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Tuesday afternoon, the gloom kept rolling in from smart Democratic operatives. The party would lose its House majority, but also kiss the Democratic Senate majority goodbye. The most optimistic spin was that a red wave would be perversely good news for President Joe Biden. Just look at 1994, when Newt Gingrich rode the Contract With America to the House speakership; two years later President Bill Clinton was reelected. Or the 2010 midterms, when Tea Party Republicans shellacked their way to power; two years later President Barack Obama was reelected. And hey, Biden may be personally unpopular, but he’s passed a bunch of legislation that voters like. So a midterm wipeout was to be expected, but it wouldn’t be the end of the political world for Democrats.
Get me rewrite, as they say in the old journalism movies.
Amid all the well-founded pessimism on Tuesday, however, there was one contrary voice. It belonged to Cornell Belcher, a Democratic strategist who worked on both of Obama’s winning White House bids, among many other campaigns. Here is what Belcher said to me yesterday long before polls closed: “I know this is counter to the narrative that the Republicans have been really successfully driving, but the closer we get to a majority of voters turning out, the lower the probability of Republicans being able to garner a majority. There’s no red wave in the data. This is supposed to be a bloodbath. This is supposed to be their wave election. They’ve got all the structural and momentum advantages. If they can’t get to 60 net seats in the House, it’s a monumental failure.”
Plenty of counting remains to be done, but the 2022 midterm turnout numbers look likely to surpass the typical level, which has lately been around 37 to 40% of registered voters. And forget Republicans netting a gain of anything close to 60 House seats: The best they can do appears to be a pickup of about 30. Which would be enough for Republicans to grab a majority and make a lot of noise for the next two years. But it’s a long way short of a wave.
So how did Democrats defy modern midterm history and 2022 conventional wisdom? It’s worth looking at a few individual contests and one prevailing trend. Pennsylvania’s crucial Senate race showed the value of having a uniquely authentic and compelling candidate who connected with middle-class voters on economic and cultural issues—especially when the Republican opponent is a confection. John Fetterman’s campaign team—led by Brendan McPhillips, Rebecca Katz, and Fetterman’s wife, Gisele—didn’t just endure Fetterman’s emergency three-month campaign-trail absence when he was knocked down by a near-fatal stroke. They filled the void with a sharp, clever social media campaign that defined Mehmet Oz as a fraud and a carpetbagger. Fetterman’s doctors, who got him back into credible fighting shape, deserve credit as well. Michigan’s governor, Gretchen Whitmer—who dealt with a life-threatening drama of her own two years ago—relied on a similar genuineness to easily defeat a conservative Republican challenger.
In multiple races—Hillary Scholten’s for a House seat in Michigan, Wes Moore’s for governor in Maryland, JB Pritzker’s for governor in Illinois, and Josh Shapiro’s for governor in Pennsylvania, to name a few—Democrats placed a risky bet by funding extremist candidates in Republican primaries, the theory being that they would be easier to beat in a general election. Every single one paid off. Drawing stark distinctions was crucial, as California Democratic strategist Sean Clegg told me it would way back in July. “This isn’t the Democratic Party against the Republican Party. It’s the Democratic Party against the antidemocratic party,” Clegg said. “These candidates are the brownshirts of the Trump movement. We are confronting a choice as a country, and we may as well make that stark choice up front.”
Roe. Dobbs. Abortion rights. Shorthand it however you want, but the Supreme Court’s ruling in June reverberated, consistently, from the defeat of an antiabortion referendum in Kansas in August through the rejection of a similar measure in Kentucky last night. The impact was less direct, but nonetheless clear, in the New York governor’s race as well. The incumbent, Democrat Kathy Hochul, waged a low-key campaign for months that relied on spending millions on TV ads; a major theme of those ads was Hochul’s pledge to protect the right to abortion in her state. She got a lot of help motivating Democratic voters on that front from her opponent, right-wing Republican congressman Lee Zeldin, who cosponsored a House bill to grant full personhood rights to embryos.
Yet even with an effective last-minute Democratic freakout at the possibility Hochul could lose—Biden flew in to campaign with her, and from the left flank Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez suddenly hit the streets with the governor—Hochul’s winning margin will probably end up in the mid-single-digits. Her weakness was reflected in five key New York House races, all of which went to Republicans, which may end up determining control of the House. The most painful loss was by Sean Patrick Maloney, running for a sixth term in a Hudson Valley district north of the city. That district, and many others, was a new one, configured by a special master appointed by a Republican state judge, in response to a proposed redistricting map that would have favored New York Democrats, a map pushed in part by…Maloney, in his role as chair of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee. Given the surprising results across the country, it appears Maloney did a great job of helping elect Democrats elsewhere and a lousy one of holding onto his own seat: The district where Maloney chose to run would have gone for Biden by 10 points in 2020.
Speaking of the big picture: Belcher has earned the final word. The larger trend he points to from the midterms is generational. “There really are two electorates,” he says, “one older and one younger, fighting to take this country in very different directions.” For instance: The youngs helped save Fetterman in Pennsylvania, and the olds dominated for Ron DeSantis in Florida. Abortion rights have intense relevance to voters in their 20s and 30s, as does climate change and student loans and threats to democracy and racism. There will be a great deal of turmoil in the next two years that scrambles the dynamic. But in 2024 Joe Biden will be the oldest president to ever run for reelection—and to win, he’ll need to make sure younger Democratic voters keep showing up.
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Chris Smith
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Content warning for ableism and misogyny.
Yesterday’s midterm elections have turned into an overwhelming victory for Democrats across the country. Slavery of the incarcerated was outlawed in four more states including Alabama, Oregon, Tennessee, and Vermont. Abortion referendums overwhelmingly reinforced protections for women and pregnant people’s right to choose. John Fetterman won in a landslide against Dr. Oz.
This of course, has Republicans scratching their heads about how they could have lost so badly. Could it be because of their out-of-touch policies that are radically more right than the general population? Could it be because of election deniers who act like spoiled children outright denying reality?
Well, one Fox News correspondent has come up with the worst reason Republicans lost the midterms: “These women just went crazy.”
Jim Messina, who is a Democrat and a former Obama campaign manager, attributed the democrats winning over Republicans and Independents, due to women ‘going crazy’ over abortion rights. Which is about the most sexist and ableist way he could have put it.
Women voters are not the Bacchae, they are not ‘crazy’ or ‘hysterical’ or any other sexist term meant to devalue women’s emotions or opinions. They’re rightfully furious or fearful for their safety.
Even more hilariously, Messina quickly walked back his comments.
Thankfully, no one is buying his excuses for the sexist language.
Unfortunately, this does speak to a larger problem in both the Democratic and Republican parties. Instead of seeing these elections as a wake-up call for what voters are demanding, they see this as a fluke. A temporary moment of fervor that will pass.
But it’s a movement that is picking up momentum, and one that will not go away quietly.
And honestly, I could see “these women went crazy” being on a shirt at the next abortion rights rally, alongside all the “Nevertheless, she persisted” badges of honor.
(image: Twitter)
—The Mary Sue has a strict comment policy that forbids, but is not limited to, personal insults toward anyone, hate speech, and trolling.—
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Washington — Coming off an Election Day in which Democrats seemingly exceeded expectations and overcame historical trends in the battle for control of Congress, a smiling and emboldened President Biden said he plans to do “nothing” different in his approach to the presidency, and offered a message for the millions of voters who don’t want him to run again: “Watch me.”
Mr. Biden fielded reporters’ questions at the White House for about an hour Wednesday, in keeping with a tradition of presidents holding news conferences following midterm elections. Mr. Biden, who said it’s his “intention” to run again but gave no definitive answer on that front, called Tuesday a “strong night” for Democrats.
“It was a good day, I think, for democracy,” Mr. Biden said. “And I think it was a good day for America. … Our democracy has been tested in recent years, but with their votes, the American people have spoken and proven once again that democracy is who we are.”
CBS News currently estimates the fight for the House is leaning in Republicans’ favor, and the battle for the Senate remains a toss-up, as several key races in the upper chamber are still unresolved. Democrats picked up a Senate seat in Pennsylvania, where CBS News projected Lt. Gov. John Fetterman defeated Republican Mehmet Oz, who conceded the race on Wednesday.
Overnight, a top White House official told CBS News senior White House correspondent Weijia Jiang there was a mix of “excitement” and “validation” as returns showed there was no “red wave” of Republican victories in House and Senate races. Although Democrats have lost some House seats, White House officials see a victory in the relatively moderate or low number of losses compared to midterms under previous presidents. As of early Wednesday morning, they were “cautiously optimistic” about keeping the Senate.
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Fox News Decision Desk Director Arnon Mishkin
Fox News Decision Desk Director Arnon Mishkin angered President Donald Trump and delighted Democrats on Election Night 2020 when he called the critical battleground state of Arizona for Joe Biden, sealing Biden’s victory. Two years later, Mishkin says “his gut” is telling him Election Night 2022 may leave Democrats with a hangover.
“The Democrats had a great summer,” Mishkin told Fox’s Martha MacCallum Tuesday on her podcast, The Untold Story. “Everything went their way politically, which is to say inflation looked like it was abating. The court decision on abortion came down, which energized Democratic voters. Since September 1? Not so much. Inflation turns out to still be around. Crime is still an issue, and people may have forgotten about, you know, the abortion anger, if you will. So my my gut has been sort of leaning in in the red direction.”
In 2020, Mishkin joined me on my podcast and explained to me how the Fox News Decision Desk works, and why he believed—correctly, as it turned out—that Fox would have an advantage over other networks in making critical calls on Election Night. For the mid-terms, Mishkin says there are signs Democrats could pull off some upsets, but it’s the GOP that has the upper hand as voters go to the polls.
“Some of these numbers are a little—there’s a little more strength to the Democrats than we thought,” he said. “And so I’m somewhere in the range between it could be a very good night for the Republicans to a surprising night, at least in some ways, for the Democrats. That’s what my story and I’m sticking to it.”
Mishkin says he expects Latino voters to play a critical role in how some of the most contested races are decided, but he doesn’t see those voters—despite widespread reporting of a “shifting Latino vote” toward Republicans—breaking together as a unified voting block. “I think that’s absolutely what you saw in 2020 with with the significant support, not majority support, but significant support that Trump got in the Hispanic community,” he said. “A lot of it was that they were behaving, they were voting not like Hispanic people, because they were voting as Americans. And what you see is that they start behaving like other Americans and they split based on college level, level of education and urbanity, whether that live in rural areas or urban areas.”
PHILADELPHIA, PA – NOVEMBER 05: (L-R) Democratic candidate for U.S. Senator John Fetterman, former … [+]
One other trend Mishkin expects to repeat from 2020: election results that trend toward Republicans early, then begin moving toward Democrats as early and absentee ballots are counted. “You’re going to have the same situation. You are I mean, we have no idea how the election is going to turn out in Pennsylvania tonight,” Mishkin said. “But I would suspect that tonight, the first returns we see from Pennsylvania are going to be more red, more Republican than the final count will wind up being.”
KENNESAW, GEORGIA – NOVEMBER 07: Republican U.S. Senate candidate Herschel Walker speaks at a … [+]
Mishkin says the same pattern will happen—only in reverse—in states like Georgia and Florida, both with hugely important statewide and national races that likely won’t be decided on Election Night. “So in states like Florida, you could easily see that they’re going to count the early vote first. They’re going to dump it in first. And you’re going to see the early vote counts you see from Florida are going to look more blue, more Democratic, then the final count is going to be. You’re also going to see that in Georgia, where I think you’re going to see some what I call a blue skew to the vote count at the beginning of the night. And if the Republicans take over and win those seats, it’ll be because the later counted vote, which is the Election Day vote.”
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Mark Joyella, Senior Contributor
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