Today we provide BTRTN’s updated
numbers, summarizing the latest look at the Presidential, Senate and House
races. We’ll add the Governors in
September.
PRESIDENT
Since our last 50-state look at the
Electoral College two weeks ago, Donald Trump forced out campaign manager Paul
Manafort, and installed the head of arch-right Breitbart News, Steve Bannon, as
campaign “CEO.” Known as a flame-thrower right-winger given to the outrageous (sample Breitbart headline: “There’s No Hiring Bias Against
Women in Tech, They Just Suck at Interviews”), Bannon's hiring seemed to
signal that the new marching orders would be “Let Trump Be Trump.” And yet, Trump’s first speech under the new
regime was, by his standards, conciliatory, admitting mistakes and apologizing
for causing “personal pain.” Not an
apology to anyone in particular, or for any of the dozens of specific hateful
comments on record, just a vague, wooden (scripted) statement. But a change nonetheless.
Since this latest attempt at “New Trump”
was unveiled, he has indeed stayed on the teleprompter. But he has also continued to confound in
strange ways. He called on
African-Americans to vote for him because, in his view, their collective condition
was so downtrodden, “what do you have to lose?”
He labeled Hillary Clinton a “bigot” (apparently in response to her
calling him a “racist,” though she appears to have far more justification for
her choice of epithet). And Trump
claimed that Clinton was “physically unfit for office” without offering
evidence, while he himself had his personal doctor issue a four-paragraph
letter that was, according to the doctor, dashed off in just five minutes (complete
with typos) as his only medical declaration to date. (Look for a more complete version to be
unveiled at the same time he releases his tax returns.)
Arguably Trump zoomed to the
popularity that ultimately won him the nomination on two bold promises, both
clear, unambiguous and brand new. He
would fund his own campaign, and therefore not be beholden to any special
interests. And he would immediately
deport the 11 million undocumented immigrants currently living in the U.S. back to
their homelands. He has already broken
the first promise, and now seems well on the way toward renouncing the
second. In the last several days, Trump
has wandered around immigration policy in some of the detail, seemingly for the first time. Resembling Simone Biles in the floor
exercises, he first flip-flopped toward a more progressive policy, then back
flipped to a more hardline one (after Ann Coulter went nuts). Thus we now have a Donald Trump who courts
donors and shifts policy positions depending on the audience, so what makes his
candidacy all that unique anymore?
Hillary Clinton – who is also
running for President, if you hadn’t noticed – has also had a bumpy
stretch. She learned that she will have
to submit written responses, under oath, to the courts in yet another airing of
the email case, before the election – and this was considered a “good news” outcome
since she avoided having to face opposition lawyers in a deposition, as her
campaign had feared. And the Clinton
Foundation continues to cause headaches.
While there is no “smoking gun” in either controversy, there are plenty
of shadows, and Clinton has to be thankful that this is the year that Donald
Trump, with all of his weaknesses, was swept to the GOP nomination. I can well imagine a Mitt Romney or Jeb Bush
giving her far more trouble than Trump if they were the GOP nominee in 2016. Fortunately, the GOP remains a party more
interested in espousing principals than winning elections.
Where has all this left the
race? The BTRTN look is remarkably
unchanged. Trump has not moved in either
direction, still stuck at roughly the 40% mark, while Clinton has been nicked,
losing a point in her standing versus early August to 46% and her overall margin
is now in the 5-6 point range..
PRESIDENT SNAPSHOT: NATIONAL POLLS
|
||
Head-to-Head
|
Polls Aug 1-14
|
Polls Aug 15-28
|
Clinton
|
47.2
|
45.8
|
Trump
|
40.7
|
40.5
|
N/A
|
12.1
|
13.7
|
Spread (D - R)
|
6.5
|
5.4
|
In the wake of the nastiness, the third-party candidates are starting to gain some attention, particularly the quest of Libertarian Gary
Johnson to make the 15% threshold required to earn a podium in the
debates. Johnson has a long way to go, as
he currently stands at 8%. It is worth
noting that Johnson and Green Party candidate Jill Stein tend to hurt Clinton
more than Trump, though only marginally, when they are included in the survey
questioning (the two-way polls differ from above because we have used only the polls that also had four-way options, so we can make a direct comparison).
PRESIDENT SNAPSHOT: FOUR-WAY POLLS
|
|||
Head-to-Head
|
2-Way
|
4-Way
|
Diff
|
Clinton
|
46.3
|
41.5
|
4.8
|
Trump
|
39.8
|
36.7
|
3.2
|
Johnson
|
na
|
8.0
|
na
|
Stein
|
na
|
3.5
|
na
|
Other
|
13.8
|
10.3
|
3.5
|
Margin
|
6.5
|
4.8
|
1.7
|
The BTRTN Electoral College snapshot
is unchanged, with Clinton still up convincingly, 348-190. There has been some movement in various states
that have tightened the race up just a whiff.
Clinton’s lead in both Iowa and Georgia has narrowed and we have changed
both from Leans to Toss-ups (with both still in the Dem column). Within the Trump total, Missouri and South
Carolina are now Toss-ups (from Lean and Solid, respectively), and Kansas,
which the GOP has won by an average of 21 points over the last four elections, has
gone from Solid to Lean. But on the
positive side for Trump, he has gotten stronger in Arizona (Toss-up to Lean), Kentucky
(Toss-up to Solid) and Mississippi (Lean to Solid). The full 50-state rack-up is at the end of
this article.
PRESIDENT SNAPSHOT: ELECTORAL COLLEGE
|
||
Electoral College
|
August 15
|
August 28
|
CLINTON - TOTAL
|
348
|
348
|
Clinton - Solid
|
273
|
273
|
Clinton - Lean
|
69
|
47
|
Clinton - Tossup
|
6
|
28
|
Trump - Tossup
|
34
|
34
|
Trump - Lean
|
19
|
20
|
Trump - Solid
|
137
|
136
|
TRUMP - TOTAL
|
190
|
190
|
Swing States (EC)
|
Latest Polls as of Aug 28
|
BTRTN
|
Ohio (18)
|
Clinton +5
|
Lean D
|
Florida (29)
|
Clinton +3
|
Lean D
|
Iowa (6)
|
Clinton +2
|
Tossup D
|
Nevada (6)
|
Clinton +2
|
Tossup D
|
Georgia (16)
|
Clinton +1
|
Tossup D
|
Missouri (10)
|
Trump +1
|
Tossup R
|
N. Carolina (15)
|
Trump +2
|
Tossup R
|
S. Carolina (9)
|
Trump +3
|
Tossup R
|
Alaska (3)
|
Trump +4
|
Lean R
|
Arizona (11)
|
Trump +5
|
Lean R
|
Kansas (6)
|
Trump +5
|
Lean R
|
The headline here: this snapshot shows that Clinton has enough votes in the "Solid" category -- 273 -- to win (you need 270, of course). She does not need any more of the current line-up of swing states. And she leads in Ohio and Florida and three other swing states. Trump needs a big push, major Clinton stumbles and decisive debate wins to chip away at Clinton's commanding position.
One point of interest: if you look at each state based on the
average margin of the past four elections, only three states are deviating from
the party whose past results indicate should be ahead. Virginia, which on average the GOP has won by
two points over the last four presidential elections, is solidly in the blue in
2016, with changing demographics and the presence of Tim Kaine accounting for
the change. Florida, a perennial toss-up
(the average margin over the past four presidential elections favors the GOP by
a mere +0.3 points), is also blue as of now, with Clinton up +3. And Georgia, solidly red since 2000 by an
average of 10 points, is now Clinton +1.
SENATE
There has been little new polling in
the last two weeks, and the snapshot for the Senate remains a 50/50 split,
which would give Senate control to the party that wins the White House. While the Dems still show the same split
among Solids/Leans/Toss-ups, the GOP has shown a bit of movement. A new poll in Arizona now shows John McCain
in control by double-digits (assuming he wins next week’s GOP primary), which
pushes Arizona into the Solid column.
The full rack-up of each Senate race
is at the end of this article.
SENATE SNAPSHOT
|
||
Senate
|
August 15
|
August 28
|
DEM TOTAL
|
50 (+4)
|
50 (+4)
|
Dem Holdover
|
36
|
36
|
Dem Solid
|
9
|
9
|
Dem Lean
|
5
|
5
|
Dem Toss-up
|
0
|
0
|
GOP Toss-up
|
2
|
2
|
GOP Lean
|
4
|
3
|
GOP Solid
|
14
|
15
|
GOP Holdover
|
30
|
30
|
GOP TOTAL
|
50 (-4)
|
50 (-4)
|
Senate By State
|
Latest Polls
as of Aug 28
|
BTRTN
|
CA,CO,CT,HI,MD, NY,OR,VT,WA
|
Solid D
|
|
Wisconsin
|
Feingold (D) + 11
|
Lean D
|
Indiana
|
Bayh (D) + 7
|
Lean D
|
New Hampshire
|
Hassan (D) + 6
|
Lean D
|
Illinois
|
Duckworth (D) + 5
|
Lean D
|
Pennsylvania
|
McGinty (D) +3
|
Lean D
|
Nevada
|
Heck (R) Tie
|
Toss-up R
|
Missouri
|
Blunt (R) + 2
|
Toss-up R
|
N. Carolina
|
Burr (R) + 4
|
Lean R
|
Florida
|
Rubio (R) + 6
|
Lean R
|
Ohio
|
Portman (R) + 7
|
Lean R
|
AK,AL,AZ,GA,IA,KS,KY,
LA,ND,OK,SC,SD
|
Solid R
|
HOUSE
The BTRTN snapshot of the likely
composition of the House has changed only marginally since several weeks
ago. Using our proprietary regression
model, we now see the Dems picking up 22 seats, instead of 23, not enough to reclaim a majority, but solid progress.
House
|
As of 8/15
|
As of 8/29
|
Democrats
|
211 (+23)
|
210 (+22)
|
Republicans
|
224 (-23)
|
225 (-22)
|
*****************************************************************
Here are the state-by-state charts for the Presidency and the Senate. Note: Change in BTRTN’s rating since the prior
update are noted in CAPS in the BTRTN Rating column.
ELECTORAL COLLEGE SNAPSHOT
|
||||||
Democrat Minus Republican
|
2016 Electoral Votes
|
Avg D-R Mrgn Lst 4
|
Latest 2016 Polls as of 8/11/16
|
Latest 2016 Polls as of 8/28/16
|
BTRTN Prior Rating
|
BTRTN Current Rating
|
DC
|
3
|
82
|
none
|
none
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
Hawaii
|
4
|
29
|
none
|
none
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
Rhode Island
|
4
|
26
|
none
|
none
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
Maryland
|
10
|
20
|
Clinton +35
|
Clinton +35
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
Illinois
|
20
|
16
|
Clinton +25
|
Clinton +25
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
Massachusetts
|
11
|
25
|
Clinton +24
|
Clinton +24
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
California
|
55
|
17
|
Clinton +23
|
Clinton +23
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
Vermont
|
3
|
26
|
Clinton +22
|
Clinton +22
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
Washington
|
12
|
11
|
Clinton +12
|
Clinton +19
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
New Jersey
|
14
|
14
|
Clinton +18
|
Clinton +18
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
New York
|
29
|
24
|
Clinton +12
|
Clinton +17
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
Wisconsin
|
10
|
5
|
Clinton +15
|
Clinton +15
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
Minnesota
|
10
|
6
|
Clinton +13
|
Clinton +13
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
Virginia
|
13
|
-2
|
Clinton +12
|
Clinton +13
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
Colorado
|
9
|
0.2
|
Clinton +8
|
Clinton +12
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
Oregon
|
7
|
8
|
Clinton +11
|
Clinton +11
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
Pennsylvania
|
20
|
6
|
Clinton +11
|
Clinton +11
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
Delaware
|
3
|
16
|
Clinton +10
|
Clinton +10
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
Maine
|
4
|
12
|
Clinton +7
|
Clinton +10
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
New Hampshire
|
4
|
4
|
Clinton +17
|
Clinton +9
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
Michigan
|
16
|
9
|
Clinton +10
|
Clinton +9
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
New Mexico
|
5
|
6
|
Clinton +8
|
Clinton +9
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
Connecticut
|
7
|
17
|
Clinton +7
|
Clinton +7
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
Ohio
|
18
|
0.2
|
Clinton +5
|
Clinton +5
|
Lean
|
Lean
|
Florida
|
29
|
-0.3
|
Clinton +4
|
Clinton +3
|
Lean
|
Lean
|
Iowa
|
6
|
4
|
Clinton +4
|
Clinton +2
|
Lean
|
Lean
|
Nevada
|
6
|
3
|
Clinton +2
|
Clinton +2
|
Tossup
|
Tossup
|
Georgia
|
16
|
-10
|
Clinton +6
|
Clinton +1
|
Lean
|
TOSSUP
|
Missouri
|
10
|
-5
|
Trump +6
|
Trump +1
|
Lean
|
TOSSUP
|
N. Carolina
|
15
|
-7
|
Trump +2
|
Trump +2
|
Tossup
|
Tossup
|
S. Carolina
|
9
|
-13
|
none
|
Trump +3
|
Solid
|
TOSSUP
|
Alaska
|
3
|
-23
|
Trump +5
|
Trump +4
|
Lean
|
Lean
|
Arizona
|
11
|
-9
|
Trump +2
|
Trump +5
|
Tossup
|
LEAN
|
Kansas
|
6
|
-21
|
Trump +14
|
Trump +5
|
Solid
|
LEAN
|
Texas
|
38
|
-18
|
Trump +8
|
Trump +9
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
Tennessee
|
11
|
-13
|
Trump +9
|
Trump +9
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
Indiana
|
11
|
-11
|
Trump +8
|
Trump +11
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
Arkansas
|
6
|
-15
|
Trump +11
|
Trump +11
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
Kentucky
|
8
|
-18
|
Clinton +3
|
Trump +13
|
Tossup
|
SOLID
|
Mississippi
|
6
|
-15
|
Trump +3
|
Trump +15
|
Lean
|
SOLID
|
Montana
|
3
|
-15
|
none
|
none
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
Louisiana
|
8
|
-15
|
Trump +16
|
Trump +16
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
S. Dakota
|
3
|
-18
|
none
|
none
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
Utah
|
6
|
-40
|
Trump +12
|
Trump +20
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
Idaho
|
4
|
-34
|
Trump +21
|
Trump +21
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
Alabama
|
9
|
-21
|
none
|
none
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
N. Dakota
|
3
|
-21
|
none
|
none
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
Oklahoma
|
7
|
-29
|
Trump +24
|
Trump +24
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
Nebraska
|
5
|
-25
|
none
|
none
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
W. Virginia
|
5
|
-15
|
Trump +27
|
Trump +27
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
Wyoming
|
3
|
-39
|
none
|
none
|
Solid
|
Solid
|
SENATE SNAPSHOT
|
|||||||
State
|
Inc. Party
|
Incumbent
|
Dem
|
GOP
|
Poll Margin 8/28
|
BTRTN Rating
|
Hold/ Flip
|
Not running
|
46-54
|
||||||
California
|
D
|
Boxer
|
Harris
|
No GOP
|
none
|
Solid
D
|
Hold
|
New York
|
D
|
Schumer
|
Schumer
|
Long
|
D +
32
|
Solid
D
|
Hold
|
Connecticut
|
D
|
Blumenthal
|
Blumenthal
|
Carter
|
D +
30
|
Solid
D
|
Hold
|
Hawaii
|
D
|
Schatz
|
Schatz
|
TBD
|
none
|
Solid
D
|
Hold
|
Maryland
|
D
|
Mikulski *
|
Van Hollen
|
Szeliga
|
none
|
Solid
D
|
Hold
|
Colorado
|
D
|
Bennet
|
Bennet
|
Glenn
|
D
+16
|
Solid
D
|
Hold
|
Oregon
|
D
|
Wyden
|
Wyden
|
Callaghan
|
none
|
Solid
D
|
Hold
|
Vermont
|
D
|
Leahy
|
Leahy
|
Milne
|
none
|
Solid
D
|
Hold
|
Washington
|
D
|
Murray
|
Murray
|
Vance
|
none
|
Solid
D
|
Hold
|
Wisconsin
|
R
|
Johnson
|
Feingold
|
Johnson
|
D +
11
|
Lean
D
|
FLIP
|
Indiana
|
R
|
Coats
|
Bayh
|
Young
|
D +
7
|
Lean
D
|
FLIP
|
New Hamp.
|
R
|
Ayotte
|
Hassan
|
Ayotte
|
D +
6
|
Lean
D
|
FLIP
|
Illinois
|
R
|
Kirk
|
Duckworth
|
Kirk
|
D +
5
|
Lean
D
|
FLIP
|
Penn.
|
R
|
Toomey
|
McGinty
|
Toomey
|
D +
3
|
Lean
D
|
FLIP
|
Nevada
|
D
|
Reid *
|
Masto
|
Heck
|
Tie
|
Tossup
R
|
FLIP
|
Missouri
|
R
|
Blunt
|
Kander
|
Blunt
|
R +
2
|
TOSSUPR
|
Hold
|
N. Car.
|
R
|
Burr
|
Ross
|
Burr
|
R +
4
|
Lean
R
|
Hold
|
Florida
|
R
|
Rubio
|
Murphy
|
Rubio
|
R +
6
|
Lean
R
|
Hold
|
Ohio
|
R
|
Portman
|
Strickland
|
Portman
|
R +
7
|
Lean
R
|
Hold
|
Georgia
|
R
|
Isakson
|
Barksdale
|
Isakson
|
R +
8
|
Solid
R
|
Hold
|
Iowa
|
R
|
Grassley
|
Judge
|
Grassley
|
R +
9
|
Solid
R
|
Hold
|
Kentucky
|
R
|
Paul
|
Gray
|
Paul
|
R +
12
|
Solid
R
|
Hold
|
Arizona
|
R
|
McCain
|
Kirkpatrick
|
McCain
|
R +
13
|
SOLID
R
|
Hold
|
S. Carolina
|
R
|
Scott
|
Dixon
|
Scott
|
R +
17
|
Solid
R
|
Hold
|
Kansas
|
R
|
Moran
|
Wiesner
|
Moran
|
R +
20
|
Solid
R
|
Hold
|
Utah
|
R
|
Lee
|
Snow
|
Lee
|
R +
33
|
Solid
R
|
Hold
|
Louisiana
|
R
|
Vitter
|
24 in both parties
|
DecRunoff
|
none
|
Solid
R
|
Hold
|
N. Dakota
|
R
|
Hoeven
|
Grassheim
|
Hoeven
|
none
|
Solid
R
|
Hold
|
Oklahoma
|
R
|
Lankford
|
Workman
|
Lankford
|
none
|
Solid
R
|
Hold
|
S. Dakota
|
R
|
Thune
|
Williams
|
Thune
|
none
|
Solid
R
|
Hold
|
Alabama
|
R
|
Shelby
|
Crumpton
|
Shelby
|
none
|
Solid
R
|
Hold
|
Alaska
|
R
|
Murkowski
|
TBD
|
Murkowski
|
none
|
Solid
R
|
Hold
|
Arkansas
|
R
|
Boozman
|
Eldridge
|
Boozman
|
none
|
Solid
R
|
Hold
|
Idaho
|
R
|
Crapo
|
Sturgill
|
Crapo
|
none
|
Solid
R
|
Hold
|
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