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Senator Joe Manchin currently trails his Republican challenger, Attorney General Patrick Morrisey.
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The Pundit’s Blue Wave in Texas
March 6, as the polls opened across Texas for the Primary Election Day, pundits across the country were breathlessly pointing out correlations between early Democrat voting numbers and the potential of a ‘Blue Wave’ election this coming November.
The self-proclaimed ‘Big Data’ journalists spent a good part of the day, leading up to the polls closing posting heavily caveated tweets and articles alluding to the Democrat early vote advantage across the 15 largest counties in Texas serving as a potential bell weather for Democrat upsets in November. While unsubstantiated observations like this may draw attention to the writer, a closer look at historical data and last night’s results show clear flaws in this overused false narrative.
Our team at WPA Intelligence analyzed the data (as we do), and they show that zero correlation between Democrat primary voting and Democrat performance in the November general elections. Even if Democrats would have had a primary advantage in the 2018 primary (narrator voice: “they did not”), there is no evidence that that impacts the November election.
2008, The Democrat’s Year…
In 2008, a year in which Democrats took control of Congress and the White House, they posted a significant early vote advantage and a significant primary turnout advantage. Despite this fact, they lost both the Senate and Presidential ballot by almost twelve-point margin in Texas.
2002, a Midterm Example
In 2002, Democrats posted a significant primary turnout and early voting advantage. Again, despite the increased energy and enthusiasm, Democrats were outperformed by Republicans at the top of the ballot in both the Gubernatorial and Senate general elections.
2018, Reality
Despite the media’s constant proclamations of record early voting, “huge crowds” and “unprecidented Democrat enthusiasm” signaling party strength, the final election results show that Democrats actually posted a significant deficit in early voting and a deficit that widened still after all of votes were cast on Election Day.
While 2018 Democratic primary turnout represents an improvement from 2014 and 2010 mid-term elections, when compared to the two previous examples it is wishful thinking to argue that this result will magically translate to Democrat victories in November. Democrats have lost major statewide elections in Texas by an average of 15% over the past four cycles. It is not realistic to believe that the March 6th results signal a change in that pattern.
While Democrats have steadily improved in primary turnout in recent years, there is no indication that there will be a ‘Blue Wave’ in Texas this November.
Campaigns Whiteboard
McSally internal poll shows neck-and-neck primary with Ward
By KEVIN ROBILLARD
An internal polling memo conducted by Rep. Martha McSally’s campaign and obtained by POLITICO shows the congresswoman running neck and neck with former state legislator Kelli Ward in Arizona’s GOP Senate primary.
The survey has McSally earning 38 percent of the vote to Ward’s 36 percent, with 26 percent undecided. Public polling in the race, mostly IVR surveys, has shown Ward with a significant lead over McSally, who is yet to officially launch her campaign. Ward, who lost to Arizona Sen. John McCain in the 2016 GOP primary, was initially challenging incumbent Sen. Jeff Flake before his retirement.
“Contrary to what some public polls suggest, Kelli Ward does not hold a strong position in the Primary race for United States Senate in Arizona. The limitations of these poorly-conducted surveys have created a misleading dialogue about the state of the nomination contest,” pollsters Chris Wilson and Alex Muir write.
“In fact, before any campaign efforts, Representative McSally starts off with a two-point lead on the ballot in a head-to-head race with Ward with one-in-four Republican primary voters are undecided. This is a remarkable starting place for a campaign against Ward, who has been running for statewide office for two years now. The McSally campaign is in an excellent position to build a winning Primary coalition simply by increasing her statewide name recognition, and thus building on the existing ballot advantage.”
The poll also shows McSally leading with both men and women over age 55, who tend to be the most reliable primary voters. Among men 55 and older, she has a 40 percent to 38 percent edge. Among women 55 and older, she leads 39 percent to 36 percent.
Rep. Kyrsten Sinema is the likely Democratic nominee.
The poll of 500 likely GOP primary voters, conducted Nov. 15 and 16, has a margin of error of plus or minus 4.4 percentage points.
You can find the full article here.
2017 Campaign Lessons
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The High Holy Day of MAGA
“That suburban vote is scary,” the Republican pollster and data analyst Chris Wilson, who worked on Ted Cruz’s presidential campaign, said in an email. “If it were just VA, we could put it down to federal workers and contractors, but it happened in PA and elsewhere too. If you’re a GOP incumbent in a heavily suburban, college-educated district, I think you’re worried today and rightfully so.”
Read more here.
Republicans have a Serious Suburban Problem in 2018
“If it were just Virginia, we could put it down to federal workers and contractors, but it happened in Pennsylvania and elsewhere, too,” Chris Wilson, a GOP strategist, wrote in an email. “If you’re a GOP incumbent in a heavily suburban, college educated district, I think you’re worried today and rightfully so.”
Read more here
Republicans Suddenly Fear Disastrous 2018
“If you’re a GOP incumbent in a heavily suburban, college-educated district, I think you’re worried today, and rightfully so,” said veteran Republican strategist Chris Wilson.
Trump won an Electoral College victory without the support of some of those voters, while others, seeing the race as a binary choice between Trump and Hillary Clinton—who also had high unfavorable ratings—reluctantly backed him. The concern is that, without facing that stark choice again, some of these suburbanites may be inclined to more actively consider Democrats going forward.
“Clinton was such a horrible candidate that distaste for her may have held back the swing of college educated whites towards the Democrats,” Wilson said. “If that’s true, it’s a real problem and one that Republicans must address prior to 2018.”
Read more here.
WHAT 2017 MEANS FOR NEXT YEAR’S MIDTERMS
Chris Wilson, WPA Intelligence: “Based on initial returns it appears rural VA voted heavily Gillespie but didn’t turn out at the same elevated rates they did for Trump. It that holds true, it’s significant. At this point I’m not sure if it means the campaign didn’t turn them out or they weren’t motivated and couldn’t be turned out, but it certainly points to the conclusion that 2018 will be a turnout—not a persuasion—election.
In Texas, there are 2,068,746 voters who don’t plan to turnout in 2018 but will vote for Gov. Greg Abbott if they do. We, the Abbott campaign, are already running a turnout operation at those voters. In Nevada, there are 45,137 for Adam Laxalt. Any campaign that can’t tell you their turnout target number is likely going to lose.”
Read more here.
Is the White Working Class a Republican identity group?
I like to catch up on my reading of the weekend, it’s the only time my constellation of e-mails, text, messages, slack messages, and phone calls (the future is, in fact, terrible) slows down enough that I can actually read and think about a piece.
So, paging through various things saved to my reading list I found a trend. It’s like machine learning, only with one old slow brain. But sometimes it still works.
Data point 1:
The Center for American Progress published some information about their big roll-up turnout analysis which combines census data (Current Population Survey and American Communities Surveys, various well-conducted academic post-election surveys, and voter file analysis).
The key takeaway among many interesting points which we already knew (such as black turnout rate declining from 2012) is that the exit polls, and thus many analyses of what happened, substantially understated the White Working Class share of the electorate.
These new estimates suggest that White Working Class voters made up 45% of all votes cast while college educated whites made up only 29% of the electorate. Exit polls had suggested an advantage for college-educated white of 37% to 34%.
Data point 2:
The NYT Upshot/Sienna College poll in Virginia was released Sunday. While the topline isn’t all that interesting compared to polling averages (Northam +3), access to detailed cross-tabs reveals one important story.
Gillespie is willing the White Working Class by 63% to 23%. While WWC voters are typically a Republican-leaning group, that 23% for Northam is a pretty stark number.
If the undecideds break lopsidedly for Northam, then perhaps this poll means nothing.
But, if his number stays that low its further evidence that, as several smart folks commented on twitter (and sorry to those smart folks, I didn’t record who you were individually to give you credit), the WWC is behaving like a racial identity group in the same way that we’ve historically seen black voters, for example, behave.
So what?
The outcome in Virginia will be important to watch. If the WWC is indeed behaving more and more like a racial identity group, it has some important implications for 2018 (and beyond).
In fact, it probably has enough implications that I could spill a few tens of thousands of words on them. And I probably will. But for now, a few quick ideas of what it might mean:
- Expect to see a lot more of the sorts of ads that drive the DC press corps nuts—confederate monuments, criminal gangs, and amnesty for illegal immigrants are all issues that signal to these voters that a candidate sees thing from their point of view.
- The opioid epidemic will be a profoundly important issue. Opioids are destroying WWC communities (and many other communities) and the sincere belief that a candidate understands and cares about this issue is going a critical factor in mobilizing these voters.
- Look for a prosecution (of drug companies, distributors, and traffickers of the non-prescription opioids) versus treatment divide to start to emerge between Republicans and Democrats. If Republicans can capture the anger that these problems have been overlooked for so long, it’s a huge win.
- Republican politicians with too-cozy relationships with drug companies and others implicated in this crisis are in real trouble.
- Democrats who are still trying to play “how do we win the WWC” may be making a big mistake. As Republicans have learned after more than a generation of trying to win black votes based on agreement on some issues and policies that would actually help many blacks, identity voting is a tough thing to overcome.
- There is a long-term challenge for Republicans in this new alignment because the WWC is rapidly shrinking as a fraction of the overall population. To build a sustainable coalition on top of a WWC base we will need to message to their concerns in a way that still gives us the ability to win college educated white, Hispanic, and Asian votes.