It does not take much to shift the fate
of the Senate, given so many Toss-up states (five), and there has been a flurry
of movement in the past week. We have
changed the ratings of three states and the net of those shifts is that the
Dems now hold the advantage, assuming Hillary Clinton wins the White House as
expected. The House, however, remains a
bridge too far for the Dems at this point.
It seems apparent that Donald Trump’s
free fall over the past two weeks has not had a dramatic impact on down-ballot
polling – but even a minor impact would have monumental implications. The impact of his “rigged election” mantra on
turnout is unknowable, but it is hard to see how such a message will motivate
his “core” to stampede to the polls. But
hey, Trump is long on blurting and short on strategy.
SENATE
We have shifted both Illinois and
Wisconsin into the Solid D camp (from Lean D), and thus we are down to only
seven races “in play.”
Excluding those seven races, the
Dems have a stronghold of 47 seats (between Holdovers and Solids) and the GOP
holds 46. Thus the Dems have to win
three of the seven races to secure control of the Senate (assuming a Clinton
win). At this point, our
BTRTN Senate Snapshot has the Democrats regaining control in a 50/50 split,
assuming a Clinton win.
The seven races in play break down
like this:
·
The Dems are ahead in three races: Indiana, where Evan Bayh continues to hold a decent lead as
a Lean D in an effort to flip the seat currently held by retiring GOP Senator
Dan Coates; and two states that we have just changed from Toss-up R to Toss-up
D, New Hampshire (Maggie Hassan), which would be
a flip from incumbent GOP Senator Kelly Ayotte, and Nevada,
where Catherine Cortez Masto has taken the lead from Joe Heck, which would be a
hold for the Dems of Harry Reid’s seat.
·
The GOP is ahead in three Toss-ups: Pennsylvania, where
incumbent Pat Toomey has regained the lead in a nip and tuck battle with Dem
Katie McGinty; and two races that have been very close for a long time, Missouri (Roy Blunt) and North Carolina
(Richard Burr), where the two incumbents have stubbornly held on to small leads
for months now, immune to potential down-ballot effects of Donald Trump’s epic
decline.
·
And the GOP also has Marco Rubio in
Florida, who holds a slightly narrowing but still healthy lead and thus remains
a Lean R (though very close to a Solid).
SENATE SNAPSHOT
|
||
Senate
|
October 15
|
October 22
|
DEM TOTAL
|
49 (+3)
|
50 (+4)
|
Dem Holdover
|
36
|
36
|
Dem Solid
|
9
|
11
|
Dem Lean
|
3
|
1
|
Dem Toss-up
|
1
|
2
|
GOP Toss-up
|
4
|
3
|
GOP Lean
|
1
|
1
|
GOP Solid
|
16
|
16
|
GOP Holdover
|
30
|
30
|
GOP TOTAL
|
51 (-4)
|
50 (-4)
|
Senate By State
|
Latest Polls as
of Oct 15
|
BTRTN
|
CA,CO,CT,HI,IL,
MD, NY,OR,VT,WA, WI
|
Solid D
|
|
Indiana
|
Bayh (D) +4
|
Lean D
|
Nevada
|
Cortez Matso (D) +2
|
Toss-up D
|
New Hampshire
|
Hassan (D) +3
|
Toss-up D
|
Missouri
|
Blunt (R) + 1
|
Toss-up R
|
Pennsylvania
|
Toomey (R) + 2
|
Toss-up R
|
N. Carolina
|
Burr (R) + 2
|
Toss-up R
|
Florida
|
Rubio (R) + 5
|
Lean R
|
AK,AL,AZ,GA,IA,KS,KY,
LA,ND,OH, SC,SD
|
Solid R
|
HOUSE
The House race has also moved a bit
toward the Dems, but they have a bigger gap to overcome to gain control there
and, at this point, they are falling short.
The Dems’ lead in the Generic Ballot inched up from 3.6 points to 4.2
points in the past week, and thus our proprietary BTRTN regression
model is predicting only a 16 seat pick-up for the Dems, just over
half of the 30 seats they need to turn the House blue.
HOUSE SNAPSHOT
|
||
House
|
As of Oct 15
|
As of Oct 22
|
Generic Ballot
|
Dem + 3.6
|
Dem + 4.1
|
Democrats
|
202 (+14)
|
204 (+16)
|
Republicans
|
233 (-14)
|
231 (-16)
|
The full set of Senate races are below. CAPS indicate a change in the rating.
SENATE SNAPSHOT
|
|||||||
State
|
Inc. Party
|
Incumbent
|
Dem
|
GOP
|
Poll Margin as of 10/15
|
BTRTN Rating as of
10/22
|
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
|
|
Wisconsin
|
R
|
Johnson
|
Feingold
|
Johnson
|
SOLID
|
Flip
|
|
Illinois
|
R
|
Kirk
|
Duckworth
|
Kirk
|
SOLID
|
Flip
|
|
Indiana
|
R
|
Coats
|
Bayh
|
Young
|
D +
4
|
Lean
D
|
Flip
|
New Hamp.
|
R
|
Ayotte
|
Hassan
|
Ayotte
|
D +
3
|
TOSS-UP
D
|
Flip
|
Nevada
|
D
|
Reid *
|
Cortez Masto
|
Heck
|
D +
2
|
TOSS-UP
D
|
Hold
|
Missouri
|
R
|
Blunt
|
Kander
|
Blunt
|
R +
1
|
Toss-up
R
|
Hold
|
Pennsylvania
|
R
|
Toomey
|
McGinty
|
Toomey
|
R +
2
|
TOSS-UP
R
|
Hold
|
N. Carolina
|
R
|
Burr
|
Ross
|
Burr
|
R +
2
|
Toss-up
R
|
Hold
|
Florida
|
R
|
Rubio
|
Murphy
|
Rubio
|
R +
5
|
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
|
24 D/R cand.'s
|
Dec runoff
|
Solid
R
|
Hold
|
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