Should Democrats abandon House to defend Senate?
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Should Democrats give up on retaking the House in 2014 and shift campaign dollars to the battle for the Senate? That鈥檚 the theme of a piece in Politico on Wednesday that says Democratic Party operatives and big donors are talking about such a strategy among themselves.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a delicate decision for Democrats and one not taken lightly,鈥 .
Well, the decision may be delicate, but the numbers involved here are anything but. The election is still months away, and a lot can happen. But if current polls hold, continued Republican control of the House is a foregone conclusion. Democrats would need a net gain of 17 seats to retake the chamber, and if you go down the list and look at it race by race, a gain of that size seems highly unlikely.
鈥淎lthough individual skirmishes will provide plenty of drama, the end result 鈥 a Republican hold in the House 鈥 is almost a certainty,鈥 write University of Virginia political scientists Larry Sabato, Kyle Kondik, and Geoffrey Skelley in their latest Center for Politics .
For Democrats to regain the speaker鈥檚 chair for Rep. Nancy Pelosi, three things would have had to occur, of the Cook Political Report late last year. Republican budget intransigence would have had to continue. More GOP members from marginal districts would have had to retire. Democrats would have had to recruit five or 10 additional top-tier candidates to run in districts currently held by the other party.
None of that happened. Instead, Democrats got the drip-drip of the troubled Obamacare rollout. The big-name retirements all seem to be Democrats, with Rep. Henry Waxman of California just the latest example.
As a result, Cook Political Report鈥檚 forecast is that Republicans will gain between zero and 10 seats.
The Senate is a different country. Right now it has 53 Democrats, 45 Republicans, and two independents that caucus with the Democrats. The GOP needs a net gain of six to switch chamber control.
Given that midterms generally aren鈥檛 favorable to the president鈥檚 party, as well as the current general electoral environment, such a Republican jump is possible, maybe even probable.
Crunching the numbers, Andrew Gelman, a Columbia University professor of statistics and political science, currently forecasts the Democratic Party鈥檚 chances of losing the Senate at 56 percent, more or less. Right now the margin of uncertainty there is five points or so either way, he adds.
鈥淲e鈥檒l learn more as the election gets closer,鈥 on the 鈥淢onkey Cage鈥 political science blog.
One big factor here may be President Obama鈥檚 low favorability rating. State-by-state outcomes in House and Senate races correlate fairly closely with presidential job ratings, according to RealClearPolitics polling and political analyst Sean Trende.
Right now, about 43 percent of Americans give Mr. Obama a favorable job-approval rating, according to RealClearPolitics' rolling average of major polls. If that figure does not go up, the question won鈥檛 be whether the GOP retakes the Senate, Mr. Trende says. It will be whether Republicans end up with 54 or 55 seats.
鈥淚f the president is unpopular, it is going to make it really tough for these red state Democrats who are up in 2014,鈥 Trende with The Wall Street Journal.
Given all this, why wouldn鈥檛 Democrats shift resources to Senate defense? The real question is whether such a move would make much difference. Dollars can do only so much at the federal campaign level. The national political environment, quality of the candidates, and the state of the economy are all important parts of Senate electoral results.