UN US Midterm Elections 2018 Megathread - Blue Wave or Red Tsunami? Because you know we need one.

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November 6th, 2018.
You have less than one month to sperg about the midterm elections.

Hot Takes :
Tis the end of Drumpf!
It's been an inauspicious beginning to the voting season for Mr Trump and his Republican Party, which continue to struggle under the weight of near-constant self-imposed crises and chaos.

http://archive.is/1rEYe
Could the US midterm elections break Trump's presidency?

President Donald Trump. Source: AAP


Voting in the US midterm elections is now underway.

UpdatedUpdated 27 September
By Rashida Yosufzai, Nick Baker
In this article...
Americans have started to cast their ballots in a vote that could shape the rest of Donald Trump's presidency.

Although the US midterm elections are technically held on 6 November, early voting has already started in a handful of states.

Minnesota was the first state to allow early in-person voting on 21 September, with a handful of key states following, including New Jersey, California and Arizona.


Thirty-five states and the District of Columbia offer some form of early voting, meaning every day until 6 November counts for Democrats and Republicans.

It's been an inauspicious beginning to the voting season for Mr Trump and his Republican Party, which continue to struggle under the weight of near-constant self-imposed crises and chaos.

80 per cent chance of winning back the chamber.

Republicans have a 1 in 5 chance of keeping control of the House, while Democrats have about a 4 in 5 chance of winning control of the House. https://t.co/lyNh30TEIw pic.twitter.com/O38qtMPpIz

— FiveThirtyEight (@FiveThirtyEight) September 25, 2018
The Senate though is likely to be retained by the Republicans.

According to CNN, the Democrats are defending some two dozen seats, including 10 in states where Mr Trump secured victory in 2016, and five of those where he won resoundingly.

FiveThirtyEight gives the Democrats just a 30 per cent chance of taking the Senate.

Trump's election one year on: What do Americans think of him now?[/paste:font]


The Democrats could also use their numbers to set up House select committees targeting the president.

"They will have an opportunity to set up special panels and committees to essentially smear President Trump," United States Studies Centre research fellow Dougal Robinson told SBS News in April.

Mr Robinson pointed to the Benghazi committee set up by the Republicans against Hillary Clinton in 2014 to further investigate the fatal 2012 terrorist attack on two US government facilities in Libya.

Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court.

Once seen as cruising to an easy vote - fulfilling Mr Trump's key promise to stack the Supreme Court with conservative justices - a string of sexual assault allegations has turned the Kavanaugh decision into all-out political war.

According to CNN's national political reporter Eric Bradner, the scandal and lukewarm response from some Republicans to Mr Kavanaugh's accusers could "drive suburban women away in midterms".

I have no doubt that, if the attack on Dr. Ford was as bad as she says, charges would have been immediately filed with local Law Enforcement Authorities by either her or her loving parents. I ask that she bring those filings forward so that we can learn date, time, and place!

— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) September 21, 2018
Analysts also point to Robert Mueller's investigation as an ongoing potential source of political curveballs.

Mr Mueller has already indicted more than 30 people in connection with his probe into whether members of Mr Trump's campaign colluded with Russia to help get the real estate tycoon elected.

And speculation has swirled in recent days that Mr Trump may fire embattled deputy attorney general Rod Rosenstein - who oversees the Russia collusion probe.

Doubts over how long Mr Rosenstein can keep the job have swirled since shock media reports that he once suggested secretly recording Mr Trump to collect evidence for ousting him under a constitutional amendment for presidents unfit to remain in office.

Mr Rosenstein's firing - and Mr Trump possibly putting someone more pliable in his place - would set off alarm bells over the future independence of a probe, which has the potential to rock both the midterms and the entire Trump presidency.

US wants ‘partnership, not domination’ in Australia and region[/paste:font]


A report co-authored by Mr Robinson predicted after the midterms, Congress would be highly unlikely to support a US re-entry to the Trans-Pacific Partnership - a trade deal between 11 Pacific nations including Australia and New Zealand which Mr Trump pulled the US out of last year.

Another issue that may affect Australia is that if the Democrats retake the House, it is likely to lead to lower defence spending.

Additional reporting: AAP, AFP

This article was originally published in April 2018 and updated in September 2018.

How will Trump keep his voter base energized? "More Winning."
http://archive.fo/VkaHH

TRUMP HAS A TWO WORD RESPONSE WHEN REPORTER ASKS HIM HOW HE WILL KEEP GOP BASE ENERGIZED
5:52 PM 10/10/2018
Benny Johnson | Reporter At Large

President Donald Trump made portions of the White House press corps chuckle with his response on how he intends to keep Republican voters fired up after the ultimately successful confirmation of Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh.

“How do you keep your base energized now that you have this Kavanaugh victory?” one reporter asked. Tuesday was the first day that Kavanaugh sat on the court after a contentious battle over his nomination.

“More winning,” Trump said.

Trump was leaving the White House on his way to a campaign rally Tuesday night when he took questions from reporters in the White House driveway.

The president was also asked about the mobs of paid progressive protesters that took over Capitol Hill during the contentious debate over Kavanaugh’s confirmation. Trump was specifically asked about the intense “energy” of the protesters.

“A lot of those were paid protesters. You saw that they are all unhappy because they haven’t been paid yet,” Trump alleged about the protesters. (RELATED: Trump Has A Theory Why The Anti-Kavanaugh Protesters Are So Mad)


Trump brought up his new trade deal with Canada and Mexico as a major policy win. “Our deal with Mexico and Canada was fantastic,” Trump said. “China wants to make a deal so badly. We will see where it goes. But I don’t think they are ready.”

Trump Will Lose 60 Seats in the house... Unless... Please Visit My Site
http://archive.fo/zHe4o

MATT DRUDGE WARNS OF MIDTERM BLOODBATH: TRUMP TO LOSE ’60 SEATS IN THE HOUSE LIKE OBAMA DID’
2:41 PM 09/14/2018
Peter Hasson | Reporter

Conservative news giant Matt Drudge on Friday made a somber prediction about Republicans’ chances in the November midterm elections, predicting President Donald Trump will see his party lose 60 seats in the House of Representatives.

Drudge, who runs the influential Drudge Report, compared the upcoming midterms to the electoral bloodbath Democrats suffered in the 2010 midterm elections under former President Barack Obama.

Matt-Drudge-Tweet-620x298.jpg

Screenshot/Twitter

“Trump and Obama both have 47% approval at this time of presidency, according to Rasmussen. Trump will also lose 60 seats in the House like Obama did during first midterm!” Drudge wrote on Twitter. (RELATED: Democrats Should Immediately Abolish ICE After Retaking Congress)

He added cryptically: “Unless…”

Democrats have to gain 23 House seats in November in order to flip the lower chamber. Democrats have an 83 percent chance of retaking the House, according to FiveThirty Eight.

Follow Hasson on Twitter @PeterJHasson

Content created by The Daily Caller News Foundation is available without charge to any eligible news publisher that can provide a large audience. For licensing opportunities of our original content, please contact licensing@dailycallernewsfoundation.org.


The Weird :
Mark Taylor "Red Tsunami Prophecy"
http://archive.fo/KJjj2

Mark Taylor (The Trump Prophecies): Most Important Midterm Elections In All Of US History
July 30, 2018 29 3159


Mark Taylor says the upcoming 2018 elections are the most important mid-term elections in all of America’s history. Here’s why…

Mark Taylor interviewed by Greg Hunter on USA Watchdog

Mark Taylor, author of the popular book “The Trump Prophecies,” contends, “If you are part of the army of God, you need to be ready also because there are going to be politicians that are going to resign. We have had the biggest number of resignations probably in history. This midterm election is going to be huge. This is going to be a red tsunami. They keep talking about the blue wave. I think it’s going to be a blue drip, a leaky faucet, and that is all they are going to get. You have had more resignations than we have ever seen. Now is the time to go in and capture this ground and hold it for the Kingdom of God. . . . It’s not a left or right thing. God is moving us towards a place of righteousness. That’s what’s happening right now. So, he’s going to be replacing these people. If you are called to be a judge, senator, congressman or a council person, I don’t care what level local, state or federal, take your place and get ready. If you are in the Army of God and you don’t vote, you need to get off your behind and register to vote. These are going to be the most important midterm elections in America’s history—period.”

In closing, Taylor says, “I don’t think there is going to be another Democrat in the White House for a long time, if ever again. I believe you are seeing the death of the Democrat party right now.”

Join Greg Hunter as he goes One-on-One with Mark Taylor, co-author of “The Trump Prophecies,” which has been made into a movie that is releasing in early October.

Donations: https://usawatchdog.com/donations/
 
My predictions

The Democrats pick up a few house seats
The Republicans pick up additional Senate seats
The political left continues to screech about npc memes and Drumpler
 
If you count "win" or "lose" as just gaining or losing House seats, it pretty much held true in every year except 2002 (right after 9/11.)
Except it even happened in the midterm before that, in 1998 the democrats gained seats in the midterm, perhaps as a response to the "witch hunt" to get Clinton for the intern blowjob

So exceptions do happen, I think the question then is how much one considers 2018 to be an exceptional year. Certainly I would consider it interesting how the DNC has refused to let go the social justice activism that currently shackles the party
 
I dunno

All the numbers coming out are contradictory lately

Some have the Dem's sweeping the +28 House seats while others show the GoP gaining +3 seats

I think we'll all just have to wait and see who actually shows up to vote.
 
Until we get post election results that line up with the pre-vote polling, I also don't have much faith they still aren't using some of Nate "98% Chance for Hillary" Silver's methodology.
I just wanted to hop on the train here too, because I followed the polling an :autism: amount, and like other commenters said, this isn't the reality. The very night of the election, Libs were roasting Silver for having a Trump victory at 17%, because the three other poll aggregators had Trump at 2%, 4%, and 7% respectively. People were literally calling Nate Silver an idiot who didn't know what he was talking about for being the big outlier in the pack.
 
My predictions

The Democrats pick up a few house seats
The Republicans pick up additional Senate seats
The political left continues to screech about npc memes and Drumpler

Pretty much this. But if the Dems lose enough seats, we might see them bounce and squeak like never before. Hell, we might even get some SJW going postal and driving a Prius of Progressiveness through a crowd at a Trump rally.
 
others show the GoP gaining +3 seats
No they aren't (unless of course you are somehow misconstruing senate predictions as house predictions.)

When you factor in the PA redistricting and NJ retirements, Democrats don't even have the fucking seats to lose for Republicans to get back to parity.
 
If you count "win" or "lose" as just gaining or losing House seats, it pretty much held true in every year except 2002 (right after 9/11.) If you take it to mean actually gaining or losing control of the house, then no of course it doesn't happen every single time.



I disagree, I think the gerrymandering actually makes it worse for them in some areas. The way that the maps were drawn in 2010 gave Democrats a solid core which they were hemmed into and it was hard to suffer additional loses after that, we've yet to see what a wave election can do to all of these light red districts. All of these suburban districts that look to be heading blue were carved out to have as many "acceptably" red districts as possible, but now with the party hurting in that area they are all equally at risk, with none having a safety belt of rural voters. New Jersey is the best example of this, in the current election Republicans would have been better off with a Democratic drawn map giving them 3/4 safe seats out of 9 than the current map giving them 5 "favored" seats, of which they seem likely to lose 3 or 4.

This is not true. The very first race I bothered looking up, Steve Chabot, has a public poll done specifically on him in his district. Right here: https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2018/upshot/elections-poll-oh01-1.html

And its not alone, there are shit loads of them. Less than governor and senator, sure, but there were no less than 11 released today.

That NYT poll perfectly illustrates why nobody really does publicly released House polling much, and why it’s complete shit. 46,000 phone calls. 500 respondents. In a fairly dense area. They are only polling landlines as they can’t geographically isolate cell users for polling purposes. You are not getting good data with those sample sizes. And really look at that poll. 500 people sampled (by landline, so old people) in a district of maybe 200,000+? It shows the Republican up 9 points with a margin of error of 9 points. A Ouija board gives better data. And this is an old dense urban and suburban district covering a good chunk of Cincinnati. So an easy one to poll. Yet it’s a fancy looking and expensive way of saying “we don’t know, but the incumbent usually wins”.
 
Maybe 200,000+? You do know what congressional districts are, right? The smallest one is the Wyoming At Large with 0ver 560,000. All Congressional districts (except the outlier states with only one or two districts) have approximately equal populations of around 610,000 and geographic size does not matter in regards to polling. 500 people is perfectly fine for statistical analysis at that size, and is actually quite a bit of overkill.
 
I dunno

All the numbers coming out are contradictory lately

Some have the Dem's sweeping the +28 House seats while others show the GoP gaining +3 seats

I think we'll all just have to wait and see who actually shows up to vote.
Its damn near impossible to poll for the house since they'd be doing polls for 500+ races in oddly segmented districts where they could never be sure if they're actually polling people who can vote in the election they're asking about. It's a mess. Most house predictions are based on public opinion and trends.
 
There are so many different interpretations/predictions right now that I’d say it’s a wait-and-see situation. It’s coming pretty damn soon anyway, and I have a feeling that no matter what happens there’s still going to be some kind of shitstorm.
 
Maybe 200,000+? You do know what congressional districts are, right? The smallest one is the Wyoming At Large with 0ver 560,000. All Congressional districts (except the outlier states with only one or two districts) have approximately equal populations of around 610,000 and geographic size does not matter in regards to polling. 500 people is perfectly fine for statistical analysis at that size, and is actually quite a bit of overkill.

I was always taught to be distrustful of any poll with a sample size of under 1000. Bigger the sample is usually the better.
 
Small sample sizes (500-1000) are generally good enough. The real question is whether the sample is actually representative of the entire cohort.

You can usually read the study’s methodology to spot errors and bias.

Ideally you want the pollster audited and peer reviewed so they would actually follow the methodology they have on paper. But verifying this as a layperson might be tough.
 
Polarization Seems to Be Helping Republicans in Run-Up to Midterms

Energized voters on the right dim prospects for big Democratic gains in red districts and states.


By Nate Cohn

  • Oct. 16, 2018
Image
merlin_123742556_c53fd472-9a29-4c80-90b4-d0f480964540-articleLarge.jpg

On the surface, the major components of a blue wave remain in place. But underlying geographic factors and an increasingly polarized electorate figure to help Republicans. The midterms are Nov. 6. CreditDavid Goldman/Associated Press
One big question looms over the fight for control of Congress: Will strong Democratic candidates ride a blue wave to victories on Nov. 6 in the long list of Republican-leaning areas they’ve put into play? Or will partisan polarization carry Republicans to a closer than expected midterm result?

The fight over Brett Kavanaugh’s nomination to the Supreme Court seems to have contributed to polarizing the electorate, helping Republicans gain in red states and districts even as Democrats cement their strong position elsewhere. The trend might fade, but if it holds it will be an abrupt change from earlier polls and last year’s special election results, which indicated that Democrats were highly competitive in red areas.

Instead, the district and state polling raises the possibility of an election more like last year’s Virginia elections or the 2010 midterm elections. Both were strong results for the party out of power — but the big numbers came mainly on home turf. A similar result this year would tend to lock the Democrats into their single biggest disadvantage: the map.

Polling the 2018 Midterm Elections in Real Time
Sept. 6, 2018

The Democratic geographic disadvantage is so severe that it gives the Republicans a chance to survive a so-called wave election, like the 1994, 2006 and 2010 elections that flipped control of the House.

eight to nine points. These indicators have remained relatively stable throughout the Justice Kavanaugh controversy, but the president’s approval rating has ticked up, most likely in the conservative areas where Republicans show newfound strength.


And if Republicans can take advantage of their underlying geographic advantages, they can hold down their losses and gain seats in the Senate, even in a Democratic wave.

The playing field is most favorable to Republicans in the Senate: They would be all but assured to retain control if they won just three of seven competitive seats where Donald J. Trump won by at least nine points in 2016. Recent polls, including those by The New York Times Upshot/Siena College, show Republicans ahead in at least the three they need — North Dakota, Tennessee and Texas — and there are rumblings that private polls show Democrats more vulnerable in several of the rest.

The House of Representatives is also stacked against Democrats because of partisan gerrymandering and the tendency for Democrats to win by lopsided margins in urban areas — and thus “waste” votes. But the House picture is not so bleak for Democrats because Republicans are defending 25 seats that Hillary Clinton won in 2016 and many more districts that Mr. Trump won narrowly.


Here, polarization is taking a toll on both parties. Even the strongest Republican incumbents appear to have fallen behind in most of therelatively white and well-educated suburban districts ringing America’s major cities. In the suburbs of Washington, New York, Denver, Philadelphia and Kansas City, Mo., recently completed or continuing Times/Siena polls show Democrats well positioned to flip Republican seats, even against battle-tested Republican incumbents who won easily in 2016.

Democratic prospects in these suburban areas are bolstered by the expectation of strong turnout among college-educated voters, who typically represent a larger share of the electorate in midterm elections and this year are poised to back Democrats by a wide margin.

Strength by Democrats in moderate suburbs makes them favorites to retake the House, even if Republicans dodge Democratic breakthroughs in conservative and less educated areas, where there’s tentative evidence that Democrats are struggling.

As in our recent Senate polls, Times/Siena House polls show Democrats struggling in rural, conservative districts like those in northern Minnesota, South Texas, southern North Carolina and western Pennsylvania.

It should be emphasized that these districts are only a small sample of the dozens of conservative districts where Democrats are thought to have a realistic chance to compete. And Democrats would need to break through in only a handful of them to be very well positioned to take control. But the overall trend in both the House and Senate polling is fairly clear.

The view that Democrats are overwhelming favorites to take control in the House hinges on the assumption that they will break through in a meaningful number of the conservative districts they’ve put into play. But the difference between Democratic breakthroughs or defeat could come down to just a few percentage points in many of these contests.

Republicans can reasonably hope that these last few percentage points will be very challenging for Democrats in conservative districts. But Democrats can hope to muscle their way over the top with strong turnout, especially from young and nonwhite voters who so far do not appear especially enthusiastic about voting. If that changes over the final weeks, it could be decisive in a long list of closely fought contests.

@Nate_Cohn

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/10/16/upshot/midterms-polarization-republicans-polls.html

The tone of this is very interesting. There's your usual smugness and "the uneducated disagree with me", but the tone is different than the usual.
 
I just am amazed they can't see that a polling gap that had been stagnant for months abruptly changed for the worse in the window of Oct 3rd - 9th and furthermore have NO IDEA why that happened....
 
I just am amazed they can't see that a polling gap that had been stagnant for months abruptly changed for the worse in the window of Oct 3rd - 9th and furthermore have NO IDEA why that happened....
To be fair, one to two or three months out is a typical come home period for districts that lean one way or another (see:Evan Bayh's failed come back bid as an example) but everytime I see it mentioned it is with Republican operatives mentioning Kavenaugh, it's not like no one is saying it.
 
Good grief. I think Heitkamp (Dem Senator from North Dakota) just fucked herself spectacularly.

Sen. Heidi Heitkamp (D-ND) had an understandably emotional reaction to a recent comment from her Republican challenger Kevin Cramer. Responding to the sexual assault allegations against Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh and the "Me Too" movement at large, Cramer spoke out against the current "movement toward victimization" and added that the women in his family were "tough."

Heitkamp responded to Cramer by sharing that her own mom was a sexual assault survivor. Then, in a new open letter to Cramer which serves as a new ad, she writes that she and several other North Dakotan women are determined to show Cramer what “prairie tough” looks like.

“We are here to let you know that you are wrong – this is not ‘a movement toward victimization’ it’s about being a survivor," the ad reads. "We are here to let you know that we have all suffered from domestic violence, sexual assault, or rape – and that yes, we expect somebody to believe us when we say it. Because it happened.”

At the bottom of the letter is a long list of North Dakotan women who are identified as sexual assault survivors. However, some of the women named in the ad say the campaign did not seek their permission.


“A lot of these people listed, including me, did not give anyone permission for our names to be posted,” Kady Miller wrote on Facebook. “I don’t even support Heidi Heitkamp and I am not a domestic abuse survivor.”

"This is completely unprofessional," commenter Keeley Beck, who also found her name on Heitkamp's list, wrote. “I want justice,” she added. “For myself and others who were illegally used and taken advantage of for corrupt, infactual, political propaganda.”

Another women wrote on Facebook that she was "disgusted" and "furious" to see her name in the ad.

The National Republican Senatorial Committee accused the Heitkamp campaign of "dirty politicking."

Heitkamp released a statement Tuesday apologizing for the ad.

“Sexual assault is a serious crime – and one that too many North Dakota women have experienced. In an attempt to bring awareness to this issue and push back against dismissive comments toward sexual assault survivors by Kevin Cramer, our campaign worked with victim advocates to identify women who would be willing sign the letter or share their story. We recently discovered that several of the women's names who were provided to us did not authorize their names to be shared or were not survivors of abuse. I deeply regret this mistake and we are in the process of issuing a retraction, personally apologizing to each of the people impacted by this and taking the necessary steps to ensure this never happens again.”

Heitkamp is currently trailing Cramer by an average of 9 points.
Heitkamp apologized at a press conference, but honestly if I was her, I'd just toss in the towel. She was already trailing and this is going to piss everyone off.
 
"It's not about moving to victimization! See? Some of these people aren't even victims!"

Well, I guess they are now victims of shoddy propaganda work.
 
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