A few
important Senate primaries remain, but we are well along in determining the candidates
in the upcoming elections, and the battle for control remains remarkably
close. The bottom line: I have the Democrats holding on, losing only 3 net seats and maintaining control of the upper chamber, 52-48. But as I will detail, the margin is laughably
tight, and of the nine battleground races, eight are literally “toss-ups.” Keep in mind, this is not a “forecast” per se
of expected results in November, but rather taking the temperature of where
things stand as of today. Much can and
will happen, of course, that can alter these projections between now and
Election Day.
The primary
season thus far has been a far cry from 2012, when the GOP squandered race
after race by nominating far right (and far out) candidates instead of more
moderate, more polished and more electable alternatives. Delaware , Indiana , Nevada and Missouri – at least –
were winnable elections if not for the doomed candidacies of Christine
O’Donnell, Richard Mourdock, Sharron Angle and Todd Akin. Republicans ranging from Reince Priebus (the
RNC head) to Karl Rove, neither exactly moderates, have openly sought to
prevent similar doomed Tea Party candidates in 2014, and have succeeded. But that might not be enough to take the
Senate.
In March I
identified 13 “battleground” states, but I have moved four into the “solid”
column, three for the Republicans (West Virginia, Montana and South Dakota) and
one for the Democrats (New Hampshire, where Scott Brown has been unable to get
any traction). Polls in each of these
four states show consistently commanding double digit margins for the leader.
Here is how
it looks at the moment, in comparison to my two earlier forecasts from last
October and March. Right now, I have the
Democrats holding on by a 52-48 margin, slightly better than in March. But the key here is not so much the apparent
lead, but rather the number of battleground races that are currently within the
margin of error: eight out of the nine battlegrounds.
Oct. 17,
|
Mar. 23,
|
Jul. 21,
|
|
2013
|
2014
|
2014
|
|
Democrats Total
|
52
|
51
|
52
|
Dem
Not Up
|
34
|
34
|
34
|
Dem
Solid
|
11
|
10
|
11
|
Dem
Lean
|
4
|
2
|
1
|
Dem
Tossup
|
3
|
5
|
6
|
Rep
Tossup
|
2
|
3
|
1
|
Rep
Lean
|
3
|
3
|
1
|
Rep
Solid
|
12
|
13
|
16
|
Rep
Not Up
|
31
|
30
|
30
|
Republicans Total
|
48
|
49
|
48
|
The
Democrats have 34 incumbents who are not up for election, and 11 more races
that will almost surely stay blue in 2014, for a total of 45 “in the bag.” The Republicans have 30 holdovers and 16
virtually certain red wins, adding up to 46 solid red. So the real battle for control of the Senate
will come among 9 battleground contests
out of the 36 elections. Republicans
have to win 5 of these 9 to take control of the Senate (they need 51, while the
Democrats need only 50 plus Joe Biden’s tiebreaking vote in the event of a
split Senate)…and they certainly could.
But as of
now, the Democrats nominally lead in 8 of them, most by quite narrow margins,
in polling covering May, June and July to date.
That amounts to about 5 polls per race, though several have fewer and
some have more.
Here is the
full chart of every race, and the latest polling in the battleground states,
and then follows a brief profile of each battleground race as it stands now. The candidates listed are either the
incumbents (unless they have announced their retirement) and the primary
winners, or, if the primary has not yet been held, the leading contestant if
one has emerged. The blue rows are the
solid Democratic races, the white are the 9 battlegrounds, and the red rows are
solid Republican.
Inc.
|
Retiring/
|
Dem
|
Rep
|
Poll
|
Current
|
||
State
|
Party
|
Incumbent
|
Running
|
Candidate
|
Candidate
|
Margin
|
Status
|
D
|
Coons
|
Running
|
Coons
|
tbd
|
Solid Dem
|
||
D
|
Schatz
|
Running
|
Schatz
|
Cavasso
|
Solid Dem
|
||
D
|
Durbin
|
Running
|
Durbin
|
Oberweis
|
Solid Dem
|
||
D
|
Markey
|
Running
|
Markey
|
Herr
|
Solid Dem
|
||
D
|
Franken
|
Running
|
Franken
|
tbd
|
Solid Dem
|
||
D
|
Shaheen
|
Running
|
Shaheen
|
Brown
|
Solid Dem
|
||
D
|
Booker
|
Running
|
Booker
|
tbd
|
Solid Dem
|
||
D
|
Udall
|
Running
|
Udall
|
tbd
|
Solid Dem
|
||
D
|
Merkley
|
Running
|
Merkley
|
Wehby
|
Solid Dem
|
||
D
|
Reed
|
Running
|
Reed
|
McKay
|
Solid Dem
|
||
D
|
Warner
|
Running
|
Warner
|
Gillespie
|
Solid Dem
|
||
D
|
Levin
|
Retiring
|
Peters
|
Land
|
Dem +6
|
Lean Dem
|
|
D
|
Harkin
|
Retiring
|
Braley
|
Ernst
|
Dem +1
|
Tossup Dem
|
|
D
|
Udall
|
Running
|
Udall
|
Dem + 2
|
Tossup Dem
|
||
R
|
Chambliss
|
Retiring
|
Nunn
|
Dem +2
|
Tossup Dem
|
||
D
|
Begich
|
Running
|
Begich
|
Sullivan
|
Dem +5
|
Tossup Dem
|
|
D
|
Hagan
|
Running
|
Hagan
|
Tillis
|
Dem +1
|
Tossup Dem
|
|
D
|
Landrieu
|
Running
|
Landrieu
|
Cassidy
|
Dem +1
|
Tossup Dem
|
|
R
|
McConnell
|
Running
|
Grimes
|
McConnell
|
Dem +2
|
Tossup Rep
|
|
D
|
Pryor
|
Running
|
Pryor
|
Cotton
|
Rep +4
|
Lean Rep
|
|
R
|
Sessions
|
Running
|
none
|
Sessions
|
Solid Rep
|
||
R
|
Risch
|
Running
|
Mitchell
|
Risch
|
Solid Rep
|
||
R
|
Roberts
|
Running
|
Roberts
|
Solid Rep
|
|||
R
|
Collins
|
Running
|
Bellows
|
Collins
|
Solid Rep
|
||
R
|
Cochran
|
Running
|
Childers
|
Cochran
|
Solid Rep
|
||
D
|
Baucus
|
Retiring
|
Walsh
|
Daines
|
Solid Rep
|
||
R
|
Johanns
|
Retiring
|
Domina
|
Sasse
|
Solid Rep
|
||
R
|
Inhofe
|
Running
|
Silverstein
|
Inhofe
|
Solid Rep
|
||
R
|
Coburn
|
Retiring
|
Johnson
|
Lankford
|
Solid Rep
|
||
R
|
Graham
|
Running
|
Hutto
|
Graham
|
Solid Rep
|
||
R
|
Scott
|
Running
|
Dickerson
|
Scott
|
Solid Rep
|
||
D
|
Johnson
|
Retiring
|
Weiland
|
Rounds
|
Solid Rep
|
||
R
|
Alexander
|
Running
|
tbd
|
Alexander
|
Solid Rep
|
||
R
|
Cornyn
|
Running
|
Alameel
|
Cornyn
|
Solid Rep
|
||
D
|
Rockefeller
|
Retiring
|
Tennant
|
Capito
|
Solid Rep
|
||
R
|
Enzi
|
Running
|
tbd
|
Enzi
|
Solid Rep
|
You will
note that most of the battleground states are now held by Democrats, seven of
them, versus only two by Republicans.
And three Democrats are retiring, versus only one Republican.
I am
keeping an eye on Montana . That remains a solid red, but a brand new
poll shows that current Democratic Senator John Walsh, appointed last year to
fill the seat of Max Baucus (when he was named Ambassador to China), now trails
challenger Representative Steve Daines by only 7 points. Previous polling had Daines up by double
digits. We’ll see if a race emerges here
that is close enough to label a battleground.
BATTLEGROUND
STATES
Here is a
brief review of the 9 battleground Senate elections in 2014:
·
Alaska : Democratic incumbent Mark Begish will likely face former
Attorney General Daniel S. Sullivan, with the primaries upcoming on August
19. Sullivan has a reasonably healthy
lead over other GOP contenders in recent polls.
There has been little head-to-head polling to date between Begich and
Sullivan, and the latest poll has Begich up by 5 points. Prior polls, quite old now, were not as
favorable to Begich, thus I am reluctant to call this anything other than a
tossup favoring the incumbent. Tossup Democrat.
·
Arkansas :
Democratic incumbent Mark Pryor will face Representative Tom Cotton in a
red state the GOP considers among the most likely for it to swipe. Cotton has a
steady four point lead in each of the last three polls. I have this in the GOP column. Lean Republican.
·
Colorado . Incumbent Democrat Mark Udall is now
being challenged by Republican Representative Cory Gardner and Gardner has emerged as a strong
opponent. Udall holds a slight edge
overall, though the most recent poll has Gardner
up by two (it was a Quinnipiac poll, though, and they often lean a bit
incorrectly toward the GOP). Tossup Democrat.
·
Georgia : A fascinating race to replace the retiring
Republican Saxby Chambliss features Democrat Michelle Nunn, daughter of Sam, a
political neophyte (she runs a “Points of Light” volunteer organization) who will
be the Democrat nominee. The Republican
primary in May resulted in a runoff, as no one claimed more than 50% of the
vote. U.S. Representative Jack Kinston is
leading the polls, not far ahead of fellow Representative Phil Gingery. Nunn has led in head-to-head polls over Kinston until the last poll which swung to Kingston . I still have this in the Democrat camp
although Nunn has a long way to go to swipe a red state seat. Tossup Democrat.
·
Iowa :
Democratic Representative Bruce Braley is in a tough race to inherit the
seat currently held by retiring Democrat Tom Harkin. Republican State Senator Joni Ernst won the
GOP nomination, and is within the margin of error of Braley, who has proven to
be a bit gaffe-prone, at one time (in May) appearing to mock longtime Republican
Senator Chuck Grassley as follows: "You might have a farmer from Iowa
who never went to law school, never practiced law, serving as the next chair of
the Senate Judiciary Committee." Perhaps Braley has not noticed that Iowa has a few farmers
here and there. Tossup Democrat.
·
Kentucky : Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, at this juncture, is
still in a dogfight. He managed to
easily crush his own party’s Tea Party challenger businessman Matt Bevin, in
the primary. But Democratic Secretary of
State Alison Lunderman is not only hanging in there against him, but is ahead
in the polls, albeit within the margin of error., though their polling is as
close as can be. I’m still calling this
for McConnell, but, as in sports, the longer the challenger remains in the
game, the more credibility she has – and the money will roll in. By the way, have you seen Mitch’s “happy
footage” yet? Check it out at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6x_pjKkYBAk). Tossup Republican.
·
Louisiana :
Democratic incumbent Mary Landrieu is embroiled in a back-and-forth race
with GOP challenger Representative Bill Cassidy. Louisiana
has an odd format…Election Day is more or less an open primary, requiring the
winner to attain at least 50% of the vote to avoid a runoff. Landrieu will likely win the election but be
forced into the runoff, and head-to-head she is only a point ahead of Cassidy,
on average, in three polls in the last 6 weeks…and the most recent one had
Cassidy ahead. I’ve got this one with
Landrieu as of now. Tossup Democrat.
·
Michigan : Democratic Representative Gary Peters’s has a healthy lead over
former Secretary of State Terri Lynn Land in the race to replace retiring
Democratic incumbent, Carl Levin. Peters appears to have taken control of this race
in late February and has been ahead in
the last 10 polls since then by an average of 6 points. Lean Democrat.
·
North Carolina : Democratic incumbent Kay Hagan is locked in a close race
with Thom Tillis, Speaker of the North Carolina House of Representatives. Tillis survived a very tough primary season
against a wide field, and this is one place where the Tea Party failed to beat
Tillis, the establishment candidate.
Hagan leads by less than a point, but the last two polls have her up by
four. Tossup Democrat.
While the
Democrats hold the advantage, these races are so close that the Democrats could
end up with anywhere from 45 to 54 seats.
They are thus almost certain to lose ground from their current 55 (including the two independents)…the only
question is…how much?
One thing
that has not made much of a dent in the mainstream news is the characterization
of the 2016 Senate race. Republicans may
win control in 2014, but if they do, it will almost certainly be a short
reign. In 2016, 34 seats will be up for
reelection, and 23 or 24 of them will feature GOP incumbents (depending on
South Carolina; one of this year’s South Carolina Senate election is a special
election that will be up for grabs again in 2016). With a presidential election drawing a far
bigger turnout, and one far more advantageous for the Democrats, it is highly
likely the Democrats will return to the majority in 2016. Illinois , Pennsylvania and Wisconsin
hold GOP seats that could be turnable, and perhaps there will be others if the
Democrats field a strong presidential candidate.