in a primary, only to see Lieberman run and win as an independent. Allen Fung (R., R.I.) is seeking a rematch of a race he lost four years ago. The most polarizing recruit is Kansas secretary of state Kris Kobach (R.), who is best known nationally for his role on the Trump administrations widely derided and since-disbanded Presidential Advisory Commission on Election Integrity.
Midterm elections are often a reaction against the party in the White House, as out-of-power partisans are angrier and independents are reminded more often of why they dont belong to the party in power. Under George W. Bush, for example, Democrats picked up six governorships in 2006. Had Hillary Clinton won the 2016 election, Republicans may have been looking at some very big gains in the Senate and would almost certainly face no threat of losing their majority in the House. But the dynamics of the governors races always dictated that 2018 would be a hard year for Republicans to avoid losing some ground.
Breaking Down the Polls
How are Republicans weathering this storm? Lets take a look at the current poll averages. As before, I list Trumps approval rating in each state from Morning Consults September monthly tracking poll and use that as a proxy where there are no poll data; Break indicates the percentage of undecideds in the poll average that the Republican would need to win; Last poll lists when the most recent poll went into the field; and Since 10/1 lists how many of the polls in the current RealClearPolitics poll average went into the field on or after October 1:
Start with the clearest good and bad news for Republicans. On the upside, New England is a remarkable bright spot: Charlie Baker is cruising to a landslide reelection in Massachusetts, and Chris Sununu in New Hampshire is comfortably ahead. One other deep-blue Republican incumbent in a similar state, Larry Hogan of Maryland, is sitting equally pretty. Morning Consults latest polling found that the ten most-popular governors in the country were all Republicans, and Baker and Hogan led that list (Oklahomas Mary Fallin was dead last).
Vermont is harder to call: Even with a Republican incumbent seeking re-election in the deepest of blue states (where Trump is 30 points underwater), RCP doesnt list a single poll all year that meets its standards. A September 2326 Democratic poll shows Republican incumbent Phil Scott up 50-42, which the Democrats optimistically spin as a statistical tie . . . well within the 4.9 percent margin of error. Thats not much to go on, but if youre releasing a partisan internal poll that shows your candidate down eight points, youre not winning.
The picture in Maine is foggier. RCP lists only a Suffolk poll from early August with Republican Shawn Moody tied 39-39 (a long way from 50 for either side) with Democrat Janet Mills. FiveThirtyEight lists a few more recent polls of more questionable vintage showing Mills up 41-33 or 52-44 on Moody, while an AARP poll of voters over 50 showed Mills up 39-38. It seems likely that Moody is trailing, as youd expect after two terms of proto-Trump Paul LePage running a long-blue state, but its far too fragmentary evidence to count Moody out just yet. Maine polls often show a lot of undecideds, and LePage typically finished strong, albeit in years when voters were breaking Republican at the end far from a certainty in 2018.
The two other New England races, in Rhode Island and Connecticut, have shown sporadic signs of life, given Connecticuts economic woes under outgoing Democrat Dan Malloy and a restive public-sector-union base in Rhode Island. But even with a fair number of voters still undecided, the Democrats seem likely to survive on the strength of the national environment and the states natural partisan leans.
In three states with hotly contested Senate races incumbents Greg Abbott of Texas and Doug Ducey of Arizona, and businessman Bill Lee in Tennessee Republicans appear to have locked down their races. And in the one really plausible Republican pickup, Alaska, Mike Dunleavy seems to be in command of a three-way field against Walker and Begich. Oregon may be the next-closest pickup opportunity (Democrat Kate Brown, like Reynolds and Ivey, is seeking her first mandate after her predecessor resigned in scandal), but remains a long shot in a state that has eluded Republicans since the 1990s.
On the downside for Republicans, New Mexico and Michigan look like predictably lost causes, albeit ones without terribly recent polling; Pennsylvania is as uncompetitive a Democratic hold as it is in the Senate; Bruce Rauner is doomed in Illinois (an incumbent below 30 percent support in September is toast), and the same Midwest malaise we see in the Senate races means that Minnesota is uncompetitive, DeWine is in a hole in Ohio, and the hard-to-bury Scott Walker is in his hardest fight yet. If youre a Republican looking for a ray of hope, the most recent gold-standard Marquette poll had Walker up 47-46, but NBC/Marist responded swiftly with a poll showing him down 53-43, enough to sober up any optimist. Walker shouldnt be counted out, but hes swimming against a brutal tide. We have less to go on with Iowa, with Kim Reynolds and her opponent both in the thirties at last glance and no polls in a month.
Further into the Great Plains and Mountain states, Oklahoma is closer than Republicans would like (due in part to the departing Fallins unpopularity), and theres no polling to speak of in Nebraska, South Dakota, or Idaho. Some Democratic partisan polls have shown a neck-and-neck race in South Dakota, with Noem up four in July and down three in late September, but again we can place only limited stock on those. We should consider both South Dakota and Oklahoma as states reasonably likely to stay in the Republican fold, but both are potential sleeper upsets.
The races that will go down the hardest, besides Wisconsin and Ohio, are Nevada, Georgia, Florida, and Kansas. Of the four, Republicans are most consistently ahead in Georgia and behind in Florida, and the Kansas polling is the least trustworthy, but these are the most toss-up-ish states. Several of them will be especially important nationally due to their role in deciding the composition of the House, their status as key presidential battlegrounds, and the national political valence of the veteran Midwest warrior Walker, the progressive African-Americans Andrew Gillum (Fla.) and Stacey Abrams (Ga.), the Trumpy Ron DeSantis (Fla.) and the extremely Trumpy Kobach.
Where Are the Breaks?
Finally, lets look at where the races have been moving. Again, this is a hard thread to follow when you dont have a whole lot of public polls to measure a trendline:
The most optimistic trends for the GOP are in Arizona, Oklahoma, Nevada, and Georgia, three of which seem to be moving in the direction of the states recent partisan lean. The mirror image is happening in Rhode Island, Illinois, Pennsylvania, Minnesota, and Oregon, and the trendline in Ohio is not encouraging.
If I had to project today, Id see Republicans picking up Alaska and taking a net loss of about five or six governorships, bringing them down to 27 or 28 of the 50 states. But there are still a lot of races that are either in play, or still have too little reliable polling to call. There were more Election Day surprises in 2014 in the governors races than the Senate races, and we should not be surprised to be surprised again.
I hope he makes it too. It seems to be a nail biter. Wisconsin has done so well and this election could set us back a long way. Not just the governor’s race, either.
LS is all about high quality political information and analysis. We are lucky to have him posting at FreeRepublic.
His opponent Tony Evers is the state superintendent of schools there. That means he’s nothing but an errand boy for the NEA and all the state unions. All the work Walker did to fix Wisconsin will be for not if Evers wins. God help you guys there if that happens.
There are two “independent” candidates running for governor in Maine. Which candidate are you referring to?
“Independent” candidate Terry Hayes seems rather liberal.... she wants “universal healthcare” and extreme environmental laws. Seems like she would pull votes from dem Attorney General and gubernatorial candidate Janet Mills.
If you would like more information about what's happening in Oregon, please FReepmail me.
Kansas is tight. Looks like Kobach thank be thankful that Orman is running as an Indie, all the RINOs in the state are endorsing the rat.
RGA pulled funding in MN.
Fung’s chances in RI seem to have declined.
Worried about Scott Walker?
All will be fine. I’m being Zen. :-P
I like your tagline, Pete.
Funding pulled in MN cuz we are in good shape now to flip two, win the AG race, and Houseley very close-—she’s getting money elsewhere.
Thanks for the ping! :)
The Republicans are going to win in both Florida and Georgia. In both cases the Democrat candidate is a far left wacko. I cant see the voters of either state electing one of those two.
“...and the hard-to-bury Scott Walker is in his hardest fight yet. If youre a Republican looking for a ray of hope, the most recent gold-standard Marquette poll had Walker up 47-46, but NBC/Marist responded swiftly with a poll showing him down 53-43, enough to sober up any optimist. Walker shouldnt be counted out, but hes swimming against a brutal tide.”
The Enemy Media is making it sound harder for Governor Walker than it is. Yes, some people are beefing about the condition of our roads and they DO need to be improved all over our state, but Tony Evers is NOT Governor Material by ANY stretch. No one knows who he is outside of Dane County. And what they DO know is that he’s a Socialist, Lifelong Edu-Crat and Plagiarist and thanks to him, our Public schools suck. Private, Religious and Charter schools are doing great!
Anyhow, Governor Walker IS taking this all seriously. He looked GREAT in the recent debate against Evers. The ONLY reason it’ll be close is if we don’t get out and VOTE, but WI Pubbies ARE motivated. :)
Since, at no time in the history of the Minnesota Poll has any Republican running for any office been shown to be leading at any time in any race, I'd say these are encouraging numbers.
Not tired of winning.
Just discouraged at the Dem female Whitmer for Gov. signs in Michigan. They are rejecting James,a fine highly qualified veteran for that bumbling hag Debbie Stabenow for US Senator.A state that narrowly went for Trump in 2016.
Too many slimy scumbreathed leftists near me. I am behind enemy lines (about 80% Dem always). Similar to CA. I may seek asylum if I can get good meals, luxury train ride to freedom and total entitlements when I try to get out of here. Guess they’re getting to me-—I’ll earn my way to freedom.
MAGA.
Can’t believe u not choose Bears.
Why do I dislike Titans? Cuz of Algore
I think you’re right about Hayes. But her ads make her look like a moderate, and she’ll probably get 7-10% of the low information independent voter who votes independent because it feels good to do so.
The results are going to be close. LePage won in 2014 by 4.5%. Trump/Johnson combined I believe got 50% of the vote in 2016. The question is which side is better organized and motivated. The absentee numbers that are on the Maine elections site will tell us all this. The early voting I think goes till the Thursday before election day. We’ll know then how these races stand.
Brady is 4-0 against the Bears with a 1.25 ERA, oops wrong sport.
I remember the last two, in 2006 in Foxborough he ran for a first down with the game tied. And a few years ago at Solider Field he annihilated us in a snowstorm.
The Bears tend to win when least expected, my gut is rumbling but it may just be indigestion. Gotta go with my head, I think the point spread is too low, I’d set at Pats -7.5.
If Kobach wins the governors race in Kansas then he should send a big thank-you gift to Greg Orman for getting into the race and taking the votes away from Kelly.
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