Tom
with the latest “snapshot” on the state of the races.
The short answer: With two weeks to go, the Democrats continue
to have a very good chance of pulling off the ultimate “trifecta” – Joe Biden
winning the presidency, the Democrats flipping the Senate, and also maintaining
control of the House.
Here are the latest BTRTN odds, based on a brand new run of
our models.
BTRTN ELECTION DASHBOARD AS OF 10/20 |
||
BTRTN Election Odds of Democrats' Winning/Controlling |
||
Presidency |
Senate |
House |
87% |
74% |
99% |
335 Biden/203 Trump |
51 DEM / 49 GOP (D+4) |
251 DEM/187 GOP (D +18) |
These odds have been inching upwards all year (with the exception of the House odds, which have remained at 99% the entire time), reflecting ever-more favorable polls and conditions for the Democrats.
CHANGES IN ODDS |
|||||||||
Date >>> |
5/9 |
5/28 |
7/1 |
8/24 |
9/8 |
9/15 |
9/23 |
10/7 |
10/20 |
Presidency |
n/a |
73% |
82% |
81% |
79% |
81% |
82% |
83% |
87% |
Senate Control |
59% |
59% |
59% |
62% |
65% |
65% |
67% |
71% |
74% |
House Control |
99% |
99% |
99% |
99% |
99% |
99% |
99% |
99% |
99% |
These conditions include:
Trump’s tendency to destroy himself and GOP hopes with every not-socially-distanced
rally, every ludicrous claim that we are “rounding the corner’ on COVID, and
every non-disavowal or outright defense of extremist groups. And on top of that, the astonishing levels of
fundraising being raked in by Biden and swing state Democratic Senate
candidates and the truly stupendous grass roots volunteer force that is madly
at work to turn out every Democratic voter they possibly can (the “2020 Victory”
team that I text with has over 46,000 members right now.)
Having delivered that favorable news, we at BTRTN again
reprise our “warning label” which should be read carefully and repeated as a
mantra by all Democrats:
WARNING: No matter how good the numbers look
at any given time, the Democrats will not win any election unless they work
hard to earn it – registering voters, calling, texting, donating – throughout
the fall, up to and including Election Day.
And remember, this is a snapshot, not a forecast. We are down to two weeks to go until Election Day, and you can rest assured much will happen between now and then. Remember 2016 – at this stage of the race, neither of the Comey letters had been released as yet.
THE RACES
The
Presidency: Joe Biden’s national lead has grown to +9
points in the month of October. Collectively
he is ahead in the swing state polls as well, on average by +4 points in that
same time span. There have been a
whopping 83 swing state polls in October thus far, and Biden has led in 67 of
them, Trump has been ahead in only 10, and there have been 6 ties.
Biden is winning by +5 points or more in states (and
districts) with enough electoral votes, 290, to give him the presidency. And while the other states are all “toss ups,”
he is modestly ahead in the polls in all of them except Texas,
where he is still shockingly competitive. But he does not need to win any of the toss-ups to win the election.
The key states here are Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. If he holds his “solid” states (216 electoral votes) and Minnesota (10 more, and he is ahead by +7 there), all he needs are those three to get to 270. He is ahead by +6 or +7 points in each. And he has other “paths to 270” as well, with good leads (+5) in Arizona and Nevada. Biden also holds “within the margin of error” leads in Iowa, Florida, North Carolina (all "toss-ups") and a host of other toss up states also present possibilities. It is an enviable map at this point.
BTRTN PRESIDENT SNAPSHOT |
|||
|
EV |
State/District (EV) |
Latest Polls |
BIDEN |
335 |
|
|
Solid |
216 |
CA, CO, CT, DC, DE, HA, IL, ME, ME1, MS, NH, NM, NJ, NY, OR,
RI, VT, VA, WA |
|
Likely |
10 |
Minnesota (10) |
Biden + 7 |
Lean |
64 |
Nebraska 2nd (1) |
Biden + 7 |
Michigan (16) |
Biden + 7 |
||
Wisconsin (10) |
Biden + 6 |
||
Pennsylvania (20) |
Biden + 6 |
||
Nevada (6) |
Biden + 5 |
||
Arizona (11) |
Biden + 5 |
||
Toss-up (D) |
45 |
Florida (29) |
Biden + 2 |
Maine 2nd (1) |
Biden + 4 |
||
North Carolina (15) |
Biden + 3 |
||
Toss-up (GOP) |
78 |
Iowa (6) |
Biden + 2 |
Ohio (18) |
Biden + 1 |
||
Georgia (16) |
Biden + 1 |
||
Texas (28) |
Trump + 2 |
||
Lean |
0 |
|
|
Likely |
0 |
|
|
Solid |
125 |
AL, AK, AR, ID, IN, KS, KY, LA, MP, MO, MT, NE, NE1, NE3, ND, OK,
SC, SD, TN, UT, WV, WY |
|
TRUMP |
203 |
|
Can Trump possibly win? Of course – but he his odds are down to a 1 in 8 chance at this point. You can’t discount that; we’re fond of saying that horses with lesser odds do win at Belmont now and again. But Trump has to win every toss up entity – which gets him to 248 electoral votes -- and then pick off two or even three of the states in which Biden has a +5 point lead or higher. Frankly, it’s not likely, barring some truly devastating October surprise (and Russian-created Hunter Biden emails, fed to Rudy Giuliani and published only by the New York Post, hardly counts).
The Senate. The Democrats remain in a strong position to flip the Senate. They need a net of +3 flipped seats to get to 50, which would be enough to gain control, assuming a Biden win, with VP Kamala Harris in the tie-breaking chair.
The clearest path to the required “+3” is to flip Arizona, Colorado
and any two of Iowa, North
Carolina and Maine. This path assumes a successful defense of Michigan (as well as all the other “solid”
states, of course) and the loss of Alabama. The Democrats have decisive
leads (both in polling and in dollars on hand, thanks to a mega-gusher of third
quarter fundraising) in each of the required states – as of now. If they won every seat they lead in, they
would gain control with a vote to spare, at 51 seats.
But they are also in highly competitive races in many other
GOP-held seats. Four races are toss-ups: Georgia’s
regular election, Kansas, Montana and South Carolina. And Alaska
and Georgia’s special election are in the mix as
well, though Kentucky, at this point, is
probably out of range. But the Democrats
still have at least a tiny chance of coming away with an eye-popping 57 seats
if everything breaks their way in a blue tsunami.
BTRTN SENATE SNAPSHOT |
|||
|
Seats |
States |
Latest Polls |
DEM |
51 |
|
|
Holdover |
35 |
|
|
Solid |
10 |
DE, IL, MS, MN, NH, NM, NJ, OR, RI, VA |
|
Likely |
2 |
Arizona |
Kelly + 9 |
Colorado |
Hickenlooper + 8 |
||
Lean |
4 |
Michigan |
Peters + 5 |
Iowa |
Greenfield + 6 |
||
North Carolina |
Cunningham + 4 |
||
Maine |
Gideon + 4 |
||
Toss-up (D) |
0 |
|
|
Toss-up (GOP) |
4 |
South Carolina |
Graham + 2 |
Georgia (regular) |
Perdue + 1 |
||
Montana |
Daines + 3 |
||
Kansas |
Marshall + 3 |
||
Lean |
2 |
Alaska |
Sullivan + 3 |
Georgia (special) |
n/a |
||
Likely |
2 |
Kentucky |
McConnell + 11 |
Alabama |
Tuberville + 12 |
||
Solid |
11 |
AK, ID, LA, MP, NE, OK, SD, TN, TX, WV, WY |
|
Holdover |
30 |
|
|
GOP |
49 |
|
The
House. The Democrats
already hold a large majority in the House.
The current count is 232 Democrats to 198 Republicans with one
Libertarian and four vacancies. When you
take the four vacancies and apportion them back to their original 2018 holding
party, and also assign to the GOP the seat currently held by Libertarian Justin
Amish, then the effective split is 233 to 205.
The generic ballot, the key variable in our BTRTN House Prediction model, has the Dems up on average by nearly 8 points. If the Democrats maintain this margin through Election Day, they would be expected to flip 18 more seats, give or take a few, according to our model, to get to a whopping 251 to 187 advantage. There is no way the GOP can flip the House. We are being kind to put the odds of the Dems holding the House at 99%; we are simply allowing for the highly unlikely threat of a meteor landing.
HOUSE SNAPSHOT |
|
House |
As of 10/20 |
Generic Ballot |
Dem + 7.7 |
|
|
Democrats |
251 (+ 18) |
Republicans |
187 (- 18) |
And always remember this:
WARNING: No matter how good the numbers look
at any given time, the Democrats will not win any election unless they work
hard to earn it – registering voters, calling, texting, donating – throughout
the fall, up to and including Election Day.
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