There is no end to the madness of
this presidential campaign. With Paul
Ryan’s decision to give up on the potential of a GOP White House
and focus instead exclusively on Congress, Donald Trump’s declaration of war on Ryan
and the mainstream GOP opens the possibility of Democratic control of both
houses of Congress.
The problem with the “down ballot
disaster” theory is that the polls are not completely
cooperating, and the GOP continues to hold on to the slimmest of margins in the
Senate, with mixed evidence of a post-Tape, post-Debate down ballot stampede away from the
GOP. And while the House margin is indeed
slimming, the Dems are still playing catch-up ball there as well.
But give Trump another week. If the Cosby-esque procession of women coming
forward detailing Trump’s hideous sexual abuses continues, and Trump continues
his “unshackled” campaign screeching, the attendant miasma may completely erase
the GOP’s tenuous hold on Congress.
SENATE
This latest BTRTN Senate Snapshot still
has the GOP retaining control by 51/49. There have been relatively few swing state
polls since The Tape (on October 7), the Clinton Debate #2 win (October 9), the
ensuing unraveling of the uneasy GOP/Trump alliance and the emergence of a slew
of Trump sexual abuse victims. Those
polls have been a mixed bag, with some evidence of movement towards the Dem
candidates but also several polls – in several contests that are GOP toss-ups –
that are unchanged. The net of it all is
no change in the basic contour of the race: the GOP maintains a slim lead in
retaining control of the Senate, but the pressure on this lead seems to be
rising.
There remain nine races in play –
five of them are toss-ups. The GOP candidate
is leading in four of the toss-ups, and thus, assuming each side holds onto its
“Leans,” the Democrats need to hold its toss-up leader (Pennsylvania) and pick
up one of the four GOP toss-ups (Missouri, Nevada, North Carolina and New Hampshire), assuming Clinton wins the White House. The nine races in play break down like this:
·
Democrat Lean races remain Wisconsin,
Indiana and Illinois. The Dem
candidates, Russ Feingold, Evan Bayh and Tammy Duckworth, respectively, all
have leads in the 3-7 point range and have led their races consistently. All three are “flips” where the current
office-holder is Republican. Add these
three to the 45 Dem seats that are either not up for reelection (36) or Solid
(9), and you get 48 seats, with the Dems needing to pick up two more from the
other six in play.
·
Of those six, one is a GOP Lean
race, Florida, with Marco Rubio up +8. But there have been no post-Tape polls
so it’s too early to put this one in the Solid camp, and thus it remains at
Lean R
·
And that leaves the five toss-ups:
o
Pennsylvania which shows a very thin
lead for Democrat Katie McGinty
o
North Carolina and Missouri, in
which the polls – including post-Tape polls – continue to slightly favor the
GOP candidate, Burr in North Carolina and Blunt in Missouri
o
New Hampshire, where there is some post-Tape
evidence the race is moving toward Dem Maggie Hassan, but not enough to switch
the rating, and thus remains Toss-up R for incumbent GOP Senator Kelly Ayotte
·
And that leaves the one state
where we have changed our rating, Nevada. Joe Heck is the GOP candidate running against
Catherine Cortez Matso for the seat Harry Reid is vacating. Heck has been leading in every poll except
one since July – until this morning when one new poll has Cortez Matso ahead by
+5. We are reluctant to flip the state
based on one poll by a local Las Vegas news station that has done no previously
polling – but this one may flip. For now
we have moved it from a Lean R to a Toss-up R.
For the Dems to regain control of
the Senate, they have to win two of the five toss-up states, assuming everyone
holds their “Leans” and Hillary Clinton wins the White House. Right now they are just short.
SENATE SNAPSHOT
|
||
Senate
|
September 25
|
October 15
|
DEM TOTAL
|
49 (+3)
|
49 (+3)
|
Dem Holdover
|
36
|
36
|
Dem Solid
|
9
|
9
|
Dem Lean
|
3
|
3
|
Dem Toss-up
|
1
|
1
|
GOP Toss-up
|
3
|
4
|
GOP Lean
|
2
|
1
|
GOP Solid
|
16
|
16
|
GOP Holdover
|
30
|
30
|
GOP TOTAL
|
51 (-4)
|
51 (-4)
|
|
|
|
Senate By State
|
Latest Polls
as of Oct 15
|
BTRTN
|
CA,CO,CT,HI,MD, NY,OR,VT,WA
|
|
Solid D
|
Illinois
|
Duckworth (D) + 7
|
Lean D
|
Indiana
|
Bayh (D) + 4
|
Lean D
|
Wisconsin
|
Feingold (D) + 3
|
Lean D
|
Pennsylvania
|
McGinty (D) + 0.4
|
Toss-up D
|
Nevada
|
Heck (R) + 1
|
Toss-up R
|
New Hampshire
|
Ayotte (R) + 1
|
Toss-up R
|
N. Carolina
|
Burr (R) + 2
|
Toss-up R
|
Missouri
|
Blunt (R) + 2
|
Toss-up R
|
Florida
|
Rubio (R) + 8
|
Lean R
|
AK,AL,AZ,GA,IA,KS,KY,
LA,ND,OH, SC,SD
|
|
Solid R
|
HOUSE
As stated in prior House Snapshots,
we at BTRTN have found a very strong correlation between the “Generic Ballot”
(in which potential voters are asked which party they would vote for in a
congressional election, without specifying candidates or a particular
race). Based on our regression equation
and the Democrats current +6.2 advantage (based on six polls since “The Tape”),
this BTRTN House Snapshot is a 23 seat pick-up for the
Dems. They would need 7 more
seats in order to gain control of the House, and that is hardly out of the
question at this point. One poll already
showed a 10-point gap.
Here is a rule of thumb for
you: every point in the generic ballot
is worth roughly 3.5 seats (we don’t want to get too precise here). The Dems need 30 seats to gain control, so
their Generic Ballot has to be in the 8-9 range for the odds to reach about
50/50.
HOUSE SNAPSHOT
|
||
House
|
As of Sep 25
|
As of Oct 14
|
Generic Ballot
|
Dem + 3.6
|
Dem + 6.2
|
|
|
|
Democrats
|
202 (+14)
|
211 (+23)
|
Republicans
|
233 (-14)
|
224 (-23)
|
************************************
The full set of Senate races are
below. CAPS indicates a change in the
rating.
SENATE SNAPSHOT
|
|||||||
State
|
Inc. Party
|
Incumbent
|
Dem
|
GOP
|
Poll Margin as of 10/15
|
BTRTN Rating as of
10/15
|
Hold/Flip
|
Not running
|
|
46-54
|
|
|
|
|
|
California
|
D
|
Boxer
|
Harris
|
Sanchez (D)
|
|
Solid
D
|
Hold
|
New York
|
D
|
Schumer
|
Schumer
|
Long
|
|
Solid
D
|
Hold
|
Maryland
|
D
|
Mikulski *
|
Van Hollen
|
Szeliga
|
|
Solid
D
|
Hold
|
Hawaii
|
D
|
Schatz
|
Schatz
|
Carroll
|
|
Solid
D
|
Hold
|
Oregon
|
D
|
Wyden
|
Wyden
|
Callaghan
|
|
Solid
D
|
Hold
|
Vermont
|
D
|
Leahy
|
Leahy
|
Milne
|
|
Solid
D
|
Hold
|
Connecticut
|
D
|
Blumenthal
|
Blumenthal
|
Carter
|
|
Solid
D
|
Hold
|
Washington
|
D
|
Murray
|
Murray
|
Vance
|
|
Solid
D
|
Hold
|
Colorado
|
D
|
Bennet
|
Bennet
|
Glenn
|
|
Solid
D
|
Hold
|
Illinois
|
R
|
Kirk
|
Duckworth
|
Kirk
|
D +
7
|
Lean
D
|
Flip
|
Indiana
|
R
|
Coats
|
Bayh
|
Young
|
D +
4
|
Lean
D
|
Flip
|
Wisconsin
|
R
|
Johnson
|
Feingold
|
Johnson
|
D +
3
|
Lean
D
|
Flip
|
Pennsylvania
|
R
|
Toomey
|
McGinty
|
Toomey
|
D +
0.4
|
Toss-up
D
|
Flip
|
Nevada
|
D
|
Reid *
|
Cortez Masto
|
Heck
|
R +
1
|
TOSS-UP
R
|
Flip
|
New Hamp.
|
R
|
Ayotte
|
Hassan
|
Ayotte
|
R +
1
|
Toss-up
R
|
Hold
|
North Carolina
|
R
|
Burr
|
Ross
|
Burr
|
R +
2
|
Toss-up
R
|
Hold
|
Missouri
|
R
|
Blunt
|
Kander
|
Blunt
|
R +
2
|
Toss-up
R
|
Hold
|
Florida
|
R
|
Rubio
|
(Murphy)
|
Rubio
|
R +
8
|
Lean
R
|
Hold
|
Kentucky
|
R
|
Paul
|
Gray
|
Paul
|
|
Solid
R
|
Hold
|
Ohio
|
R
|
Portman
|
Strickland
|
Portman
|
|
Solid
R
|
Hold
|
Arkansas
|
R
|
Boozman
|
Eldridge
|
Boozman
|
|
Solid
R
|
Hold
|
Iowa
|
R
|
Grassley
|
Judge
|
Grassley
|
|
Solid
R
|
Hold
|
Georgia
|
R
|
Isakson
|
Barksdale
|
Isakson
|
|
Solid
R
|
Hold
|
Kansas
|
R
|
Moran
|
Wiesner
|
Moran
|
|
Solid
R
|
Hold
|
S. Carolina
|
R
|
Scott
|
Dixon
|
Scott
|
|
Solid
R
|
Hold
|
Arizona
|
R
|
McCain
|
Kirkpatrick
|
McCain
|
|
Solid
R
|
Hold
|
Utah
|
R
|
Lee
|
Snow
|
Lee
|
|
Solid
R
|
Hold
|
North Dakota
|
R
|
Hoeven
|
Grassheim
|
Hoeven
|
|
Solid
R
|
Hold
|
Oklahoma
|
R
|
Lankford
|
Workman
|
Lankford
|
|
Solid
R
|
Hold
|
South Dakota
|
R
|
Thune
|
Williams
|
Thune
|
|
Solid
R
|
Hold
|
Alabama
|
R
|
Shelby
|
Crumpton
|
Shelby
|
|
Solid
R
|
Hold
|
Alaska
|
R
|
Murkowski
|
Metcalfe
|
Murkowski
|
|
Solid
R
|
Hold
|
Idaho
|
R
|
Crapo
|
Sturgill
|
Crapo
|
|
Solid
R
|
Hold
|
Louisiana
|
R
|
Vitter
|
Dec runoff of
|
24 D/R cands
|
|
Solid
R
|
Hold
|
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