Note: If
anyone wants our famous BTRTN Election Night Scorecard spreadsheet, so you can
easily follow all 506 elections (435 House, 35 Senate and 36 gubernatorial),
please email us at borntorunthenumbers@gmail.com
and we will send it along.
OUR TRACK RECORD
We’ll
start with our credentials. Why should
you pay any attention to BTRTN? We’ve
been forecasting elections since 2008, when we started by getting every state
right in the Senate and all but two states in he Obama-McCain presidential race.
Out of more than 2,000 elections since then (now including all presidential, House,
Senate and gubernatorial races), we've been right 96% of the time, missing the mark in fewer
than 100 of those races. And we’ve been nearly
spot on in forecasting gains and losses in the House, as the chart below
illustrates.
Year
|
Total Elections
|
House Gains
|
||||
Total
Races
|
#
Correct
|
%
Correct
|
BTRTN Prediction
|
Actual Outcome
|
||
2008
|
91
|
89
|
98%
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
|
2010
|
471
|
453
|
96%
|
R + 58
|
R + 63
|
|
2012
|
524
|
502
|
96%
|
D + 4
|
D + 8
|
|
2014
|
507
|
488
|
96%
|
R + 10
|
R + 13
|
|
2016
|
537
|
519
|
97%
|
D + 5
|
D + 6
|
|
2017
|
8
|
6
|
75%
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
|
Total
|
2138
|
2057
|
96%
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
Like
others, we got it wrong in the 2016 Presidential election, when Donald Trump
overcame the odds (and the polls, in just a few crucial states) to win the
presidency, even though he lost the popular vote by 2.1% (which the national
pollsters and aggregators got just about right). But we hold our track record up with anyone,
and despite the 2016 fiasco, we have not hedged our bets any more than our
models, tempered by our judgment, would have done otherwise. As you shall see.
THE PREDICTIONS
The
chart below summarizes the outcomes.
House
|
Senate
|
Governors
|
|
%
chance D takeover
|
78%
|
6%
|
n/a
|
D/R
Split
|
231/204
|
49/51
|
25/25
|
Dem
gain
|
D + 38
|
No change
|
D + 9
|
We
foresee:
·
The Dems gain +38 seats, taking control of the House with some breathing
room to spare, and coming away with a 231/204
advantage. The Dems end up winning 22 of
the 33 “toss-up” races, but some of these take days before a winner is
declared. By any definition, this
represents a giant repudiation to Trump and certainly counts as a “blue wave.” But keep in mind, those toss-up races are
close, and thus there is a 22% chance (1 in 5) the GOP retains the House.
·
The GOP holds onto the Senate and keeps their current
51/49
advantage. Of the eight races truly in
play, the Dems manage to flip both Nevada and Arizona, but the GOP will offset those losses by
turning North Dakota and Missouri. The Democrats hold onto Indiana and Montana, but despite valiant
efforts, they lose in single digits in the deep red states of Texas and Tennessee.
·
The Dems pick up a healthy +9 gubernatorial seats, turning a whopping
16/33/1 state house deficit into a 25/25 split, exceptionally marked progress
and welcome news on so many fronts, not the least of which is with a census and
redistricting battles ahead.
Our
final ratings (chart below) underline exactly how crucial these toss-up races
are in the outcomes. In the House, the
Dems can’t take control without winning at least 9 of those 33. In the Senate, not only must the Dems win all
six of them, but they need to pick off one of the “leaning GOP” seats
(Tennessee or Texas) as well to get to 51 – that’s what makes the odds of a Dem
Senate takeover so low. And in the
gubernatorial races, they need to take 6 of the 9 toss-ups to get to a
majority, which would be a symbolic turning point.
Understand
that “toss-up” does not mean “50/50.” If
the Dems are ahead by a point or two, as they are in many of these races, they
are statistically the favorite. It is
just that if the Dems hold a slim lead, within the margin of error, the GOP
does have at least a decent statistical chance of winning those races. But being even slightly ahead in the toss-ups
gives the Dems a clear leg up.
What
could upset the House applecart, the linchpin of Dem hopes to control Trump and
begin a blue turnaround? It would have
to take new shock news tonight to truly make a difference, an epic “November
surprise.” Or perhaps a systemic
sampling error. Or an incredibly larger
than expected GOP turnout. None of this
is very likely, and, while anything is possible, we stick by our predictions.
BTRTN FINAL RATINGS: 11/5/2018
|
|||||||
HOUSE
|
SENATE
|
GOVERNOR
|
|||||
DEM TOTAL
|
231
|
DEM TOTAL
|
49
|
DEM TOTAL
|
25
|
||
Dem Solid
|
185
|
Dem Holdover
|
23
|
Dem Holdover
|
7
|
||
Dem Likely
|
18
|
Dem Solid
|
21
|
Dem Solid
|
8
|
||
Dem Lean
|
6
|
Dem Lean
|
0
|
Dem Lean
|
5
|
||
Dem Toss-up
|
22
|
Dem Toss-up
|
5
|
Dem Toss-up
|
5
|
||
GOP Toss-up
|
11
|
GOP Toss-up
|
1
|
GOP Toss-up
|
4
|
||
GOP Lean
|
7
|
GOP Lean
|
2
|
GOP Lean
|
1
|
||
GOP Likely
|
25
|
GOP Solid
|
6
|
GOP Solid
|
13
|
||
GOP Solid
|
161
|
GOP Holdover
|
42
|
GOP Holdover
|
7
|
||
GOP TOTAL
|
204
|
GOP TOTAL
|
51
|
GOP TOTAL
|
25
|
EVERY RACE
Below
is the prediction for each and every Senate and Governor race, and all of the competitive House races.
Keep an eye on the races “in play,” that is, with the outcome at least somewhat in doubt (the “leans”, “likelies”
and “toss-ups”). They are clearly
identified in the charts.
THE SENATE
The
Dems chances of winning the Senate are now vanishingly small. We see the range of outcomes as follows:
Dem Seats
|
% Chance
|
52
|
1%
|
51
|
5%
|
50
|
20%
|
49
|
34%
|
48
|
27%
|
47
|
11%
|
46
|
2%
|
What
it really boils down to, is the Dems have to win four races that at this point
show less than a 1% margin – Arizona, Nevada, Missouri and Indiana – plus win
either Texas or Tennessee, which they trail by 5-6 points in the latest
polling, a very, very tough hill to climb.
It
is excruciating predicting a race where the average polling margin is less than
one point and, as stated, we have four of them.
The Dems could end up with anywhere from 47 to 50 seats, and, while none
of those likely outcomes gives them control of the Senate, every seat they flip
or hold onto makes a huge difference in the GOP’s ability to get the judges
they want on the bench. The GOP still
has Lisa Murkowski (who voted against Kavanaugh) to contend with, as well as
the (kind of) moderate Susan Collins and the pesky Ben Sasse. Fifty Dem seats makes the Senate far more
difficult for Mitch McConnell to navigate than 47.
At
this point we have the Dems holding onto to their 49 seats, the “mode”
probability outcome. Here are all 35
races, sorted from most to least likely Dem win. Again, pay attention to those highlighted races
in the middle of the chart, those that are “in play,” the six toss-ups plus red-leaning
Tennessee and Texas.
BTRTN SENATE PREDICTIONS
|
||||||
State
|
Inc. Party
|
Incumbent
|
Democrat
|
GOP
|
Recent Polls Avg
|
BTRTN Rating
|
CAL
|
D
|
Feinstein
|
Feinstein
|
de Leon (D)
|
D Solid
|
|
VER
|
I
|
Sanders
|
Sanders
|
Paige
|
D/I Solid
|
|
NY
|
D
|
Gillebrand
|
Gillebrand
|
Farley
|
D Solid
|
|
HAW
|
D
|
Hirono
|
Hirono
|
Curtis
|
D Solid
|
|
MARY
|
D
|
Cardin
|
Cardin
|
Campbell
|
D Solid
|
|
RI
|
D
|
Whitehouse
|
Whitehouse
|
Flanders
|
D Solid
|
|
DEL
|
D
|
Carper
|
Carper
|
Arlett
|
D Solid
|
|
MASS
|
D
|
Warren
|
Warren
|
Diehl
|
D Solid
|
|
WASH
|
D
|
Cantwell
|
Cantwell
|
Hutchison
|
D Solid
|
|
MN
|
D
|
Klobuchar
|
Klobuchar
|
Newberger
|
D Solid
|
|
CONN
|
D
|
Murphy
|
Murphy
|
Corey
|
D Solid
|
|
MICH
|
D
|
Stabenow
|
Stabenow
|
James
|
D Solid
|
|
MAINE
|
I
|
King
|
King (I)
|
Ringelstein (D), Brakey (R)
|
I Solid (D)
|
|
NMEX
|
D
|
Heinrich
|
Heinrich
|
Rich
|
D Solid
|
|
VA
|
D
|
Kaine
|
Kaine
|
Stewart
|
D Solid
|
|
PA
|
D
|
Casey
|
Casey
|
Barletta
|
D Solid
|
|
WISC
|
D
|
Baldwin
|
Baldwin
|
Vukmir
|
D Solid
|
|
OHIO
|
D
|
Brown
|
Brown
|
Renacci
|
D Solid
|
|
WV
|
D
|
Manchin
|
Manchin
|
Morrisey
|
D Solid
|
|
NJ
|
D
|
Menendez
|
Menendez
|
Hugin
|
D Solid
|
|
MN (SP)
|
D
|
T. Smith
|
T. Smith
|
Housley
|
D Solid
|
|
MONT
|
D
|
Tester
|
Tester
|
Rosendale
|
D +
5
|
D
TU
|
FLA
|
D
|
Nelson
|
Nelson
|
Scott
|
D +
3
|
D
TU
|
IND
|
D
|
Donnelley
|
Donnelley
|
Braun
|
D +
1
|
D
TU
|
NEV
|
R
|
Heller
|
Rosen
|
Heller
|
D +
1
|
D
TU (Flip)
|
ARIZ
|
R
|
Flake (ret.)
|
Sinema
|
McSally
|
Tie
|
D
TU (Flip)
|
MO
|
D
|
McCaskill
|
McCaskill
|
Hawley
|
R +
1
|
R
TU (Flip)
|
TEXAS
|
R
|
Cruz
|
O'Rourke
|
Cruz
|
R +
6
|
R
Lean
|
TENN
|
R
|
Corker (ret.)
|
Bredesen
|
Blackburn
|
R +
5
|
R
Lean
|
NDAK
|
D
|
Heitkamp
|
Heitkamp
|
Cramer
|
R Solid (Flip)
|
|
MS (SP)
|
R
|
Hyde-Smith
|
Espy
|
Hyde-Smith
|
R Solid
|
|
MS
|
R
|
Wicker
|
Baria
|
Wicker
|
R Solid
|
|
NEB
|
R
|
Fischer
|
Raybould
|
Fischer
|
R Solid
|
|
UTAH
|
R
|
Hatch (ret.)
|
Wilson
|
Romney
|
R Solid
|
|
WYO
|
R
|
Barrasso
|
Trauner
|
Barrasso
|
R Solid
|
THE GOVERNORS
This
will be an excellent result for the Democrats; they are almost certain to pick
up +4 governorships, most likely +9, with a shot at +13. There are fully nine “toss-up” races and we
have the Dems winning six of them. That
includes Florida and Ohio where they have reasonably strong +4 leads. There are five races where the margin appears
to be one point or less”: Alaska,
Georgia, Iowa, Kansas and Nevada.
BTRTN GOVERNOR PREDICTION
|
||||||
State
|
Inc. Party
|
Incumbent
|
Democrat
|
GOP
|
Recent Polls Avg
|
BTRTN Rating
|
HAW
|
D
|
Ige
|
Ige
|
Tupola
|
D Solid
|
|
NY
|
D
|
Cuomo
|
Cuomo
|
Molinaro
|
D Solid
|
|
CAL
|
D
|
Brown
|
Newsom
|
Cox
|
D/I Solid
|
|
RI
|
D
|
Raimando
|
Raimando
|
Fung
|
D Solid
|
|
PENN
|
D
|
Wolf
|
Wolf
|
Wagner
|
D Solid
|
|
ILL
|
R
|
Rauner
|
Pritzker
|
Rauner
|
D Solid (Flip)
|
|
MINN
|
D
|
Dayton
|
Walz
|
Johnson
|
D Solid
|
|
MICH
|
R
|
Snyder
|
Whitmer
|
Scheutte
|
D Solid (Flip)
|
|
MAINE
|
R
|
LePage
|
Mills
|
Moody
|
D +
8
|
D
Lean (Flip)
|
NMEX
|
R
|
Martinez
|
Grisham
|
Pearce
|
D +
7
|
D
Lean (Flip)
|
COL
|
D
|
Hickenlooper
|
Polis
|
Stapleton
|
D +
5
|
D
Lean
|
CONN
|
D
|
Molloy
|
Lamont
|
Stefanowski
|
D +
4
|
D
Lean
|
OR
|
D
|
Brown
|
Brown
|
Beuhler
|
D +
4
|
D
Lean
|
FLA
|
R
|
Scott
|
Gillum
|
DeSantis
|
D +
4
|
D
TU (Flip)
|
OHIO
|
R
|
Kasich
|
Cordray
|
DeWine
|
D +
4
|
D
TU (Flip)
|
WISC
|
R
|
Walker
|
Evers
|
Walker
|
D +
2
|
D
TU (Flip)
|
IOWA
|
R
|
Reynolds
|
Hubbell
|
Reynolds
|
D +
1
|
D
TU (Flip)
|
KAN
|
R
|
Colyer
|
Kelly
|
Kobach
|
D +
1
|
D
TU (Flip)
|
GA
|
R
|
Deal
|
Abrams
|
Kemp
|
R +
1
|
R
TU
|
NEV
|
R
|
Sandoval
|
Sisolak
|
Laxalt
|
R +
1
|
R
TU
|
ALASKA
|
I
|
Walker*
|
Begish
|
Dunleavy
|
R +
1
|
R
TU (Flip)
|
SDAK
|
R
|
Daugaard
|
Sutton
|
Noem
|
R +
2
|
R
TU
|
OKL
|
R
|
Fallin
|
Edmondson
|
Stitt
|
R +
7
|
R
Lean
|
ARI
|
R
|
Ducey
|
Garcia
|
Ducey
|
R Solid
|
|
NH
|
R
|
Sununu
|
Kelly
|
Sununu
|
R Solid
|
|
VER
|
R
|
Scott
|
Hallquist
|
Scott
|
R Solid
|
|
SC
|
R
|
McMaster
|
Smith
|
McMaster
|
R Solid
|
|
TENN
|
R
|
Haslam
|
Dean
|
Lee
|
R Solid
|
|
MARY
|
R
|
Hogan
|
Jealous
|
Hogan
|
R Solid
|
|
IDA
|
R
|
Otter
|
Jordan
|
Little
|
R Solid
|
|
ALAB
|
R
|
Ivey
|
Maddox
|
Ivey
|
R Solid
|
|
TEX
|
R
|
Abbott
|
Valdez
|
Abbott
|
R Solid
|
|
NEB
|
R
|
Ricketts
|
Krist
|
Ricketts
|
R Solid
|
|
ARK
|
R
|
Hutchinson
|
Henderson
|
Hutchinson
|
R Solid
|
|
MASS
|
R
|
Baker
|
Gonzalez
|
Baker
|
R Solid
|
|
WYO
|
R
|
Mead
|
Throne
|
Mead
|
R Solid
|
|
*
Walker is also on the ballot as an Independent, but he is trailing the
major party challengers by a wide margin.
|
THE HOUSE
Here
are the 89 House races that are “in play,” including the 33 that are
“toss-ups.” You can see which races are
pick-ups for each party, which net to a gain of 38 seats for the Dems
(including a few changes in “solid” races not shown).
BTRTN HOUSE PREDICTIONS
|
|||||
State
|
Dist.
|
Incum. Party
|
Latest Polls
|
BTRTN Rating 11/2
|
Dem Net Pickup
|
235 R / 193 D
|
38
|
||||
Pennsylvania
|
17
|
D
|
D + 12
|
D Likely
|
|
Pennsylvania
|
8
|
R
|
D + 12
|
D Likely
|
+ D
|
California
|
7
|
D
|
D Likely
|
||
Minnesota
|
7
|
D
|
D + 7
|
D Likely
|
|
Florida
|
7
|
D
|
D Likely
|
||
Arizona
|
2
|
R
|
D + 1
|
D Likely
|
+ D
|
Arizona
|
1
|
D
|
D Likely
|
||
New Hampshire
|
1
|
D
|
D + 7
|
D Likely
|
|
California
|
49
|
R
|
D + 7
|
D Likely
|
+ D
|
Iowa
|
1
|
R
|
D + 10
|
D Likely
|
+ D
|
Pennsylvania
|
7
|
Vacant
|
D + 5
|
D Likely
|
+ D
|
Colorado
|
6
|
R
|
D + 9
|
D Likely
|
+ D
|
Minnesota
|
2
|
R
|
D + 8
|
D Likely
|
+ D
|
Minnesota
|
3
|
R
|
D + 5
|
D Likely
|
+ D
|
New Jersey
|
11
|
R
|
D + 8
|
D Likely
|
+ D
|
Virginia
|
10
|
R
|
D + 11
|
D Likely
|
+ D
|
Kansas
|
3
|
R
|
D + 12
|
D Likely
|
+ D
|
Nevada
|
4
|
D
|
D + 2
|
D Likely
|
|
New Jersey
|
7
|
R
|
D + 6
|
D Lean
|
+ D
|
Utah
|
4
|
R
|
D + 7
|
D Lean
|
+ D
|
North Carolina
|
2
|
R
|
D + 9
|
D Lean
|
+ D
|
Florida
|
27
|
R
|
D + 7
|
D Lean
|
+ D
|
Nevada
|
3
|
D
|
D + 2
|
D Lean
|
|
Michigan
|
11
|
R
|
D + 3
|
D Lean
|
+ D
|
Illinois
|
6
|
R
|
D +
2
|
D
TU
|
+ D
|
California
|
10
|
R
|
D +
2
|
D
TU
|
+ D
|
California
|
45
|
R
|
D +
2
|
D
TU
|
+ D
|
Washington
|
8
|
R
|
D +
3
|
D
TU
|
+ D
|
California
|
48
|
R
|
D +
1
|
D
TU
|
+ D
|
New
York
|
19
|
R
|
D +
3
|
D
TU
|
+ D
|
Texas
|
32
|
R
|
D +
4
|
D
TU
|
+ D
|
Illinois
|
14
|
R
|
D +
6
|
D
TU
|
+ D
|
Pennsylvania
|
16
|
R
|
D +
4
|
D
TU
|
+ D
|
Georgia
|
6
|
R
|
D +
2
|
D
TU
|
+ D
|
Minnesota
|
1
|
D
|
D +
2
|
D
TU
|
|
Pennsylvania
|
1
|
D
|
D +
2
|
D
TU
|
|
Florida
|
26
|
R
|
D +
1
|
D
TU
|
+ D
|
Virginia
|
5
|
R
|
D +
1
|
D
TU
|
+ D
|
California
|
39
|
R
|
D +
1
|
D
TU
|
+ D
|
Iowa
|
3
|
R
|
D +
1
|
D
TU
|
+ D
|
Maine
|
2
|
R
|
D +
1
|
D
TU
|
+ D
|
New
Jersey
|
3
|
R
|
D +
1
|
D
TU
|
+ D
|
California
|
25
|
R
|
D +
2
|
D
TU
|
+ D
|
New
York
|
22
|
R
|
Tie
|
D
TU
|
+ D
|
Kentucky
|
6
|
R
|
Tie
|
D
TU
|
+ D
|
Florida
|
15
|
R
|
Tie
|
D
TU
|
+ D
|
Texas
|
7
|
R
|
R +
1
|
R
TU
|
|
Kansas
|
2
|
R
|
R +
1
|
R
TU
|
|
Alaska
|
1
|
R
|
D +
1
|
R
TU
|
|
Montana
|
1
|
R
|
Tie
|
R
TU
|
|
Michigan
|
8
|
R
|
R +
3
|
R
TU
|
|
New
Mexico
|
2
|
R
|
R +
2
|
R
TU
|
|
Virginia
|
2
|
R
|
R +
3
|
R
TU
|
|
Virginia
|
7
|
R
|
R +
1
|
R
TU
|
|
Pennsylvania
|
10
|
R
|
R +
1
|
R
TU
|
|
North
Carolina
|
9
|
R
|
R +
1
|
R
TU
|
|
North
Carolina
|
13
|
R
|
R +
3
|
R
TU
|
|
Illinois
|
12
|
R
|
R + 9
|
R Lean
|
|
Minnesota
|
8
|
D
|
R + 7
|
R Lean
|
+ R
|
Georgia
|
7
|
R
|
R + 6
|
R Lean
|
|
New York
|
27
|
R
|
R + 6
|
R Lean
|
|
Ohio
|
1
|
R
|
R + 9
|
R Lean
|
|
Ohio
|
12
|
R
|
R Lean
|
||
Wisconsin
|
1
|
R
|
R Lean
|
||
Arizona
|
8
|
R
|
R Likely
|
||
Arkansas
|
2
|
R
|
R + 12
|
R Likely
|
|
California
|
4
|
R
|
R Likely
|
||
California
|
21
|
R
|
R Likely
|
||
California
|
50
|
R
|
R + 3
|
R Likely
|
|
Colorado
|
3
|
R
|
R Likely
|
||
Florida
|
6
|
Vacant
|
R Likely
|
||
Florida
|
16
|
R
|
R Likely
|
||
Florida
|
18
|
R
|
R Likely
|
||
Florida
|
25
|
R
|
R Likely
|
||
Illinois
|
13
|
R
|
R + 5
|
R Likely
|
|
Michigan
|
6
|
R
|
R Likely
|
||
Michigan
|
7
|
R
|
R Likely
|
||
Missouri
|
2
|
R
|
R Likely
|
||
Nebraska
|
2
|
R
|
R + 9
|
R Likely
|
|
New York
|
1
|
R
|
R + 8
|
R Likely
|
|
New York
|
11
|
R
|
R + 4
|
R Likely
|
|
New York
|
24
|
R
|
R + 14
|
R Likely
|
|
Ohio
|
14
|
R
|
R Likely
|
||
Texas
|
21
|
R
|
R Likely
|
||
Texas
|
23
|
R
|
R + 15
|
R Likely
|
|
Washington
|
3
|
R
|
R + 7
|
R Likely
|
|
Washington
|
5
|
R
|
R Likely
|
||
Iowa
|
4
|
R
|
R Likely
|
||
West Virginia
|
3
|
Vacant
|
R + 7
|
R Likely
|
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