Candidate Slates Finalized as Midterm Contests Heat Up

September 21, 2018

This article originally appeared on BIPAC's blog. Written by BIPAC Political Analyst Jim Ellis.

Key Takeaways

  • Minnesota: potential upset could be on the horizon in Senate race between state Sen. Karin Housley (R) and appointed Sen. Tina Smith (D)
  • Tennessee & Texas Senate:  latest polls have contests flipping back and forth
  • CA-39: GOP's Young Kim (R) opens big lead over opponent, Gil Cisneros (D)
  • MA-3: Democrat re-count winner now final - former congressional COS and businesswoman Lori Trahan officially clinches party nomination and will face GOP candidate, businessman Rick Green in the general
  • NY-27: indicted Rep. Chris Collins (R) back to fight for seat
  • Florida & New Mexico: Democrat candidates for Governor develop leads
  • Wisconsin: Gov. Scott Walker (R) in political dogfight as recent polling shows him trailing Superintendent of Public Instruction, Tony Evers (D)

Senate

Minnesota:  A new Minneapolis Star Tribune/Mason-Dixon Polling & Strategies poll (9/10-12; 800 MN likely voters) finds state Sen. Karin Housley (R-St. Croix Valley) pulling to within high single-digits of appointed Sen. Tina Smith (D) in the upcoming special Senate election scheduled concurrently with the regular election calendar.  According to the Mason-Dixon results, Sen. Smith's lead is narrowing to 44-37%, placing Housley within shouting distance of the incumbent with Sen. Smith well below 50%.  This special election effort may become one to watch as Election Day draws ever nearer.

Tennessee:  The open Tennessee Senate race continues to move back and forth between former Gov. Phil Bredesen (D) and US Rep. Marsha Blackburn (R-Brentwood).  The latest Vox Populi survey sums it up, well.  According to their latest poll (9/16-18; 567 TN "active" voters), the two candidates are tied at 42% apiece on the first ballot test question.  When pushed for an answer, an additional nine percent lean toward Bredesen as opposed to seven percent more preferring Blackburn.

Earlier in the month, CNN released their Tennessee poll (9/11-15; 723 TN likely voters) that placed Mr. Bredesen up 50-45%.  But, during the same time period, Triton Research & Polling (9/10-12; 1,038 TN registered voters) found Blackburn riding in front, 48-45%.  Out of state groups are coming in hard for Bredesen, but Blackburn has raised more campaign money. October promises to be an interesting month in the Volunteer State.

Texas:  Just when Sen. Ted Cruz (R) sees his best independent polling results from Quinnipiac University (9/11-17; 807 TX likely voters) placing him ahead of Rep. Beto O'Rourke (D-El Paso), 54-45%, Ipsos Reuters countered with their online poll (9/6-14; 992 TX adults/registered voters) that gives O'Rourke a 47-45% edge. This is further countered by Vox Populi (9/16-18; 508 TX likely voters) that foresees a flat tie at 46%, apiece.  Then, Democratic pollster Public Policy Polling, surveying for the liberal interest group Protect Our Care (9/19-20; 613 TX likely voters) again finds Cruz up, 48-45%.

Wisconsin:  Marquette University Law School just released their September poll (9/12-16; 800 WI registered voters; 614 likely voters) and sees Sen. Tammy Baldwin (D) substantially strengthening her advantage over state Sen. Leah Vukmir (R-Brookfield).

In Marquette's August poll, the margin between the two candidates was only two percentage points (Baldwin leading 49-47%), but this new survey finds the Senator establishing a 53-42% advantage.  Sen. Baldwin, without facing a primary, launched a strong media wave just before and after the August 14th vote, thus taking advantage of Ms. Vukmir having to spend her treasury in order to win the competitive Republican vote.

House

CA-39:  A new independent Monmouth University poll (9/13-16; 402 CA-39 likely voters) is forecasting Republican former state Assemblywoman Young Kim to a new double-digit lead over retired Naval officer and lottery winner Gil Cisneros (D).  According to the Monmouth result, Ms. Kim now has a strong 51-41% lead for retiring Rep. Ed Royce's (R-Yorba Linda/ Fullerton) seat.  Previously, the race had been considered to be languishing in the toss-up category.

CO-6: The Siena College/New York Times polling series examined the east Denver suburbs (9/12-14; 500 CO-6 likely voters) and found five-term incumbent Mike Coffman (R-Aurora) falling significantly behind in his battle for re-election.  The Congressman, who has won three difficult campaigns in a district drawn to defeat him, now looks to be trailing by double digits.  According to the Siena data, challenger Jason Crow (D), an attorney and Iraq War veteran, leads Rep. Coffman, 51-40%.  It is clear the Congressman has his work cut out for him to score another unconventional political victory.

FL-27:  According to a McLaughlin & Associates poll for the Maria Elvira Salazar campaign (9/10-13; 400 FL-27 likely voters), the Republican nominee, an Emmy winning Spanish language news reporter, holds a 51-42% lead over former Health and Human Services secretary and ex-University of Miami president Donna Shalala (D) in the open South Florida seat.  The Shalala campaign countered with their own internal Bendixen & Amandi International poll (8/29-9/2; 600 FL-27 registered voters), which gave their candidate a 46-42% advantage.  Though many prognosticators have this seat rated as Likely Democratic, the numbers appear to be telling a different story. Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-Miami) is retiring.

KS-2:  Rep. Lynn Jenkins (R-Topeka) is retiring, leaving this marginal district open.  Democrats have been high on their chances here with former state House Minority Leader and 2014 gubernatorial nominee Paul Davis.  Republicans hosted a difficult primary, and Afghan War veteran Steve Watkins, aided by a major independent expenditure that his father financed, overcame four state legislators to win the GOP nomination, but with only 26% of the vote. Therefore, Mr. Watkins has to scramble to unite a skeptical Republican base behind him. Siena College just tested this campaign (9/13-15; 500 KS-2 likely voters) and finds a dead heat general election contest.  The Siena results find Davis edging Watkins, 45-44%.

MA-3: The open 3rd Congressional District Democratic primary recount has now concluded.  As expected, after the initial recount precincts actually added votes to her total, former congressional chief of staff and businesswoman Lori Trahan has now officially clinched the party nomination.  Her main opponent, Boston mayoral former chief of staff Dan Koh, conceded defeat.  The original count, which found Ms. Trahan leading by just 52 votes, expanded to a 145-vote margin when the canvass and recount concluded.  The new Democratic nominee is now favored to defeat Republican businessman Rick Green in the general election, though an upset is not entirely out of the question.  The seat is open because Rep. Niki Tsongas (D-Lowell) is retiring.

NJ-7:  Monmouth University went into the field to test the central New Jersey race between five-term incumbent Leonard Lance (R-Clinton Township) and former State Department official Tom Malinowski (D).  According to the survey (9/13-17; 414 NJ-7 registered voters), Mr. Malinowski takes a 46-43% over Rep. Lance among the most likely voters.  The 7th District is politically marginal, and is obviously in play for a Democratic conversion.

NM-2:  The open southern New Mexico congressional district hasn't generated a lot of national attention, but that could soon change.  While previous polling had posted state Rep. Yvette Herrell (R-Alamogordo) to leads of between two and 14 points, the new Siena College/New York Times survey (9/13-18; 503 NM-2 likely voters) finds attorney Xochitl Torres-Small (D) now claiming a one- point lead, 46-45%.  Earlier this week, the Albuquerque Journal released their poll that gave Ms. Herrell a 48-41% advantage.

NY-27:  It has now become apparent that New York Republican officials will not be able to legally remove Rep. Chris Collins' (R-Clarence/Batavia) name from the November ballot, as the Congressman requested.  Mr. Collins was indicted for insider trading in a situation involving his son and a company in which both served on the board of directors.  The Democratic nominee is Grand Island town official Nate McMurray, but he has yet to make a mark on the campaign trail.  Despite what is normally a safe Upstate Republican seat, we can certainly expect to see national and local Democrats quickly coalescing behind McMurray to finance a serious run.

VA-2:   A Garin-Hart-Yang Research survey for the Elaine Luria campaign (9/5-8; 404 VA-2 likely voters) finds the retired Navy Commander moving ahead of Rep. Scott Taylor (R-Virginia Beach), 51-43%.  Recent controversy has arisen that resulted in several of Taylor Campaign operatives being fired for apparently assisting an effort to qualify an Independent candidate for the ballot with falsified signatures.  This data suggests that the negative publicity has clearly put Rep. Taylor, originally elected in 2016, in serious danger of losing his seat.

VA-10:  Despite political rumors previously circulating that the National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC) was going to abandon Virginia Rep. Barbara Comstock (R-McLean) because early polling suggested a Democratic lead, their latest action proves such conjecture wholly false.  The NRCC just committed over $710,000 in new independent expenditures on Rep. Comstock's behalf, making her the top recipient of their most recently announced round of spending in 15 districts around the country.

Governor

Florida:  Rasmussen Reports has, at times, been criticized for producing skewed data in the Republicans' favor.  But, their new Florida poll (9/9-11; 800 FL likely voters) actually gives Democratic nominee Andrew Gillum, the Tallahassee Mayor who scored a come-from-behind upset victory in the August 28th primary, his strongest lead over resigned Rep. Ron DeSantis (R-Palm Coast/Daytona Beach).  All other polls of this race find the two candidates well within the margin of polling error, but Rasmussen sees a 48-42% spread.

Maryland:  Maryland-based Goucher College, which often polls Maryland political campaigns, released a new statewide study (9/11-16; 831 MD adults).  The results find Gov. Larry Hogan (R) moving out to a prohibitive lead over former NAACP president Ben Jealous (D) in his race for re-election. According to Goucher, the Governor holds a 54-32% advantage.

The fact that this is a poll of "adults" and uses a universe apparently not even screened for registered voters could give the Governor some enhanced artificial support because he is the more well-known candidate, so it's possible that the registered or likely voter ballot test would be a bit closer.  Irrespective of the polling segmentation, Republican Gov. Hogan appears headed for re-election even in this most Democratic of states.

Minnesota:  In a rare poll of the open Minnesota Governor's race since the August 14th primary, the Minneapolis Star Tribune newspaper released their Mason-Dixon Polling & Research survey (9/10-12; 800 MN likely voters) that posts the south Minnesota Congressman to a 45-36% lead over Hennepin County Commissioner and 2014 Republican gubernatorial nominee Jeff Johnson.

Among men, the race is tied at 40-40%, but women give the Democratic nominee a whopping 18-point advantage at 50-32%.

New Mexico:  US Rep. Michelle Lujan Grisham (D-Albuquerque) is sustaining a 50-43% advantage over GOP Rep. Steve Pearce (R-Hobbs) in the open Governor's race as reported in a new Albuquerque Journal newspaper poll (Research & Polling, Inc.; 9/7-13; 966 NM registered voters).  The winner replaces term-limited Gov. Susana Martinez (R) next year. Earlier, Ms. Grisham's lead over Mr. Pearce had dropped to two points, 42-40%, when Emerson College released the results of their mid-August survey.  Since then two Democratic polls gave her leads of eight and ten points, and now we see a seven-point spread in this latest independent survey.

Wisconsin:  In a race that continually polls close but bounces back and forth between Gov. Scott Walker (R) and Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Evers (D), the aforementioned Marquette University Law School survey (see Wisconsin Senate above) finds the Governor trailing Mr. Evers, 49-44% among likely voters.  Expanding to the registered voters universe, the split is a similar 47-43% in Mr. Evers' favor.  Gov. Walker is running for a third term, but he has already won three elections since 2010, including surviving a statewide recall vote in 2012.