Posted on 11/01/2018 2:09:56 PM PDT by MaxistheBest
It wont be a blue wave, NBC reports today, at least not if early voting is any indication. Thus far, in a record turnout, Republican voters hold the edge by a slim two-point margin in ballots already cast in the midterms. The turnout model thus far looks more similar to 2014 than 2016:
Six days out from Election Day, over 24 million votes have been counted as early or absentee, a number that exceeds the total nationwide early vote from 2014.
As of Wednesday, 24,024,621 million early and absentee ballots have been counted nationwide in all states with early voting activity.
As of Wednesday, 43 percent of early voters are Republican and 41 percent are Democrats. At this point in 2016, 43 percent of early voters were Democrats and 40 percent were Republicans.
This chart shows the comparison:
Its a narrower lead than in 2014, but its still a lead. It cuts against the expectation of an oversized Democratic turnout that led to the blue wave predictions for most of this cycle. It also calls into question whether the turnout models used by pollsters will accurately reflect the final results assuming that Democrats dont turn on the afterburners on Election Day, anyway. Pollsters largely missed the mark on turnout models in 2016, and its very possible theyve failed to learn their lesson in time for this election.
However, dont forget that Democrats dont necessarily need a blue wave to win back the House. The GOP has three dozen House retirements with which to contend, as well as the need to hold onto gains made at expense of Democrats that may see voters returning to type when a Republican holds the White House.
In case anyones forgotten what a heavy lift holding the House majority will be for Republicans, the Washington Post offers a reminder today. Its new battleground poll a generic-congressional ballot survey focused on 69 competitive districts shows Democrats still leading, albeit almost within the margin of error. Four years ago, Republicans led by 15, and they won most of the districts involved as a result:
Overwhelming majorities of both Democrats and Republicans are confident that their party will prevail, with both nearly as confident as Democrats were erroneously, as it turned out ahead of President Trumps surprise victory two years ago. Voters also perceive high stakes in the event of a loss: At least two-thirds of Democrats and Republicans alike say a losing outcome for their party would be very bad for the country.
Across 69 congressional districts identified by the Cook Political Report and The Post as competitive in late August, the Post-Schar School poll finds 50 percent of likely voters support the Democratic candidate, while 46 percent support the Republican.
The Democrats four-point edge represents a superficial advantage with Republicans, given the polls 3.5-point margin of error. Still, the finding marks a sharp turn from 2016, when voters in these districts backed Republicans by a margin of 15 percentage points. With 63 of the battleground districts held by Republicans, that kind of shift in sentiment would be sufficient for Democrats to take control of the House. The party needs a net gain of 23 seats to win the majority.
Dont bother trying to drill down into the individual districts. The sample contains 1350 likely voters across the 69 districts, which works out to just under twenty voters per district. As with their other battleground polls, the usefulness here isnt to predict the outcomes in each of these districts but instead to narrow down the national generic-ballot questions to just those districts which are competitive.
But which districts are truly competitive? This poll says 69, but other polls put the number as high as in the 90s. The New York Times lists 73 districts, all but four of them Republican, with 29 leaning toward the GOP and 15 to the Democrats. All they would need is eight of 29 toss-ups to grab the majority if they take all those leaners, and seven of the 29 dont have Republican incumbents running to hold the seat.
Charles Cook himself suggests 72 districts, but that makes the numbers worse for the GOP. Either way the numbers dont look great for Republicans, Cook wrote earlier this week, in part because they built their majority from swing districts that rebelled against Obama in the last two midterms:
Disproportionately, the battle for control of the House is being fought in suburban districts where Trump is a liability, not in more-rural and small-town-oriented districts where the president is an asset for his party. That is why Trump is still able to boost GOP fortunes in many of the Senate contests, most of which are in red states, while being something of a millstone around the necks of Republicans in the suburban House districts that matter most. Cook Political Report House Editor David Wasserman has dubbed this the Year of the Fired-Up Female College Graduate.
A generally accepted rule of thumb is that Democrats need a lead of at least seven points in the national popular vote for the House, matching the generic ballot number in the CPR/Manship School poll. The RealClearPolitics average of national polls is 7.5 percent, while Nate Silvers FiveThirtyEight average is 8.3 percent. But when you look exclusively at the most competitive districts, not at the slam-dunk seats where parties waste votes by running up the score, and keeping in mind that only a handful of the competitive seats are held by Democrats, a generic lead for Democrats of 3 points, as the Washington Post/Schar School poll shows, or of 11 points, as the CPR/Manship School polls indicates, would both indicate Democrats having an advantage in terms of control of the House.
This top-down, macro-political view of the House matches a more race-by-race, micro-political analysis, starting with Alabamas 1st District and going through Wyomings at-large seat, suggesting that Democratic gains in the 30- to 35-seat range, more than the 23 needed to tip control, are likely to occur.
The steadiness in the battleground districts parallels that of the overall generic ballot. The RCP average put Democrats at +7.4 thirty days ago, and its D+7.5 today. As has been true throughout the cycle, Republicans have been stuck in at 42% or below all along; the dynamic part of the generic ballot has been Democratic support, which has fluctuated between 43% and 50% in the RCP average since May, and has settled into the 49% range for the past month.
Either way, however, the majority in the House in the next session will almost be exceptionally narrow. That would leave leadership unable to move anything significant without cross-aisle appeal, and likely a stronger Republican majority in the Senate effectively setting the agenda. Thats not the worst outcome the GOP faced, especially at the beginning of this cycle. And the early voting numbers at least show a chance that Republicans might be the ones dealing with that leadership headache in January.
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Moving our way.
And Trump is appearing in numerous battleground states through Tuesday.
He definitely knows what he’s doing.
but .. but...
Win this election and we actually may have a chance, lose it and were screwed. Screwed really hard because worms like Mrs Clinton and that Bolshevik bombshell from the Bronx will be our rulers
How do we know the Drudge headlines of 40 seats added to Dem victory or GOP leads in early voting is the right one?
Like really good for you to eat whole grains or dangerously bad to eat whole grains-—with doctors on both sides.
#RocksAreGuns
Drudge hates Trump they want him to fail..I treat Drudge like I do CNN, fake news!
I big part of 538 Nate Silver’s model is based on turnout projections..in fact I would say it’s the biggest part of his model. He is projecting a 7-8 point Democrat edge in his general ballot.
If you take out NY, CA and IL, that 2 point margin in early voting opens up wide in favor of Republicans.
NBC doing their part to get Dems to the polls
10 seconds.................
Well, if that is the case, democrats better be very very concerned. This from Wiki: "The elections saw sweeping gains by the Republican Party in the Senate, House, and in numerous gubernatorial, state, and local races. The Republicans gained control of the Senate for the first time since 2006, and increased their majority in the House"
So, we increase our #'s in the Senate (which seems like a given) and we keep the house and perhaps pick up seats. This would take the left-wing over the edge.
Trump is correct to lay the responsibility of losses in the house at Ryan’s feet. Ryan has been nothing but a boil on the POTUS’ rear and has done nothing to support his policies. Trump, OTOH has gone pedal to the metal campaigning for republicans. Good thing Ryan is leaving, he’s been worthless.
Dont bother trying to drill down into the individual districts. The sample contains 1350 likely voters across the 69 districts, which works out to just under twenty voters per district.
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OK. In other words, the polling is statistical noise.
Well the projection of Democrat seats is based on the same polling that assumes a “Blue wave”. Democrat party id has fallen from the same time period in 2016. So the assumed samples can not be right. If anything they are worse than the ones in 2016. Democrats led GOP in party id at the beginning of the year by +10 and now by +2. They lead by +5 in 2016. They are in a much worse position going into this election and these early vote numbers appear to confirm this.
https://news.gallup.com/poll/15370/party-affiliation.aspx
I can’t say too much.
But ppl are gonna be shocked at how some of these races don’t go the Ds way.
If you think they are crazy now, wait til Nov. 7.
Dems in worse shape than bogus headline of 40 seats to gain in coming victory.
Thanks. I really needed that. As each of us here goes on the steepest part of the roller coaster we need someone to say it’s okay.
The other bad part of the election amusement park is the terrifying ghoul image gallery of Maxine,Pelosi and Schiff as the Congressional power brokers of the future. Scarier than horror movies by far.
Get every good person you know to vote. 62,979,636 legally voted for Trump in 2016. Let’s all do it one more time in 2018.
He is also assuming that blacks will show up big, and vote 95% Dem...
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