Weekly Opinion Editorial
MIDTERM ELECTION
PREDICTION
by Steve Fair
Midterm elections normally don’t go well for the political Party of the
president. The Party of the incumbent
president tends to lose ground during midterm elections. In the past 21 midterms, the President's party
has lost an average of 30 seats in the House, and an average of 4 seats in the
Senate. The last time the Party of the sitting
president did well in the midterms was in 2002 when George W. Bush was
president. Republicans gained 8 seats in
the House and 2 in the Senate. The last
time that was done was in 1934 when FDR was president.
Real Clear Politics(RCP) is a Chicago political news and polling data
aggregator run by former options trader John McIntyre and ad executive Tom
Bevin. RCP tracks all 435 House races
and the 33 Senate races on the ballot in November 2018 using polling data from
multiple sources. They currently say
that 199 seats in the House are safe Democrat seats and 194 are safe
Republican, with 42 seats too close to call.
On the Senate side, they have 48 safe GOP seats and 45 safe Democrat
seats with 7 as toss ups. RCP did
predict that Hillary would win by 3.3% in 2016, but virtually everyone else
missed that race as well. In the
Congressional races, Republicans outperformed RCP’s prophecies by 3.3% in the 2014
mid-term, so they haven’t always been the best barometer for what will happen
on election day.
Fivethirtyeight, a website owned
by ESPN/ABC, is also a polling aggregator.
Founded by Natt Silver, a statistician
and writer whose parents are partisan Democrats, he started out as a number
cruncher for Major League baseball. Fivethirtyeight’s
name is the number of presidential electors.
They predict a 75% chance the Democrats will take the House. They also claim some Democrat Senate seats
are going to be decided on whether the candidate backs President Trump’s
nominee to the Supreme Court. Depending on
the district, that vote could sway voters.
There are currently 247 Republicans in the House and 188 Democrats. 218 is the magic number needed to be the
majority Party of the body. That means
the GOP can lose up to 29 seats and still retain control of the House. In 2006, when GWB was president, Republicans
lost 30 seats in the midterms so it is very possible the Democrats could flip
the House. On the Senate side, it is
highly unlikely the Democrats can gain control.
Of the 33 Senate seats up for election in 2018, only 8 are Republicans,
23 are Democrats, and 2 are Independents who caucus with the Democrats. It
appears very likely Republicans will gain seats in the Senate. That could mean a spilt Party Congress, which
normally means gridlock.
The only
poll that really matters is the one on Election Day. The 2018 general elections will ultimately come
down to who votes. The ‘generic’
Congressional ballot has Democrat voter enthusiasm at a much higher level than
Republican, but President Trump is the master of building excitement among supporters
and driving up voter turnout. At this
point in 2016, pundits had him losing to Clinton by double digits and we know
how that turned out. I predict
Republicans will maintain control of both chambers in November
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