Democrats Are Favored to Take Back the Senate

floridafan

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With just over 100 days until Election Day, the political climate appears dire for Republicans across the board. President Trump is the decided underdog against former Vice President Joe Biden in our Electoral College ratings and Democrats could end up expanding their House majority.

That leaves the Senate as Republicans' firewall—the final barrier to unified control for Democrats in 2021. While GOP incumbents are trying to run races independent of the president, if Trump’s polling numbers remain this dismal come November, that’s an unenviable and likely unsuccessful strategy, according to several top party strategists. As of now, Democrats are a slight favorite to win the Senate majority.

“Something remarkable would have to happen for Republicans to still have control of the Senate after November,” remarked one GOP pollster. “It’s grim. There’s just so many places where Democrats either have the upper hand or are competitive in states that six months ago we wouldn’t have considered at risk.”

“If you’re an incumbent in a bad environment sitting at 44 percent, you should be pretty damn scared,” another alarmed Republican strategist said. “The expanding map has made it really hard, and there’s just a lot of Democratic momentum right now."

We wrote four months ago that the worsening pandemic, along with Biden emerging as the Democratic nominee instead of Bernie Sanders, was the “perfect storm” Republicans feared. Now, with the death toll nearing 150,000, the environment has gotten even worse for the GOP, prodded along by Trump’s missteps. Racial injustice protests after the deaths of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor and Ahmaud Arbery in early June further galvanized the nation, leading to rapid cultural shifts against Confederate monuments and even the long pushed for change of the Mississippi state flag, which still bore the Confederate battle flag emblem.

Taken together, that’s not just a perfect storm for Democrats, but perhaps a perfect tsunami. “The bottom fell out for us at the end of May and June,” with worsening numbers continuing into July now, one national GOP strategist looking at polls across the map bemoaned.

Ultimately, every day that Trump stubbornly refuses to change course is another day that it becomes increasingly likely he may not only tank his own re-election bid but could be on a kamikaze mission to take the Republican-held Senate down with him. At this point, a net gain of five to seven seats for Democrats looks far more probable than the one to three seat gain that would leave them shy of a majority.
https://cookpolitical.com/index.php...ys-out-democrats-are-favored-take-back-senate
 
they were favored to do it in 2018 as well.....

They failed in the Senate but won the House and gained seven state governorships, control of at least 350 state legislative seats, and control of six state legislative chambers.

Their success was due to very high turnout which debunked the claim Democrats could not win due to voter suppression and gerrymandering.
 
Keep saying means nothing four months out, with the 24/7 cable infotainment cycle anything can happen, besides, nearly any election where one candidate surges ahead the rival always makes it closer in the end
 
They failed in the Senate but won the House and gained seven state governorships, control of at least 350 state legislative seats, and control of six state legislative chambers.

Their success was due to very high turnout which debunked the claim Democrats could not win due to voter suppression and gerrymandering.

a fairly flat midterm "success" compared to the typical situation......
 
With just over 100 days until Election Day, the political climate appears dire for Republicans across the board. President Trump is the decided underdog against former Vice President Joe Biden in our Electoral College ratings and Democrats could end up expanding their House majority.

That leaves the Senate as Republicans' firewall—the final barrier to unified control for Democrats in 2021. While GOP incumbents are trying to run races independent of the president, if Trump’s polling numbers remain this dismal come November, that’s an unenviable and likely unsuccessful strategy, according to several top party strategists. As of now, Democrats are a slight favorite to win the Senate majority.

“Something remarkable would have to happen for Republicans to still have control of the Senate after November,” remarked one GOP pollster. “It’s grim. There’s just so many places where Democrats either have the upper hand or are competitive in states that six months ago we wouldn’t have considered at risk.”

“If you’re an incumbent in a bad environment sitting at 44 percent, you should be pretty damn scared,” another alarmed Republican strategist said. “The expanding map has made it really hard, and there’s just a lot of Democratic momentum right now."

We wrote four months ago that the worsening pandemic, along with Biden emerging as the Democratic nominee instead of Bernie Sanders, was the “perfect storm” Republicans feared. Now, with the death toll nearing 150,000, the environment has gotten even worse for the GOP, prodded along by Trump’s missteps. Racial injustice protests after the deaths of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor and Ahmaud Arbery in early June further galvanized the nation, leading to rapid cultural shifts against Confederate monuments and even the long pushed for change of the Mississippi state flag, which still bore the Confederate battle flag emblem.

Taken together, that’s not just a perfect storm for Democrats, but perhaps a perfect tsunami. “The bottom fell out for us at the end of May and June,” with worsening numbers continuing into July now, one national GOP strategist looking at polls across the map bemoaned.

Ultimately, every day that Trump stubbornly refuses to change course is another day that it becomes increasingly likely he may not only tank his own re-election bid but could be on a kamikaze mission to take the Republican-held Senate down with him. At this point, a net gain of five to seven seats for Democrats looks far more probable than the one to three seat gain that would leave them shy of a majority.
https://cookpolitical.com/index.php...ys-out-democrats-are-favored-take-back-senate

Hillary was a shoe in to win the presidency in 2016, too, according to you idiots on the left.
 
You dumb piece of shit, just look at how many Senate seats the D's had to defend vs the number of R seats. You have got to be as pathetic as handjob. Right sweetie?

no serioiusly, cunt, there's no reason to pay attention to your constant lies......I suggest you review some of your own posts from 2018......you had the bit in your teeth and thought you would rule the world.......instead you can't even remember if you zipped up your pants......
 
no serioiusly, cunt, there's no reason to pay attention to your constant lies......I suggest you review some of your own posts from 2018......you had the bit in your teeth and thought you would rule the world.......instead you can't even remember if you zipped up your pants......

You are just another dumb cunt, sweetie
 
they were favored to do it in 2018 as well.....

No, they were not. I know you are running on near empty, but about 1/3rd of senators come up for election every 2 years due to their 6-year terms. In 2018 2/3rds of the senator's seats in play were Dems. It would have been a great break for Dems to pick up seats. Were you asleep during the election, or could you not understand it?
 
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