Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Monday November 2, 2020
THE DAILY SIGNAL
November 2 2020
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Good morning from Washington, where conservatives confront the left over law and order. In a video report, Virginia Allen shows what an immigrant family lost in the Kenosha riots. San Diego schools will regret decoupling discipline from grades in woke policy change, Jarrett Stepman writes. On the podcast, author Clarence McKee contrasts gains for black Americans in the Obama and Trump administrations. Plus: the economy begins to roar back; helping women prosper around the world; and religious freedom suffers during the pandemic. On this date in 1948, incumbent President Harry Truman, a Democrat, scores an upset victory over Republican challenger Thomas Dewey as Dixiecrat Strom Thurmond takes four states.
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THE EPOCH TIMES
NOVEMBER 2, 2020 READ IN BROWSER
AMAC – the conservative alternative to other 50+ organizations – gives its members valuable benefits, while boldly defending America’s priceless Constitution, individual liberties, and basic moral compass. We hope you have been enjoying The Morning Briefs and the Breaking News emails! We have been providing this experience for you for free for some time now. As an independent news source, our team works tirelessly to provide you with the best journalism, with no hidden agendas. And we want you to have full access to all of our content. Take advantage of our limited time, 4 months for $1 offer. This is our best offer ever, and it will only be available for a limited time. Subscribe to The Epoch Times for 4 months for just $1: Offer Ends Soon Cancel anytime “Keep your face always toward the sunshine – and shadows will fall behind you.” WALT WHITMAN Good morning,Presidential candidates Donald Trump and Joe Biden made their appeals to voters with Tuesday’s elections just two days away.Epoch Times reporter Ivan Pentchoukov writes that the atmosphere at the events was as divergent as the two candidates’ visions for the future of the nation. “The CCP’s victory in mainland China was indirectly related to leftist influence in the United States.” In a world that has lost respect for logic and law – who is defending you in Washington? Who speaks for conservatives? AMAC – The Association of Mature American Citizens – does.AMAC gives its members valuable money-saving benefits, while boldly defending America’s sacred Constitution, individual liberties, and moral compass. Fighting for border and national security, freedom of speech and religion, and values articulated by Reagan, like strong defense, lower taxes, and a solvent government, AMAC was founded to be your conservative alternative to other, liberal 50+ organizations.The stakes are high. This election will decide our nation’s future. JOIN AMAC TODAY! Sorry, America. Reconciliation Is a Long Way Off After the Election PREMIUM Greg Gutfeld on his Fox show this weekend said that if Joe Biden is elected, he will be “my president.” Excuse me if I say Mr. Gutfeld, of whom I am a big fan and with whom I almost always agree… Read more On Tuesday, Americans will officially vote for the person to be our president, one of the most important positions in the world. Republicans and Democrats agree that voting is an important civic responsibility. Read more Some benefits of playing Sudoku may include reducing anxiety and stress, and improving concentration, problem-solving skills, logical thinking, and memory. Even before coronavirus hit, the United States was 23 trillion dollars in debt. And in recent months America has devoted $4 trillion to grants, loans, and tax breaks for coronavirus relief. Now there is discussion about another $1.8 trillion stimulus. Copyright © 2020 The Epoch Times, All rights reserved. You are receiving this email because you opted in to receive newsletter communications from The Epoch Times. Our mailing address is: The Epoch Times 229 W. 28 St. Fl. 5 If you no longer wish to receive Morning Brief from us, please click here to unsubscribe. |
DAYBREAK
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AXIOS
Axios AM
🗳️ Two easy ways to follow the epic hours ahead:
- The Axios app: All of our reporting, graphics and results — neatly packaged. (App Store, Google Play Store)
- Our “Axios Today“ and “Axios Re:Cap” podcasts will team up with a burst of special 5-minute episodes tomorrow and Wednesday.
⚡ Situational awareness: Prince William had COVID this spring, kept it secret. (BBC) … Justice Amy Coney Barrett will hear her first arguments today. … “Fire Fauci!” was a new chant at a Trump rally in Florida. The president hinted he might after the election.
- Today’s Smart Brevity™ count: 1,279 words … 5 minutes.
Illustration: Eniola Odetunde/Axios
High-net-worth Americans are setting up trust funds, giving large gifts to heirs and philanthropies, and even selling family businesses as they brace for the tax hikes a Joe Biden presidency might bring, Axios’ Jennifer A. Kingson and Hans Nichols report.
- Why it matters: President Trump has jacked up the amount that people can leave tax-free to their heirs to record highs. If Biden wins, his tax shakeup would have ripple effects on how the wealthy buy and sell properties, allocate savings and investments, and give to charity.
Family business owners who have been flirting with selling their companies are making a big rush to the exits:
- It takes months to close such a deal — and waiting until next year could mean paying 40% in taxes on the transaction vs. 20% this year, Joe Maier, an estate-planning attorney in Racine, Wis., tells Axios.
- Buyers are lowballing their bids — knowing that a seller could be grateful for a 10% smaller offer as long as the deal closes in 2020.
Biden says he wants to raise taxes on people who earn more than $400,000 a year — which excludes most Americans — and lower the amounts people can give tax-free to their spouses and heirs.
- He also wants to tax capital gains and dividends at 39.6% for people making over $1 million.
- The goal is to raise revenue for federal coffers while targeting a segment of society that can best afford it (and for whom few people feel sorry).
How it works: Biden proposes to cut in half the unusually generous cap of about $23 million that a couple can leave to heirs tax-free. This means gift and estate taxes, which can climb to 40%, would kick in at much lower dollar amounts.
- If Biden wins, tax professionals expect an even greater stampede of customers who want to make gifts, set up trusts and establish philanthropic vehicles called donor-advised funds (DAFs) — all before Dec. 31.
Reality check: “Just 1.9 percent of taxpayers would see a direct tax hike” if Biden’s tax proposals for individuals were in effect in 2022, the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy (ITEP) estimates.
- Many of Biden’s proposals would simply attempt to roll tax laws back to where they were when President Obama left office.
Young voters, projected to turn out overwhelmingly for Joe Biden, could provide a huge advantage for Democrats not just this in this election but for decades to come, Axios’ Stef Kight and executive editor Sara Kehaulani Goo write.
Pollsters and political scientists are poring over new reports by the Harvard Institute of Politics and the liberal Center for American Progress that examine the growing enthusiasm among the nation’s youngest voters.
- The Harvard poll finds that 63% of 18- to 29-year olds “definitely” plan to vote. Their enthusiasm for Biden grew even stronger since September.
- The CAP models forecast a huge advantage for Democrats in future elections, based on demographics and voting patterns of today’s youngest generations — even taking account of trends that show that Americans tend to become more conservative as they age.
- Electoral College models, which factor in changing state demographics of these young voters, look even more ominous for Republicans.
Millennials and Generation Z are much more liberal than their predecessors, and voted for Democrats in previous election cycles. Voting research shows that the president you vote for as you come of age to vote often determines which party you’ll stick with, too.
- Millennial (born 1981 to 1996) and Generation Z (born 1997 onward) voters combined are estimated to represent 37% of eligible voters this year — larger than Baby Boomers (28%) and Generation X (24%).
- By 2036, those two generations will make up 60% of the electorate.
Reality check: The election-upending impact of younger voters has been predicted for decades and has yet to come to pass.
- The unknown is whether Democrats — in particular Biden and vice presidential candidate Kamala Harris — will continue to engage these youngest voters.
“The Milwaukee Police Department has recorded 162 homicides so far this year, with the city close to surpassing the highest total ever recorded of 165 in 1991, a time when the crack epidemic raged and serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer was active,” the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reports (subscription).
- “That amounts to one homicide in the city every 45 hours in 2020.”
The big picture: It’s not just the health care system. The pandemic is also straining police.
- “Other cities, from Oakland to Louisville to New York City, have seen similar spikes.”
Joe Biden voters hold up fans during a “Souls to the Polls” drive-in rally he addressed yesterday in the parking lot of Sharon Baptist Church in Philadelphia.
Trump fans blocked traffic yesterday on the former Tappan Zee Bridge, now the Gov. Mario M. Cuomo Bridge, in Tarrytown, N.Y. (Details.)
Supporters throng President Trump’s rally at Hickory Regional Airport in Hickory, N.C. — one of five he held yesterday.
America, 2020: Political signs line Franklin Street in Portland, Maine, yesterday.
- 📷 More photos from this weekend.
This is a great Morning Consult graphic of final results for: “If the November 2020 presidential election were being held today, for whom would you vote?”
Illustration: Eniola Odetunde/Axios
The headaches facing the tech industry’s giants won’t change much whether President Trump remains in the White House or Joe Biden takes his place, Axios managing editor Scott Rosenberg writes from the Bay Area.
- The market: Business traditionally fears interest rates and inflation will rise under freer-spending Democratic administrations. But Trump’s deficit-friendly term scrambled those expectations. Inflation is nowhere in sight. Whoever wins, the Fed will keep refilling tech’s punch bowl.
- Regulation: Democrats have their own reasons for pursuing action against the big companies — but, unlike Republicans, they’re less focused on claims of censorship and more on the concentration of corporate power.
- Moderation and privacy: Democrats have typically been readier than Republicans to favor stricter privacy rules. But a Democratic administration would have a long list of priorities ahead of such action.
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios
Joe Biden would likely pursue the most aggressive climate plan in history, but his campaign aspirations are far higher than what political reality allows, Axios’ Amy Harder writes in her “Harder Line” column.
- Its centerpieces, including $2 trillion in spending over four years and a goal of making the electricity grid carbon-free in 15 years, will probably need congressional legislation.
- It’s not clear that Democrats would succeed in getting rid of the filibuster, and Biden hasn’t committed to supporting the change.
President Trump has presided over a stock market surge since taking office in 2017, but he’s been outpaced by three of his four predecessors, Axios’ Dan Primack and Andrew Witherspoon report.
The Supreme Court has tried to tread lightly so far in election-related cases, though that could change after Election Day, Axios’ Stef Kight reports.
- In its pre-election rulings, the court has largely preserved the status quo. But in the details and nuances of those decisions, it may have laid a foundation for a more conservative approach in its next wave of election cases.
Andrew Lloyd Webber, 72, is celebrating the 50th anniversary of the release of his “Jesus Christ Superstar” album with the first single from his new musical, “Cinderella,” AP’s Mark Kennedy reports.
- The rollicking “Bad Cinderella” is sung by Carrie Hope Fletcher, the title character in what Webber calls a “complete reinvention” of the fairytale.
- Before the pandemic, the cast was to start rehearsals last spring in London.
The single is a portrait of a fearsome woman standing apart from society’s rules:
- “They call me a wretch / A witch / Well, choose one,” the heroine sings.
- “Every fairytale for sure can use one / Sorry I’m so rude / Sorry you’re so lame / I won’t play your game.”
Hear the hook. (It’s very Andrew Lloyd Webber!)
📬 Thanks for starting your week with us. Invite your friends to sign up for Axios AM/PM.
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THE WASHINGTON TIMES
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THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER
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Copyright © 2020 MEDIADC, All rights reserved.Washington Examiner | A MediaDC Publication 1152 15th Street NW Suite 200 | Washington, DC 20005 |
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ASSOCIATED PRESS
Nov 2, 2020 View in Browser AP MORNING WIRE Good morning. In today’s AP Morning Wire:
TAMER FAKAHANY
The Rundown AP PHOTO/ANDREW HARNIK Bitter pandemic-hit 2020 campaign draws to a close with US facing a crossroads; Bruised and haunted, US holds tight for next chapter
America stands at a crossroads on Election Day eve, never before in modern history facing a choice between two candidates who offered such polar opposite visions in a time of such great and existential stakes amid a confluence of crises.
Donald Trump and Joe Biden are poised today to give their closing arguments, their last chance to sway any undecided voters as to why each would be best to steer the nation confronted with a once-in-a-century pandemic, the starkest economic contraction since the Great Depression and a citizenry toxically divided on cultural and racial issues. Jonathan Lemire, Zeke Miller, Will Weissert and Alexandra Jaffe report.
Trump’s final day has him rushing through five rallies from North Carolina to Wisconsin. Biden will be devoting most of his time to Pennsylvania, where a win would leave Trump with an exceedingly narrow path to victory. Biden will also be dipping into Ohio, a show of confidence in a state that Trump won by 8 percentage points four years ago.
The Campaign: Americans are bracing for a moment of truth, a crash landing, perhaps a crystal clear look in the mirror, as Trump and Biden race across the country in the final hours. The campaigns that began before Trump’s impeachment and acquittal are ending with a nation battered by the coronavirus and haunted by racial injustice. Images of confrontations between protesters, get-out-the-vote volunteers and police are putting people on edge. Many say they fear what comes after, since Trump has refused to commit to leaving office if he loses, Laurie Kellman reports.
The Race: Both parties can agree on one thing: The stakes in the White House race are higher than at perhaps any point in modern American history. The candidates have taken pride in their differing visions for the nation, including their approach to the pandemic. Even before Tuesday’s election, over 90 million Americans have already cast ballots through early voting. That’s shattered records in the U.S. for advance voting. The choice before voters is a shaping up as referendum on the role of the presidency itself and a test of the sturdiness of democracy, AP Washington Bureau Chief Julie Pace writes.
VIDEO: Biden, Obama join forces to rally voters to polls.
VIDEO: Trump makes one last pitch to Michigan voters.
PHOTOS: As virus cases grow, voting reaches home stretch.
Biden on the Issues: He’s looking to restore, expand Obama administration policies.
Trump on the Issues: Expect a lot more of the same if he wins a second term.
Trump vs. Fauci: The president suggested at a Florida rally that he will fire Dr. Anthony Fauci after the election, as his rift with the nation’s top infectious disease expert widens while the U.S. sees its most alarming surge of new infections since the spring, Zeke Miller reports.
VIDEO: Crowd chants “Fire Fauci,” Trump says after election.
AP FACT CHECK: Trump’s errant final pitches on virus, energy.
MISINFORMATION: Video altered to make it look like Biden greeted wrong state.
Key Questions: Election Day is nearly upon the U.S. but critical questions still linger as the final votes are cast and counted. What do Americans want from a president? Whose turnout approach will win? Will voting be peaceful? Is 2020 more like 1968 or 1980? Bill Barrow reports.
Legal Challenges: Signature matches. Late-arriving absentee votes. Drop boxes. Secrecy envelopes. Democratic and Republican lawyers already have gone to court over these issues in the run-up to Tuesday’s election. But the legal fights could take on new urgency, not to mention added vitriol, if a narrow margin in a battleground state is the difference between another four years for Trump or a new Biden administration. Both sides say they’re ready, with thousands of lawyers on standby, Mark Sherman reports.
Paris Withdrawal: The U.S. is out of the Paris climate agreement on the day after the election. Experts say the outcome of the vote will determine to some degree just how hot the entire world will get in the future. The candidates have stark differences on fighting human-caused climate change. Biden has promised to return the U.S. to the agreement, while Trump took the country out of the 189-nation accord, Seth Borenstein reports. AP PHOTO/CHARLIE RIEDEL AP Explains: What you need to know about a complicated election night and beyond; AP plans openness on race calls
It has already been a U.S. presidential election like no other, with myriad potential complications and a slew of chaotic factors at play, including possible challenges, irregularities or even violence.
There are many confounding questions. Here are some answers from the AP’s reporters and editors:
Knowing the Results: It’s possible the world may not know the results of the U.S. election on Election Night – or for a while afterward. Why?
The 270 Factor: You hear it everywhere: the number 270, the Electoral College threshold for winning the presidency. How does that break down?
Road to 270 Map: An interactive capturing the number of electoral votes garnered by previous Republican and Democratic presidential contenders. Readers can view the past electoral results and come up with their own predictions.
Unprecedented or Not: Everybody’s talking about how different the 2020 election is, how it’s unlike any other in recent memory. What makes it so?
Voting in 1800: This tempestuous election has been rife with predictions of confusion and cataclysm, with warnings that a contested battle could last well into December. It’s happened before. Take 1800, for example.
Unpopular Victors: Five times in U.S. history, candidates have lost the popular vote but won the presidency — most recently in 2016. Could Trump be the first to do it twice? A look at the previous instances in which the person who got the most votes didn’t win the nation’s highest office.
INTERACTIVE: The facts about voting early, by mail or absentee.
VIDEO: What you need to know about your voting rights on Election Day.
VIDEO: How the votes will be counted on election night.
Senate Control: Thirty-five U.S. Senate seats are on the ballot and will determine which party controls the chamber for the next two years. But due to election law quirks in Georgia and Louisiana, where a total of three seats are up for grabs, it is possible that the fate of the current 53-47 Republican majority will remain unknown for weeks.
51 Elections: A major misconception about the vote for U.S. president is that it is a national election. It’s not. Instead, it consists of 51 elections — one in each state and in the District of Columbia. And that’s more than a technical difference.
The Transition: No matter what happens in the election, there will be a limbo period between who wins and who takes office on Jan. 20, 2021. What will that time look like – whether Donald Trump or Joe Biden wins?
Inaugural Planning: The inauguration of an American president is a large and complex affair – and only more so during a pandemic. How will planning it work?
How it’s Called: How does AP call a race? What’s the process behind it?
Show Your Work: AP plans to peel back the curtain and let people know how our experts declare winners and losers on election night. In so doing, the AP is joining with U.S. television networks, who also say they plan to be more transparent with viewers and show how conclusions are drawn. The intense interest and anxiety over the 2020 presidential election, and the complicating factor caused by early voting, have led to a new openness. The AP will explain its calls in stories that accompany the decisions and make top executives available publicly to discuss why decisions are being made.
Here’s the one-stop browsing location for all the AP Election Explainers. AP PHOTO/ALBERTO PEZZALI, POOL US virus spike creates concerns for polling places; UK says 4-week lockdown may have to last longer
A relentless surge in coronavirus cases across the United States, including in key presidential battleground states, has created mounting health and logistical concerns for voters, poll workers and political parties ahead of Election Day.
In Iowa, county officials are preparing for scores of confirmed or potentially infected people to vote curbside. In Wisconsin, the governor sought to assure voters in the critical swing state that going to the polls would not be risky, even as officials announced more than 5,000 new coronavirus cases, Ryan J. Foley reports.
In the meantime, five of the six states with the nation’s lowest unemployment rates are in the Midwest, have Republican governors and have almost no restrictions intended to slow the spread of the virus, Josh Funk reports.
Plasma Contract: An AP investigation has found that the Trump administration awarded emergency coronavirus funds to a well-connected Republican donor’s company to test a possible COVID-19-fighting blood plasma technology. In discussing the contract, the administration noted Plasma Technologies LLC’s “manufacturing facilities” in Charleston, South Carolina. AP found that Plasma Tech has no manufacturing facilities in Charleston. Instead, the company exists within the luxury condo of its owner, Eugene Zurlo. Now, the tiny company may be in line for as much as $65 million in taxpayer dollars. Richard Lardner and Jason Dearen have this exclusive story.
UK Lockdown: The British government says a new national lockdown in England may have to last longer than the planned four weeks if infection rates don’t fall quickly enough. The lockdown announced by Prime Minister Boris Johnson is to run from Thursday until Dec. 2.. Under the new restrictions, bars and restaurants can only offer take-out, non-essential shops must close and people must remain at home except for exercise and essential tasks. Hairdressers, gyms, golf courses, swimming pools and bowling alleys also have to shut. Jill Lawless reports from London.
Brazil: Protesters have gathered in the country’s two biggest cities to demonstrate against any mandate for having to take a coronavirus vaccine, supporting a rejection campaign encouraged by President Jair Bolsonaro that counters the advice of most health professionals, Christiana Sciaudone reports from Sao Paulo.
Mexico: Diminutive figures of skeletons in face masks and medical caps are all too common on Day of the Dead altars this year. More than 1,700 Mexican health workers are officially known to have died of COVID-19 and they are being honored with three days of national mourning. Amnesty International says Mexico had lost more medical professionals to the virus than any other nation. Lissette Romeo reports from Mexico City.
US Day Care Rules: As more families in America jump back into group day care this fall to restart lives and careers, many parents, pediatricians and care operators are finding that new, pandemic-driven rules offer a much-needed layer of safety but also seem incompatible with the germy reality of childhood, Sally Ho reports.
Sean Connery An Appreciation: To glimpse Sean Connery’s magnetism, you might turn to a photograph of him in a tailored suit, leaning against an Aston Martin. You’d probably get more of his menacing charisma by pulling up the “Chicago way” scene from “The Untouchables.” It might be enough simply to say: “The king is dead,” AP Film Writer Jake Coyle reports.
As a lion of movies for half a century, Connery’s talent was manifest. He was famously cast as James Bond without a screen test. And from then on, in even his lesser films, Connery was never out of place on screen. His presence was absolute.
The Scottish actor widely considered to be the best 007 of all died at 90 on Saturday. Other Top Stories Rescue teams have brought out two girls alive from the wreck of their collapsed apartment buildings in the Turkish coastal city of Izmir, three days after a strong earthquake hit Turkey and Greece. The overall death toll in Friday’s quake reached 85 after teams discovered more bodies amid the toppled buildings in Izmir, Turkey’s third-largest city. More than 1,000 people have been injured by the quake, which was centered in the Aegean Sea. Scientists have put its magnitude in a range from 7.0 to 6.6. Philippine officials say at least 16 people were killed as Typhoon Goni lashed the country over the weekend, and about 13,000 shanties and houses were damaged or swept away in the eastern island province that was first hit by the powerful storm. Goni blasted into Catanduanes province as a super typhoon with sustained winds of 140 miles per hour. But the ferocious storm weakened considerably after making landfall and shifted to spare the capital, Manila, before blowing out last night into the South China Sea. Eta has powered up to near-hurricane strength heading for Central America as forecasters warn it could bring a dangerous storm surge, damaging winds and the threat of floods and mudslides from heavy rains. Eta is expected to be a hurricane today and is predicted to close in on Nicaragua’s coast by early Tuesday. Forecasters said central and northern Nicaragua into much of Honduras could get 15 to 25 inches of rain. Heavy rains also are likely in eastern Guatemala, southern Belize and Jamaica. Iran’s air force has begun an annual drill, with its aging fleet of U.S.- and Russian-made jet fighters taking part alongside locally made drones and other aircraft. The drill will see forces from eight air bases take part over two days in exercises that include missile firing and mid-air refueling. This is the second drill Iran has held since a decade-long U.N. arms embargo that barred it from purchasing foreign weapons expired in October. Iran reportedly is interested in purchasing new aircrafts, as it still flies U.S. F-14 Tomcats alongside F-4s and F-5s dating back to before the 1979 Islamic Revolution. GET THE APP
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CHICAGO TRIBUNE
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CHICAGO SUNTIMES
The inside story on top Illinois political donors
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THE HILL
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ROLL CALL
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Morning Headlines
Almost every vulnerable Republican senator on our final list financed their campaigns on less money than their Democratic challengers. Democrat Doug Jones continues to be the most vulnerable senator going into Election Day, but Republicans occupy the remaining nine spots in the rankings. Read More…
ANALYSIS — We’re down to the eve of the 2020 election after a campaign season that often felt like one of the longest in living memory. CQ Roll Call elections analyst Nathan L. Gonzales breaks down the eight events that shaped this year’s races. Read More…
McConnell: ‘We’re going to clean the plate’ on judges
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has vowed to continue confirming both U.S. circuit and district court nominees through the lame-duck session and right up to the end of the 116th Congress, which must adjourn Jan. 3. Read More…
Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.
Watch: A weekend all-nighter, fake tweets and a Grassley impression — Congressional Hits and Misses
Chuck Grassley was upset he couldn’t be back in Iowa for #CornWatch, Roger Wicker had trouble connecting with Mark Zuckerberg and Kevin McCarthy dreamed about Nancy Pelosi handing him the speaker’s gavel. All that and more in the latest Congressional Hits and Misses. Read More…
Listen: CQ Future — the presidency
Donald Trump’s time in the Oval Office has been unlike any of his predecessors. CQ Roll Call’s Shawn Zeller speaks with presidential historian David Greenberg to examine whether Trump has transformed the American presidency, regardless of who wins this year’s election. Listen here…
CQ Roll Call is a part of FiscalNote, the leading technology innovator at the intersection of global business and government. Copyright 2020 CQ Roll Call. All rights reserved Privacy | Safely unsubscribe now.
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POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: One day more
Presented by Facebook
DRIVING THE DAY
HAPPY MONDAY and welcome to election week!
HERE’S SOMETHING YOU SHOULD REMEMBER going into Election Day: Candidates do not get to decide they won the election. Just like football coaches don’t get to call the game at halftime (h/t @jaketapper), and like golfers don’t get to call the match after one good hole.
BUT IT IS CRITICALLY IMPORTANT to understand what President DONALD TRUMP is going to do, and AXIOS’ JONATHAN SWAN took us inside his head Sunday night. He reported TRUMP has told people he plans to declare victory if he’s ahead Tuesday.
WE SPOKE TO A FEW PEOPLE IN TRUMP WORLD on Sunday who said that they will publicly try to make the point that states and localities should make a clear delineation between the ballots that come in before Election Day and the ones that arrive afterward.
DECLARING VICTORY BEFORE THE BATTLE IS WON is silly and somewhat dangerous behavior, and should be taken with a mountain of salt, if you want to pay attention to it at all. A smattering of states — including the all-important Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Michigan — could be unresolved by Tuesday night.
TRUMP said Sunday that he will be going “in with our lawyers” “as soon as the election is over.” JOSH SHAPIRO, Pennsylvania’s A.G., tweeted this in response: “FACT CHECK: Our elections are over when all the votes are counted. But if your lawyers want to try us, we’d be happy to defeat you in court one more time.”
STATES RUN ELECTIONS, not candidates or television networks. Remember tfhat.
JASON MILLER, Trump’s spokesperson, said Sunday: “President Trump will be ahead on election night, probably getting 280 electoral — somewhere in that range, and then they’re going to try to steal it back after the election.” BUT OF COURSE, THIS IS ALSO NONSENSE. As Utah Lt. Gov./GOP gubernatorial nominee SPENCER COX said Sunday: “Please ignore this type of garbage. The truth is that elections are never decided on election night. In Utah (and most states) it takes 2 weeks to finalize counting and certify results. It really doesn’t matter who is ahead on election night.”
Former Paul Ryan aide BRENDAN BUCK (@brendanbuck): “The campaign is gonna do what it’s gonna do, but I really urge my Republican friends, wherever you come down on Trump, not to give any legitimacy to BS that people who voted according to their local rules should not have their ballot count. Just don’t go there.”
WE’VE KNOWN FOR MONTHS that this is an unusual election that could take time to sort out. Election Night is probably not the end.
POLITICO’S BATTLEGROUND STATE WRAP … “Democrats sweat Trump’s focus on Philadelphia,” by Holly Otterbein in Philadelphia … “The 2 big bets that will decide Florida,” by Marc Caputo in Miami … “‘Arizona is clearly in play’ for Biden,” by Laura Barrón-López in Phoenix … “Margins matter for Trump in neck-and-neck N.C.,” by Michael Kruse in Harrisburg, N.C. …
… “‘There’s a big presence in this state that we didn’t see 4 years ago,’” by Natasha Korecki: “Donald Trump’s hopes of replicating his surprise, razor-thin win in Wisconsin appear to be dimming.” … “Michigan spirals away from Trump,” by Tim Alberta in Lansing … “Georgia Republicans bet it all on Election Day turnout,” by Elena Schneider … “Why the math in Minnesota is more daunting for Trump than in 2016,” by David Siders
PENNSYLVANIA IS EVERYTHING … PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER’S JULIA TERRUSO and JONATHAN TAMARI: “Voters across Pennsylvania are bracing for ‘an incredibly nerve-racking several days’” … NYT’S KATIE GLUECK and ANNIE KARNI: “In Dash to Finish, Biden and Trump Set Up Showdown in Pennsylvania”
BOOKMARK IT … PLAY AROUND with the NYT’s path-to-270 calculator.
MORNING CONSULT has the makings of a JOE BIDEN romp. They have a poll of 4,451 in Florida, and BIDEN up 6 points. The poll
DRIVING THE DAY — TRUMP will travel to Fayetteville, N.C., Avoca, Pa., Traverse City, Mich., Kenosha, Wis., and Grand Rapids, Mich., for campaign rallies. VP MIKE PENCE and second lady KAREN PENCE will travel to Latrobe, Pa., Erie, Pa., Traverse City, Mich., and Grand Rapids, Mich., for campaign rallies. IVANKA TRUMP will be in Eaton Rapids, Mich., and Des Moines.
BIDEN will travel to Cleveland, Beaver County, Pa., and Pittsburgh. JILL BIDEN will be in Erie, Pa., Lawrence County, Pa., and Allegheny County, Pa. LADY GAGA will perform at a drive-in event in Pittsburgh with them. Sen. KAMALA HARRIS (D-Calif.) will be in Luzerne County, Pa., and Lehigh Valley, Pa. DOUG EMHOFF will be in Lancaster, Pa., Ephrata, Pa., and Montgomery and Bucks counties, Pa. Harris and Emhoff will attend a drive-in event with JOHN LEGEND in Philadelphia.
DEMOCRATS ARE PRAYING … HOUSTON CHRONICLE: “Experts wonder who is left to vote on Election Day after record early turnout”
HERE’S A QUESTION: WILL THE RECKONING ever come for House Republicans? We have a pretty good idea what Tuesday is going to look like in the House: Republicans are bracing for a whooping. Most suggest a net loss of between seven and 15 seats. Will anyone in the House GOP leadership get held responsible? Will there be any reflection?
— SOME REALITIES: No one has the stones — or infrastructure — to try to take out KEVIN MCCARTHY for leader. No one really wants to take out STEVE SCALISE (R-La.). But there’s one target that everyone is talking about: LIZ CHENEY (R-Wyo.). House GOP Conference chair is a thankless job, but CHENEY has feuded with TRUMP backers and her House GOP colleagues, so keep an eye on this.
— AFTER LOSING MORE THAN TWO DOZEN SEATS, it would be tough for TOM EMMER of Minnesota to make a case that he’s the right guy for the NRCC. Keep an eye on ELISE STEFANIK of New York, who ran Elevate PAC this time around. She can make the argument that the GOP needs more women in leadership and one running the party’s campaign arm — she’d be the first female NRCC chair.
TRUMP FIRING FAUCI? … WHILE YOU WERE SLEEPING, via NYT’s MATT STEVENS: “Mr. Trump spoke well past midnight at the Miami-Opa Locka Executive Airport in Florida at his fifth and final rally of the day. At one point, he began reciting a familiar complaint about the news media’s continued coverage of the virus. His grousing led the crowd of his supporters to begin chanting, ‘Fire Fauci! Fire Fauci!’ Mr. Trump listened in silence for a few moments before remarking: ‘Don’t tell anybody, but let me wait until a little bit after the election. I appreciate the advice.’”
— NOTE: Fauci is a civil servant, so technically Trump can’t fire him directly, though in theory he could order a political appointee to do so.
POLITICO’S POLITICAL UNIT — led by STEVEN SHEPARD — has made changes to its election forecast: BIDEN has 279 electoral votes in the likely/lean/solid category, which means TRUMP needs to run the table in toss-up states and pick off a lean Democratic state. Georgia is now a toss-up in the presidential race.
— SHEPARD has the Senate at 48 Dems, 47 Republicans, with FIVE toss-ups. (He has moved the David Perdue/Jon Ossoff Georgia race to toss-up here, too.)
— HOUSE DEMS are poised to pick up between five and 10 seats, and SHEPARD has moved DCCC Chair CHERI BUSTOS’ Illinois seat to lean Democratic from likely. Election Forecast site
NYT’S MAGGIE HABERMAN: “To Trump, ‘the Polls That Matter’ Point to Victory. The Rest Are ‘Fake’”: “When President Trump talks about polling, his focus is very much on survey-takers that he thinks are good for him. Polls that show him trailing Joseph R. Biden Jr. — virtually all national polls — are simply ‘fake news.’
“The president’s blinkered view has created something of an alternate universe, one not governed by polling averages or independent analysis but by declarative statements that, at times, feel as if they are coming out of nowhere.”
HISTORIC … WAPO’S CHELSEA JANES: “Kamala Harris could be quietly on the brink of a historic leap”: “Harris, who could be voted the nation’s first female vice president this week, never made ‘pinkie promises’ telling little girls they could be president, like Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.). She did not have a gender-conscious slogan like Hillary Clinton’s ‘I’m with her.’ She did not center her campaign’s message on women’s equality like Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.).
“But in her own, quieter way, Harris has embraced her presence on the cusp of history. Her potential to become the first woman so close to the presidency has gotten less attention than previous female candidacies — in part because of the crises gripping the nation, in part because of other firsts that Harris embodies as a Black and Asian American woman, and in part because of her relatively low-profile way of grappling with gender.”
UNDER THE DOME … BURGESS EVERETT: “Trump threatens Senate GOP — now and in the future”: “A female fighter pilot. A ‘new kind of Republican.’ The only woman in Senate GOP leadership. And veteran lawmakers who’ve been in the mix on most every major bipartisan deal over the past decade. These are a few of the Republican senators President Donald Trump has put at risk this November, through his divisive style of politics, handling of the pandemic and close alliance with the Senate GOP.
“It’s not just Trump who is on the ballot on Tuesday, but the present and future of the Republican Party. ‘The president has represented a departure from more traditional mainstream philosophy. And that’s probably affected the races of a number of my colleagues,’ said Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah), who opposes Trump’s reelection.
“Senate Republicans enter Election Day with an outside shot at protecting their 53-seat majority, particularly if Trump can overperform expectations in Senate battlegrounds. But even a surprise hold will probably sweep away some prominent Republicans that otherwise might have had a better chance if Trump were a more conventional president. That both rising stars and longtime senators are threatened underscores how far-reaching the damage could be.” POLITICO
ON THE LEGAL FRONT — “Biden camp quietly raises money for post-election court brawl,” by Elena Schneider and Natasha Korecki: “Joe Biden’s campaign fundraising efforts have quietly turned toward raising additional money for a possible post-Election day legal fight with President Donald Trump that could stretch through November.
“In recent calls, Biden allies and donors discussed preparations to counter potential lawsuits from Trump and his campaign, and they detailed how close results in key states could set off prolonged, expensive legal fights, according to two people who participated in those calls. If vote totals are close or contested, the funds would support the efforts of dozens of lawyers working for Biden’s campaign, including some who have already deployed to key battleground states as part of voter protection programs.”
— “Lines, lawsuits and Covid: 5 big questions confront election officials before voting ends,” by Zach Montellaro
PLAYBOOK READS
TOP-ED … GOP elections lawyer BEN GINSBERG in the WAPO: “My party is destroying itself on the altar of Trump”
BEYOND THE BELTWAY — “How Stacey Abrams convinced Biden to take Georgia — and her — seriously,” by Ryan Lizza in Atlanta: “If there is one person who is both most responsible for Georgia’s emergence as a competitive state, and most likely to benefit from a Democratic victory here, it is Stacey Abrams. The 2018 Democratic gubernatorial candidate’s near miss — she lost by 1.4 points — made Georgia the new North Carolina: a recently red Southern state undergoing dramatic demographic change that has made it competitive for the foreseeable future.”
CORONAVIRUS RAGING … There are currently 48,000 Americans hospitalized for Covid-19. … States reported more than 74,000 people tested positive for the virus Sunday.
— AP/BERLIN: “Germany launches 4-week partial shutdown to curb virus”: “A four-week partial shutdown has started in Germany, with restaurants, bars, theaters, cinemas and other leisure facilities closing down until the end of the month in a drive to flatten a rapid rise in coronavirus infections.
“The restrictions that took effect Monday are milder than the ones Germany imposed in the first phase of the pandemic in March and April. This time around, schools, kindergartens, non-essential shops and hairdressers are to remain open. But leading officials decided last week that a ‘lockdown light’ was necessary in light of a sharp rise in cases that has prompted many other European countries to impose more or less drastic restrictions.”
— “Doctors Begin to Crack Covid’s Mysterious Long-Term Effects,” by WSJ’s Sarah Toy, Sumathi Reddy and Daniela Hernandez: “Nearly a year into the global coronavirus pandemic, scientists, doctors and patients are beginning to unlock a puzzling phenomenon: For many patients, including young ones who never required hospitalization, Covid-19 has a devastating second act.
“Many are dealing with symptoms weeks or months after they were expected to recover, often with puzzling new complications that can affect the entire body—severe fatigue, cognitive issues and memory lapses, digestive problems, erratic heart rates, headaches, dizziness, fluctuating blood pressure, even hair loss.
“What is surprising to doctors is that many such cases involve people whose original cases weren’t the most serious, undermining the assumption that patients with mild Covid-19 recover within two weeks. Doctors call the condition ‘post-acute Covid’ or ‘chronic Covid,’ and sufferers often refer to themselves as ‘long haulers’ or ‘long-Covid’ patients.”
NYT’S BEN SMITH … MEDIA EQUATION COLUMN: “It’s the End of an Era for the Media, No Matter Who Wins the Election”
PLAYBOOKERS
Send tips to Eli Okun and Garrett Ross at politicoplaybook@politico.com.
SPOTTED at a 45th anniversary celebration for the National Italian American Foundation honoring Anthony Fauci on Saturday: former President George W. Bush, U.S. Ambassador to Italy Lewis Eisenberg, Italian Ambassador Armando Varricchio, Pat Harrison, Anjelica Huston, Linda Roth, Robert Carlucci, Joe Mantegna, Maria Bartiromo, Mario Andretti, Anita McBride, Joe Piscopo, Massimo Ferragamo, Bob Johnson, Neil Sedaka, Bret Baier, Franco Nuschese …
… Jonathan Karl, Mary Ann Esposito, Michael Douglas, Leonardo DiCaprio, Robert De Niro, Al Pacino, Martin Scorsese, Tony Bennett, Giuliana Rancic, Dionne Warwick, John Turturro, Leon Panetta, Francis Ford Coppola, John Salomone, Isabella Rossellini, Andrea Bocelli, Dion Dimucci, Marisa Tomei, Bono, Joseph Lonardo, Patti LuPone, Connie Francis, Alan Alda, Susan Lucci, Sharon Rockefeller, Frankie Valli and Kristin Chenoweth.
TRANSITION — Alejandra Soto has joined Planned Parenthood Federation of America as director of Latino media and comms. She previously was a national spokesperson for Mike Bloomberg’s presidential campaign.
WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Lori Moylan, public policy manager for external affairs at Facebook, and Andrew Moylan, EVP at the National Taxpayers Union Foundation, welcomed Eamon Charles Moylan on Friday. He came in at 7 lbs, 8 oz and 19.5 inches, and joins big brother Seth and big sisters Mia and Rose. Pic
BIRTHWEEK (was Sunday): Cami Bissen, Chippewa County, Wis., field organizer for the Biden campaign (h/t dad Bob)
BIRTHDAY OF THE DAY: Kevin Cirilli, chief Washington correspondent for Bloomberg TV and Bloomberg Radio. How he got his start: “Growing up outside Philly in an Irish-Italian Catholic family, I was born a news junkie. I’d get off the kindergarten bus and watch the O.J. trial with my mom. When I got to Penn State, my dad told me to try out for the student newspaper. I took his advice (but of course didn’t tell him). Those kids were smart. I didn’t think I’d make the cut. I did. And here we are more than a decade later.” Playbook Q&A
BIRTHDAYS: Playbook’s own Eli Okun … David Sirota is 45 … Pat Buchanan is 82 … former Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker is 53 … Dougie Simmons … Katie Hogan … Jonathan Stahler, COS for Sen. Chris Coons (D-Del.) … Jen Dlouhy … Makan Delrahim is 51 … WaPo’s Ava Wallace … Roger Dow, president and CEO of the U.S. Travel Association … RNC’s Cam Cawthorne … AARP’s Bill Walsh is 56 … Christopher Graves … John Sampson, managing director of government affairs for Microsoft Azure … Celeste Lavin of HuffPost … Melanie Tiano, director of cybersecurity and privacy at CTIA … Anthony Zurcher, senior North America reporter for BBC … Aaron Weinberg (h/t Jonah Adams) …
… Adam Kushner, WaPo Outlook editor … Alana Mounce, Nevada state director for the Biden campaign … Jay Solomon, senior director at APCO Worldwide global solutions … Sheyla Asencios … Natalie Johnson, press secretary for Sen. Martha McSally (R-Ariz.) … Catherine Lyons … Steven Capozzola … Sarah Greenwalt … Daniela Pierre Bravo … Larry Fink is 68 … Patty Judge (h/t Teresa Vilmain) … Tony Fazio … Barbara Surk … Kayla Benker of Civis Analytics … Aaryn Kopp … Sarah Elliott, chair of Republicans Overseas U.K. … Warren Hoemann … Raynel Knight … Paula Zellner … Alan Abbey … William Haldeman … Monique Jenkins … Anna Landmark … Emily Davol … Reenie McCarthy … Caitlin Heising
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AMERICAN MINUTE
Conspiracy to Overthrown Government thwarted by George Washington – American Minute with Bill Federer
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PJ MEDIA
The Morning Briefing: Enemy of the People MSM Suddenly Worried About Violence It Spent 6 Months Ignoring
The MSM Proves Again Why It Can’t Be Trusted
Happy Election Day Eve, my dear devoted Kruiser Morning Briefing friends.
Well compadres, we have arrived that the week that may go on for another month or so. This is the 247th day of March, 2020, so we know that calendar time-bending is real this year. The only thing that we cannot do is travel back in time to a more innocent era, because I think we’ve all forgotten what innocence is at this point.
We’re going to do something a little different for the lead-in today and use something I wrote last week as a starting point. It was posted in Friday’s briefing but Fridays are always a little slow and the story hung around all weekend.
I wrote about the fact that the cities that are making a show of bracing themselves for election night violence are all Democrat-run places that embraced Black Lives Matter and antifa. Of course, the article I referenced failed to mention that. As the weekend wore on, more and more MSM types began freaking out and, again, not being honest about where the violence might come from.
Many in the MSM have been warning about the threat of violence from right-wing militias. No mention of BLM or antifa. You know, the groups that have been committing all of the violence. That would be silly to bring them up, wouldn’t it?
That the MSM is talking about violence — even the threat of it — at all is amazing. These are the people who’ve spent months telling us that smashed windows and burning buildings were happening amid “mostly peaceful” protests. Heck, Rep. Jerry Nadler (D-N.Y.) insisted that antifa was a “myth,” which no doubt irritated all of the antifa thugs who have put so much effort into looting and bullying whenever they outnumber their targets.
I happened upon this tweet from Wolf Blitzer on Sunday and was immediately embarrassed for him:
This is a guy who was once a respected journalist. Yes, he’s always had his bias, but he was less awful than the rest of them at one point, which was enough for even people on my side of the aisle to respect him a bit.
Now, the CNN done rot that poor boy’s brain.
Twitchy has some fairly epic responses to Blitzer’s psychotic break here.
No Sunday news cycle would be complete without CNN’s Brian “Poppin’ Fresh” Stelter saying the dumbest thing. Doughboy wondered aloud if all of these cities that have been plagued by leftist violence that was cheered on by elected Democrats were worried because President Trump is “attacking the election.”
Oh, the projection.
These idiots have been lying for so long that they believe their own garbage. They’re going to lie themselves into being destroyed by the mobs they’ve been coddling and running interference for. The karmic payback is not going to be pleasant for them.
These cities are preparing for violence because they know what the MSM won’t admit: BLM and antifa are in it just for the violence. They bark about “REFORM!” and “JUSTICE!” but it’s really all about thuggery without fear of retaliation (you won’t see them in places where people fight back) and the occasional free television from a Best Buy with smashed windows.
The leftist hellholes are reaping what they’ve sown. The MSM heavyweights are headquartered in some of them.
Good harvest.
#ProTip From An Experienced Activist
Well Played
PJM Linktank
Me: Turncoat Idiot Joe Scarborough Thinks the Constitution Is Voter Suppression
NOT CREEPY AT ALL…Michigan Bars and Restaurants Will Require Customers’ Names and Phone Numbers
#TrueStory Trump Is in Striking Distance, But Either Way This Election Won’t Be Pretty
#WINNING. Philadelphia Firefighters Union Confirms Trump Endorsement in Forced Recount
Oh. Maxine Waters Calls Black Trump Voters ‘Shameful,’ Says She Will ‘Never Ever Forgive Them’
Alyssa Milano Tried to Honor Ruth Bader Ginsburg on Halloween and Failed Miserably
American Hostage in Niger Freed in Daring SEAL Team Six Military Raid
Barack Obama’s legacy. EXCLUSIVE: Brady White Reveals Identity of Alleged Cop Shooter In New Orleans
Beyond Bond: Sean Connery’s Impact on the Culture
2020 Must Be a Trump Landslide, a Total Knock-Out Against the Unscrupulous Left
Handicapping the Post-Election Unrest
The Latest Poll Out of Iowa Foreshadows Disaster for Biden
Trump and Biden on Islam: The Important Details
Biden ‘Will Open the Floodgate to Radical Islamic Terrorism.’ Why Don’t His Supporters Care?
Mayor Pete on Future Lockdowns: ‘Everything Has to Be on the Table’
Biden May Have the Polls But Events Are Trending Toward Trump
Bureaucrats Try Limiting Us to Just One Drink a Day—After Everything They’ve Put Us Through?
Again? Another White Professor Outed as Fake ‘Chicana’
VIP
The Kruiser Kabana Episode 77: Kira Davis Joins Me for Election Preview Mood Swings
The Fringe with Megan Fox, Episode 37: Election Predictions with PJ Media’s Matt Margolis
VIP Gold
Democrats Are Not the Party of Science
From the Mothership and Beyond
Driverless race car sums up 2020 by swerving into a wall for no reason
Kamala Accused of Pushing Marxism in New Video
Schlichter: It’s Too Late for a Late Hit
Trump Hammers Biden in Final Days of Campaign
WATCH: Trump Slams Biden and Obama While Touting His Admin’s Biggest Success Thus Far
Here’s the Major Endorsement Trump Landed in a Key Battleground State
Black Pro-Lifers Slap Planned Parenthood with a Lawsuit. Here’s Why.
Thugs Vandalize Sean Parnell’s House
Major KY Newspaper That Historically Endorsed Democrats Declines to Publicly Back Amy McGrath
Pennsylvania Voters: Banning Fracking Will Be Devastating
EXCLUSIVE: GOP Reveals Their Secret for Combatting Big Tech’s Censorship and Mainstream Media Bias
A Former NeverTrumper Casts Her Ballot
More Anti-Gun Optics In New Jersey
Two Men Arrested In TX Gun Thefts
University Of Miami Official Demands Removal Of Pro-2A Sign
Third Breonna Taylor Grand Juror Disputes Findings
Politics Isn’t Stopping The Riots. How About An Exorcism?
Associated Press To Bravely Explain How They Call Elections
Hundreds Of Thousands Of “Dubious” Ballots Sent Out Just In Los Angeles County
Machu Picchu reopens after eight-month Covid closure
The FBI That Hid the Hunter Biden Laptops Is on the Job Investigating a Trump Truck Caravan in Texas
Why Californians Should Vote Yes on Prop 22
He’s gotta go. Dr. Fauci Melts Down Again, Attacks Scott Atlas and Predicts Doom
Kirstie Alley Takes No Prisoners in Her War With CNN
Still an Undecided Voter? Consider Abortion Numbers
History is fun. Reviving America’s Forgotten Boozy, Fruity Election Cake
Bee Me
The Kruiser Kabana
Current mood…
We don’t need different flavors of Oreos. Oreos is the flavor. Stop the commie madness.
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PJ Media Senior Columnist and Associate Editor Stephen Kruiser is the author of “Don’t Let the Hippies Shower” and “Straight Outta Feelings: Political Zen in the Age of Outrage,” both of which address serious subjects in a humorous way. Monday through Friday he edits PJ Media’s “Morning Briefing.” His columns appear twice a week.
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THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: Meet the People Keeping the Election Shipshape
We spoke to dozens of state election officials to get their sense of how this unprecedented election will go.
The Dispatch Staff | 2 hr | 42 | 154 |
Happy Monday! We hope you enjoyed that extra hour of sleep Saturday night. You’ll need it this week.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- Philip Walton, an American citizen who was abducted last week in Niger, was rescued by members of SEAL Team Six in Nigeria on Saturday. The operation was the result of cooperation between the armed forces of Niger, Nigeria, and the United States.
- British Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced on Saturday a four-week national lockdown, set to go into effect Thursday, to “contain this autumn surge” of COVID-19. All restaurants and nonessential shops will be forced to close, but people will be allowed to leave their homes for school, medical appointments, essential goods shopping, and work (if they can’t do so from home). Schools, colleges, and childcare facilities will remain open.
- Thousands of Belarusian protesters turned out into the streets in Minsk for the 13th straight Sunday in protest against President Alexander Lukashenko, whose recent electoral victory over popular challenger Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya is widely seen as illegitimate.
- President Trump tweeted out his support for supporters of his who surrounded a Biden campaign bus on a highway in Texas, writing “in my opinion, these patriots did nothing wrong.” The FBI is investigating the incident.
- Sean Connery died over the weekend in the Bahamas at the age of 90. The legendary actor was most well known for his character-defining role as James Bond, and won an Oscar in 1988 for his role in “The Untouchables.”
- The United States confirmed 85,316 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 8 percent of the 1,068,044 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 622 deaths were attributed to the virus on Sunday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 230,967. According to the COVID Tracking Project, 46,502 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID-19.
Meet the People Overseeing This Week’s Elections
The 2020 election has been underway for about a month and a half now—early voting in states like Michigan, Virginia, Wyoming, South Dakota, and Minnesota began in late September—but all ballots must be cast (or postmarked) by tomorrow. Since the onset of the coronavirus pandemic in March, experts have cautioned that voting will look a little different this year, and indeed it has.
Around the country, state election officials and legislatures have amended their voter registration deadlines, and—to protect voters from crowded polling places on Election Day—expanded access to early, absentee, and mail-in balloting. The CARES Act appropriated hundreds of millions of dollars toward helping states and localities prepare to hold elections amid a pandemic. Dozens upon dozens of lawsuits have challenged—or sought to clarify—these changes, and countless entities have combined to launch the most comprehensive voter education effort in American history.
The result? Voter enthusiasm that appears on pace to smash 2016’s record raw-vote total. An astounding 93 million votes have already been cast according to the U.S. Elections Project—nearly 68 percent of the total votes counted in 2016—with Election Day itself still to come. Battleground states Florida, Georgia, and North Carolina are close to matching their vote totals from four years ago, and Texas has already surpassed its 2016 tally.
But these changes didn’t come unopposed. President Trump has railed against mail-in voting for months, referring to it as the “rigged ballot scam” and trashing the entire election as “rigged.” “I think it’s a terrible thing when people or states are allowed to tabulate ballots for a long period of time after the election is over,” Trump said Sunday. “I think it’s terrible when we can’t know the results of an election the night of the election in a modern-day age of computers.” (In reality, official ballot tabulation is always a multi-day process, although media organizations can typically use partial counts to project the eventual winner before that process is completed.) Combined with foreign adversaries determined to sow disinformation, the next several days will prove a real test for our electoral system, and voters’ faith in it.
Nate Persily, the co-director of the Stanford Cyber Policy Center, told The Dispatch back in August the best remedy for this dishonesty and distortion is to “flood the zone of disinformation with real information.”
To that end, we’ve spent the last several months going straight to the source of real information about the electoral process: Secretaries of state, lieutenant governors, election commissions, and county commissioners. All told, we’ve talked to officials in dozens of states, asking them a set list of questions about coronavirus safety, mail-in voting, the timing of results, election security, and their confidence in the systems they have built. We encourage you to read the full piece to get a sense of how different states have approached these challenges, but here are some snippets from our interviews—which were conducted from early September to the last week of October, and have been edited for length and clarity.
What changes has your state made to prepare to hold an election during a pandemic?
- North Carolina State Board of Elections Executive Director Karen Brinson Bell: Through the spring, we worked with legislators and made a series of recommendations that became part of a bipartisan bill in June that reduced the required number of witnesses. We had previously required two witnesses in North Carolina, and they reduced it to one. We changed our absentee materials to align with that. We had actually started on a new look for our absentee by-mail return envelopes to be more user-friendly anyway, working with the Center for Civic Design. We launched our Democracy Heroes campaign in June. That was just an effort to solicit help from people, because many of our veteran workers were not going to be able to serve because they were in a vulnerable population. We knew that we would need 25,000 to 30,000 people across the state to work, not just because of the presidential election, but obviously because of COVID. We are over 50,000 people who completed that interest survey. Not only do we have the workers that we need, but we also have reserves. We launched an online absentee request portal, so for the first time, North Carolinians could make that request online and provide an online signature.
What steps have you taken to ensure citizens in your state will be able to vote by mail securely and easily?
- Wisconsin Election Commission Public Information Officer Reid Magney: We integrated intelligent mail barcodes (IMB) into the system. So when the clerk is printing a mailing label, the IMB goes right on there. And that allows us then to essentially watch batches of mail move through the system. So if a tub of absentee ballots gets left in a corner in a post office somewhere, and doesn’t move for a couple of days, we know. And so then we get to tell the clerk, “Hey clerk, the ballots that you sent out on this day, or at least a certain portion of them, aren’t going anywhere. These are the voters who they were intended for. You need to be figuring out what’s going on, contact these voters, see if they got their ballots. If not, issue them replacements.” Because of the IMBs, we were able to give voters that information too, on our website, which is myvote.wi.gov. I don’t normally order pizza online, but I’ve been told it reminds people of the Domino’s delivery tracker. You can see where your ballot is in the processing. You can see the estimated delivery time.
Absentee ballots are invalidated at much higher rates than in-person votes. Is that something you’re concerned about? And if so, what steps are you taking to mitigate the effects of this phenomenon?
- Kentucky Secretary of State Michael Adams (R): We actually had a lower proportion of absentee ballots being voided in our primary election this year than we had in the last election in 2018, even though we had a much higher proportion of voters voting absentee. We engaged in an information campaign through social media and otherwise to inform voters of how to avoid common mistakes that they make that would get a ballot invalidated. Voters make mistakes all the time, and make them in person too. But when they’re voting in person, they can spot that error and get a fresh ballot from the poll worker and they can void the prior ballot. It’s hard to do if they’re voting absentee: They don’t have the use of a poll worker. So in the primary, we allowed for a cure process for voters. If their signatures didn’t match, we enabled them to have a process to verify their signature after the fact. We look at it and make sure that they’re not false voters. We expanded that cure process for the general election. It’s not just signature issues that will trigger a cure option. It’s also people making other mistakes that they make, like not sealing their ballot envelope, or failing to sign at all.
The final vote tally in an election is never fully certified on Election Night itself, but there are additional concerns this year that winners may not be known for days, or even weeks. When do you expect to know the outcome of elections in your state with some degree of certainty?
- Minnesota Secretary of State Steve Simon (D): For the first time ever, our office is going to post and make available data on outstanding absentee ballots by Minnesota state house district. We wanted to get more granular than state, county, congressional district, so we went down to the house district. And so you’ll know on Election Night, Candidate A is ahead of Candidate B in a house district, let’s say by 500 votes. And you’ll also know, “Hey, there are 300 votes outstanding. We don’t know when they’re going to come in the next week, or if, but the most that could come in is 300.” And you and your colleagues will be able to make calls based on that information. So that’s why I think we’ll know winners and outcomes earlier rather than later. If not on Election Night, then shortly thereafter.
Have you seen any evidence in your state of attempted interference in voting systems—foreign or domestic?
- Nebraska Secretary of State Robert Evnen (R): The place where I’m most concerned about foreign actors interfering in our elections is in a campaign of disinformation, directed to two objectives. One is to create mistrust in our systems of government for elections. And the second is to drive a wedge between us. The idea of robust debate in our country is fundamental. But the problem we’re having now is that we’re not just debating each other, we’re hating each other. And foreign actors like to drive wedges that will increase our dislike for each other. There’s also a campaign to try to create mistrust in the election process. My message to voters is: Go to your trusted sources and ask them your questions.
What security systems does your state have in place to protect against any meddling with the actual vote count?
- Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose (R): The idea that some foreign actor can tamper with a voting machine and that that would go undetected is far-fetched to the extent of being nearly ridiculous. The voting machines in Ohio are never connected to the internet. They’re kept in a vault at the board of elections or a secure room where they’re under double lock and key: The Republicans have one key, the Democrats have another key. I always joke, it’s like those submarine movies from the ‘80s where it takes two keys to launch the torpedo. It takes the Republican key and the Democratic key to get into the room. The machines are tested and certified at both the state and federal level before they were ever purchased. Of course, they’ve got seals and tamper evidence devices on them, so that you can tell if they have been messed with. If somebody were to take a screwdriver and crack open a machine, we would know about it, the board of elections would know about it. And then after the election, we do a full post-election audit because in Ohio, every vote has a hard copy paper trail that goes with it. And so you can compare the paper results to the electronic results.
Do you feel confident that the results tabulated in November in your state will be fair and accurate?
- Iowa Secretary of State Paul Pate (R): Most certainly. Unequivocally. We’ve put so much into this. We do a lot of elections in our state every year. This just happens to be the biggest one. And we learn from each one of those to improve the process. And we learned a lot in the primary: How to deal with COVID and how to deal with civil unrest, hot topics. For the last four years, we’ve been dealing with cybersecurity, the bad actors. So all of those lessons, and the knowledge we’ve gained, is there for us to draw on, to make sure that we’re successful on the third of November.
Is there anything you could see next week that would cause you to lose that confidence?
- Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson (D): No, because I’m fully confident in the strength of the infrastructure that we’ve built. The biggest variable and uncertainty is misinformation and the pervasive attempts to try to diminish the truth. We’ve been successful so far, as I mentioned, it’s reflected in the number of the people voting, at pushing back against disinformation and frankly investigating anything that rises to illegality in partnership with the Attorney General. So we’re on it, is the bottom line. And because of that, I’m confident that we’ll be able to ensure voters not only can have faith that our system is secure and accessible, but that efforts to undermine that faith will be unsuccessful.
Worth Your Time
- In his latest for Politico, chief political correspondent Tim Alberta chats with key voters in battleground states to dig into the country’s shockingly low confidence in the electoral process this cycle. It stems, he contends, from President Trump’s relentless rhetoric about a “rigged” election and widespread voter fraud. “Despite incredible advances in technology that have afforded voters more security and more transparency than ever before, a rising tide of distrust has swamped an institution that has kept our democracy afloat for a couple of centuries,” Alberta writes. “Trump’s agenda is not to fix our electoral problems; Trump’s agenda is to scare away enough voters to win or sow enough doubt in the minds of those who do vote to preemptively justify a loss.”
- Is Rep. Liz Cheney the Republican party’s “last gasp of its Bush-Cheney past,” or the face of its path forward for a post-Trump GOP? Alex Thompson charts Cheney’s path to political prominence—and aspirations to become the first Republican woman House Speaker—in a comprehensive profile. Cheney’s adherence to her father’s “unapologetically muscular foreign policy” and backing from prominent Trump skeptics make her a breath of fresh air for conservatives disillusioned by Trumpian nationalism, despite her public support for many of the president’s policy decisions.
Presented Without Comment
Also Presented Without Comment
Also Also Presented Without Comment
Toeing the Company Line
- Jonah pubbed his last G-File before the election on Friday, and you’ll want to make sure you’ve read it before tomorrow: He hits the rank punditry—hard. Trump “couldn’t define or explain a second-term agenda that people could vote for,” Jonah argues. “My own theory is that plenty of folks tried to design a second-term agenda for him, but he resisted it because he couldn’t stomach the idea that people needed more reason to vote for him other than his Magnificent Himness.” He expands on this piece—and more—in Saturday’s episode of The Ruminant.
- “The longer I live, the more I realize that we simply don’t know who we truly are until we’re tested,” writes David in this Sunday’s French Press. “We can vocalize our beliefs all day long, but when living those beliefs is hard—when upholding our principles carries a cost—that’s when we learn what we truly value.” The past four years have tested America in innumerable ways, breaking and dividing us in the process. Some people–who David calls “the remnant”—have weathered the storm, showing immense courage and integrity during the darkest of times. “But the critical truth is that a nation or a church heals not through the virtue of that remnant, as admirable as it may be,” David writes. “The remnant might represent a foundation, but the repentant truly powered the church. That’s how our church heals. That’s how our nation heals. Not so much by exalting the righteous and giving them their due, but by embracing the repentant and forgiving them with joy.”
- What do Republican lawmakers want the GOP to look like in a post-Trump era? “There’s a great fear of one scenario which is that Donald Trump loses in a race that is extremely tight,” Axios reporter Jonathan Swan tells Sarah and Steve on Friday’s episode of the Dispatch Podcast. “In that scenario, it would be much more difficult for elected Republicans to disown Trumpism and make the case that this was an aberrant cancer that needs to be excised.” Tune in for a discussion of the GOP’s spending problem, the state of the polling industry, and what will have happened if Trump wins tomorrow.
Let Us Know
Last chance for election predictions; let’s get ’em all out there. Who wins the presidency (and with how many electoral votes), when is the race called, does the loser concede, and which state puts the winner over the top? Which Senate incumbents lose, and which party will control Congress’ upper chamber come January? Anyone who guesses the exact Electoral College vote—whenever it is finalized—will get a shoutout in the next day’s TMD.
Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Audrey Fahlberg (@FahlOutBerg), Charlotte Lawson (@charlotteUVA), James P. Sutton (@jamespsuttonsf), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).
Photo by Logan Cyrus/AFP via Getty Images.
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LEGAL INSURRECTION
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THE DAILY WIRE
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DESERET NEWS
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AMERICAN THINKER
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LARRY J. SABATO’S CRYSTAL BALL
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KEY POINTS FROM THIS ARTICLE— Our final Electoral College ratings show Joe Biden at 321 electoral votes and Donald Trump at 217. — Democrats are narrow favorites to capture a Senate majority, 50-48 with two Toss-ups — the two Georgia races, both of which we think are likely to go to runoffs. — We have Democrats netting 10 seats in the House. — The only governorship we have flipping is Montana, which would be a gain for Republicans. Table 1: Crystal Ball Electoral College rating changes
Table 2: Crystal Ball Senate rating changes
Table 3: Crystal Ball House rating changes
Table 4: Crystal Ball gubernatorial rating changes
Map 1: Final Crystal Ball Electoral College ratingsMap 2: Final Crystal Ball Senate ratingsMap 3: Final Crystal Ball House ratingsMap 4: Final Crystal Ball gubernatorial ratingsOur final ratingsIs it possible that Donald Trump will win a second term as president? Yes. Do the data point to that happening? No. As we survey the political landscape a day before the election, we see a race that has largely been steady. Even before he was the Democratic nominee, Joe Biden seemed like the strongest potential challenger to Donald Trump. Perhaps that said more about the Democratic field than Biden himself, and he is hardly an inspiring candidate, but the former vice president has been able to bring together the Democratic Party’s warring factions — at least for now — and keep the focus of the election on the sitting president. A worldwide pandemic challenged Trump’s mettle — and he is in a considerably weaker position because of it. We have kept looking for indicators that the president was catching up. It is likely the case that the president was in worse shape in the aftermath of the first debate and his hospitalization for COVID-19 than he is now, but it’s really just a question of the size of his deficit. Both our Democratic and Republican sources generally see Biden as a strong favorite to surpass the requisite 270 electoral votes to win. Polling released over the weekend provided a few bright spots for Trump, particularly a Des Moines Register/Mediacom poll conducted by respected pollster J. Ann Selzer showing Trump up a surprising 48%-41% in Iowa. A similar poll released four years ago proved a harbinger of Hillary Clinton’s weakness with white voters in small cities and rural areas across the Midwest. However, there were plenty of other surveys over the weekend from other pollsters we respect that told a different story, a story that has been consistent throughout the campaign — Biden is polling markedly better with whites compared to Clinton’s performance, and he has built durable leads in the key states of Michigan and Wisconsin, and a smaller but seemingly real edge in Pennsylvania. Is it possible that Selzer and some other polls that have been good for Trump are right, and the others are wrong? Sure. Among our sources — and among us — there is a persistent worry that pollsters have simply misconstrued the white vote. In this scenario, the president’s strength among white voters would either be undiminished from 2016 and/or a wave of newly registered or activated Trump voters would come out of the woodwork Tuesday to save the president. This may be real, and the product of a carefully executed plan hatched years ago, or it may be wishful thinking by the president’s supporters. One politically experienced friend of the Crystal Ball subscribes to this theory and believes in his gut that Trump will win. He also said that if he were in our shoes, he’d have to pick Biden too — because that is what the data suggest is the proper handicap. One doesn’t need to come up with a theory of hidden voters to believe Biden is the favorite. That’s just where the data lead, in our judgment. Others will come to different judgments. If theirs is right and ours is wrong, we’re sure we’ll hear from them! With that, let’s unveil our final handicapping of the Electoral College, Senate, House, and governors. THE ELECTORAL COLLEGEThroughout much of October, we had 290 electoral votes at least leaning to Joe Biden. That includes all of the states that voted for Hillary Clinton (232 electoral votes), plus Trump-won Arizona, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin in addition to the single electoral vote in Nebraska’s 2nd Congressional District. In the end, we did not see a reason to shift any of these electoral votes back to Trump. Pennsylvania is probably the state we feel the shakiest about. If Trump were to win the state, we suspect it would be because of even bigger margins in the state’s white rural and small town areas combined with a weaker-than-expected Democratic margin in Philadelphia. (While some projections of Trump winning 20% or even 30% of the Black vote are very unrealistic, he may do a little bit better than 2016 among nonwhite voters in aggregate.) Note, though, that if Biden can win the Clinton states plus Arizona, Michigan, NE-2, and Wisconsin, he could afford to lose Pennsylvania. But that would be an agonizingly close election. If Biden does carry these 290 electoral votes, and only these, he would be fine to win, but his victory might be in doubt tomorrow evening. That’s because the vote counts in some of these states — most notably Pennsylvania — could take a while to complete. So if Biden wants an impressive victory on Election Night, he needs more than just these states. We should know a lot about the vote counts in a number of other big, competitive states on Election Night: Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, Ohio, and Texas. If Biden wins just one of these states, we think it would be indicative of him getting north of 300 electoral votes and a clearer victory on Election Night. We do favor Biden in a couple of these states, but perhaps not the ones you might think. If one goes by the polls, Biden should be favored in Florida, albeit only by a little. Yet we have seen the Democrats (and even the polls) come up short in the Sunshine State so often, including in the Democratic wave year of 2018, that we needed unmistakable signs to pick them there this time. We just don’t see those signs in this complex state with lots of moving parts. Therefore, we’re picking Trump in his adopted home state of Florida. Team Trump, beware of the Crystal Ball’s kiss of death in Florida: We have to admit that our record in Florida is poor. We have erred in the state four cycles in a row, missing the 2012 and 2016 presidential races and the 2014 gubernatorial and 2018 gubernatorial/Senate races. Such is the peril of trying to divine a state that is so perennially close (all of the aforementioned races were decided by roughly a point each time). If we could’ve come up with an excuse to keep Florida as a Toss-up, we would have. But we traditionally call each state so that we can present a complete Electoral College projection. We also are picking Trump in Ohio, although we expect his margin to be much reduced from his big 2016 win. Perhaps 2020 will be to Ohio what 2008 was to Missouri: the death knell of a Midwest state’s bellwether status. If Ohio does not vote for the winner, it would be the first time since 1960 that it failed to do so. We also favor Trump in two other whiter-than-average places where he did well in 2016, Iowa and Maine’s 2nd Congressional District (even though polling has actually shown Biden leading in the latter). We came closer than we ever thought we would to leaning Texas to Biden — amidst an immense turnout, this may finally be the year of Blue Texas. But we retain enough skepticism that we will keep it in the lightest possible shade of red. Yet we all know there will be a year relatively soon when Texas votes Democratic again. All that said, we do now favor Biden, narrowly, in two of the key Sun Belt states: Georgia and North Carolina. We have been surprised by the level of Republican concern about Georgia, and Democrats are expressing surprising confidence about North Carolina, a state that has frustrated the party in recent years. Neither place is a certainty for Democrats, but a small bet seems worthwhile on the Tar Heel and Peach states. If our projection comes true, Biden would win an Electoral College victory smaller than those of Barack Obama in 2008 and 2012, although it’s possible that Biden could simultaneously eclipse Obama’s 7.3-point win in the 2008 national popular vote. Of course, as Democrats know all too well, the national popular vote is meaningful only as trivia. THE SENATELet’s assume that Democrats flip seats in Arizona and Colorado and Republicans flip Alabama, outcomes we have long projected in our ratings. In that instance, it may be that one can boil the race for the Senate down to three races: Iowa, Maine, and North Carolina. It seems likely that the party that wins two of those three will win a Senate majority, even if that majority is just a 50-50 one broken by a vice presidential tiebreaker. Our final ratings show Democrats favored in two of these three races, so we see Democrats as narrow favorites for a Senate majority when combined with their party’s edge in the presidential race. We have shown Maine state House Speaker Sara Gideon (D) narrowly favored over Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME) since September. Democrats were hoping that Gideon would build a bigger lead by the end, but the race remains very close and seems likelier than not to trigger a ranked-choice voting process that most expect will benefit Gideon. We leaned Iowa to challenger Theresa Greenfield (D) a few weeks ago against Sen. Joni Ernst (R-IA), but since then, the numbers seem to have gotten better for Republicans in Iowa, so we’re going to pick Ernst along with Trump in the state. Do not necessarily assume Ernst’s four-point lead in the Des Moines Register/Mediacom poll — which we freely admit is helping to guide our handicap — is necessarily real, though: Operatives on both sides of the race wondered if the GOP edge in that survey was a bit inflated. That leaves North Carolina, and the battle between the movable object, Sen. Thom Tillis (R-NC), and the resistible force, former state Sen. Cal Cunningham (D). Despite Cunningham’s late-breaking extramarital affair and consequent damage to his image, Tillis has remained a bit behind, and he is almost certainly reliant on Trump dragging him across the finish line. Because we slightly favor Biden in North Carolina, we also favor Cunningham, who if elected to the Senate would enter the chamber as one of the more damaged newly-elected members in recent memory. One can see how close the battle for the Senate is — in our minds, it is coming down to North Carolina. However, there are plenty of other competitive races beyond those we mentioned. Republicans hold out hope that Trump can come close enough in Michigan to get veteran John James (R) in range of Sen. Gary Peters (D-MI), although Peters (and Biden) remain favored in the Wolverine State. There is a long list of Republican-held Senate seats that are all Democratic upset possibilities: Alaska, Kansas, Montana, South Carolina, and now Texas, where we are downgrading Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX) from Likely Republican to Leans Republican. Biden is a big enough threat to carry the state that Cornyn has to be feeling some heat, although our read of the statewide and congressional district-level polling is that there are a small number of Biden backers who will support Cornyn and a House GOP candidate down the ballot. It may be that Democrats score an upset in one or more of these second-tier states, but we are not picking Democrats in any of them. Finally, there are the two races in Georgia, which we’re calling Toss-ups in anticipation of runoffs. The Georgia special, an all-party jungle primary, seems guaranteed to go to a runoff as it’s not practical for anyone to get to 50%. In the late going, and as Republicans have seemingly lost ground in Georgia, some in the GOP are worried about Sen. David Perdue’s (R-GA) ability to hold challenger Jon Ossoff (D) under 50%. We see a runoff as the likeliest outcome even if Biden carries the state. Between two possible runoffs in Georgia, a potential ranked-choice vote allocation in Maine, and the vicissitudes of the vote count in some states, there may be lingering question marks about Senate control after Nov. 3. THE HOUSEOperatives on both sides of the battle for the House agree that the Democrats will hold the House of Representatives, but they also marvel at both the size of the battlefield and the seeming fact that neither side has truly put away their most obvious targets. While Republicans remain confident that they will knock off several Democratic incumbents in districts that Donald Trump carried by decent-sized margins in 2016, the general consensus is that only a single Democratic incumbent is a clear underdog: Rep. Collin Peterson (D, MN-7), the long-tenured chairman of the House Agriculture Committee who holds a district that’s much more Republican than any other held by a Democrat. We are giving the benefit of the doubt to other incumbents in our final picks, but don’t be surprised at all if several other Democratic incumbents, such as Reps. Xochitl Torres Small (D, NM-2), Kendra Horn (D, OK-5), or Max Rose (D, NY-11), end up losing. If one or more loses, it will be a victory for Republican efforts to tie these incumbents to national Democrats on issues such as energy production and law enforcement. We also are giving some endangered Republicans a halting nod in districts where Donald Trump seems very likely to lose significant ground, such as Reps. Ann Wagner (R, MO-2) and Don Bacon (R, NE-2). Despite a poor national environment, Republicans are holding their own in some of their most vulnerable seats; for instance, both sides agree that the open seat in TX-23, a perennially competitive, majority-Hispanic district that runs from El Paso to San Antonio, remains a dogfight even though many assumed it’d be a sure Democratic pickup when Rep. Will Hurd (R) retired after barely surviving 2018. Overall, we see House Democrats picking up some traditionally Republican suburban districts where Trump seems likely to run behind his 2016 showing. That includes open seats in GA-7, IN-5, and TX-24. We also see a combination of strong Democratic challengers and slippage for Trump as endangering Reps. David Schweikert (R, AZ-6), Steve Chabot (R, OH-1), and Scott Perry (R, PA-10). Rep. Jeff Van Drew (R, NJ-2) switched parties during the impeachment battle; now he appears to be a slight underdog. Coming into the end of the campaign, we had 18 Toss-ups, and we have leaned them all: 11 to the Democrats, and seven to the Republicans. We are under no illusions that we will get all of them right. The playing field is large and there are a large number of close races. Overall, our ratings show the Democrats netting 10 seats from the 233 they currently hold (assuming Democrats hold a safe-seat vacancy), or an eight-seat gain from the 235 Democrats won in 2018. THE GOVERNORSWe had only one Toss-up in the gubernatorial races, the open seat in Montana. It appears that the race between Rep. Greg Gianforte (R, MT-AL) and Lt. Gov. Mike Cooney (D) has tightened down the stretch, matching the state’s very competitive at-large House and U.S. Senate races (the presidential race seems surprisingly close as well). But ultimately we think the GOP is a better bet in all of the Montana races, so we’re pushing the gubernatorial race to Leans Republican. Democrats are hopeful that state Auditor Nicole Galloway (D) can upset Gov. Mike Parson (R-MO), but our sense is that the incumbent is still ahead. So it is Leans Republican in the two races we see as most competitive tomorrow, and don’t be shocked if the Democrats score an upset in one or both. If our ratings hold, the Republicans would net a single governorship this year, giving them 27 and Democrats 23 as we head into a midterm cycle, when the vast majority of governorships are contested. ConclusionThis is the 72nd issue of the Crystal Ball this year — the most issues we’ve ever published in a single year, and the year is not over. At the very least, we can guarantee that readers have gotten their money’s worth — especially since the UVA Center for Politics, as a public service, does not charge anyone for the Crystal Ball. Whatever happens, we’ll be back after the election to start wading through the results — and looking ahead to what’s next. |
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KEY POINTS FROM THIS ARTICLE— New numbers from the UMass Poll show very few undecided voters and suggest the vast majority of those voting for Joe Biden and Donald Trump made up their minds well before the pandemic and before Biden secured the Democratic nomination. — Nearly two-thirds of likely voters say they made up their minds when Donald Trump was elected four years ago. Most voters decided long agoEstimates suggest that, when the dust settles, more than $6 billion will have been spent on this year’s presidential race. That’s more than double what was spent in 2016. Which makes sense, given that the stakes are so high. But, how many voters have been persuaded? Political operatives, the news media, and pundits painstakingly dissect the impact of convention speeches, the latest tidbits from the campaign trail, each new horse-race poll, the utterances of “undecided voters” in hokey on-air focus groups, and every debate gaffe or knock-out blow. We political scientists, on the other hand, have spilled substantial ink wondering whether campaigns even matter. After all, early studies of voting showed precious little persuasion during the course of a campaign. And, models based on indicators that precede the heart of campaign season are generally quite predictive of the final results while horse-race polls often jump around with momentum and leads sometimes swinging back and forth in the months prior to an election. As is often the case, the truth probably sits somewhere in the middle, with campaign effects producing minimal persuasion and the fundamentals carrying the day most of the time, but campaign choices, mobilization efforts, candidate qualities, and key events helping shift outcomes enough to be decisive in tight contests like the one in 2016. Our current hyper-polarization along party lines means that very few voters and states are truly up for grabs every four years, but also has tended to ensure that presidential elections have been relatively close since the dawn of the 21st Century. New evidence from the UMass Poll, run by me and my colleagues at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and fielded by YouGov, suggests that 2020 may represent a low water mark for persuasion effects. For starters, our national poll, taken between Oct. 20-27, finds just over 1% of likely voters still undecided and shows Joe Biden with a commanding nine-percentage-point advantage (Biden 53% to Trump 44%). When did these voters decide for whom they would vote? We asked them. Sixty-one percent report having made up their minds when Donald Trump was elected four years ago. Another 23% say they knew how they’d vote during the first half of Trump’s term. That’s nearly 85% of voters deciding well before the novel coronavirus jumped species. Ten percent tell us they chose a few months ago. For those of you keeping score at home, that leaves just 5% of voters who say they made up their mind in the last few weeks or days. Just over half of voters note that they made up their mind earlier than usual this time around. Table 1: When presidential voters made up their mindsIronically, the year in which everything seems to have changed may have produced a campaign season during which virtually no voter minds were changed.
Read the fine printLearn more about the Crystal Ball and find out how to contact us here. Sign up to receive Crystal Ball e-mails like this one delivered straight to your inbox. Use caution with Sabato’s Crystal Ball, and remember: “He who lives by the Crystal Ball ends up eating ground glass!” |
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Latest Trafalgar Poll out of Michigan Sounds an Alarm for Sleepy Joe Biden
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NBC MORNING RUNDOWN
Monday, November 2, 2020
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Good morning, NBC News readers.
With less than 24 hours to go before Election Day, President Donald Trump and Democratic nominee Joe Biden are making their final pleas to voters today.
Here’s what we’re watching this Monday morning.
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Chaos, anxiety and optimism: Inside the Trump campaign’s final mad dash
As the president crosses the country, hitting three to five states a day in the final push ahead of Election Day, his campaign has taken on much the same frenetic feel it had in 2016 — with one major difference, writes NBC News’ White House reporter Shannon Pettypiece.
Unlike last time, Trump campaigners and staffers say, they aren’t entering the final hours of the race mentally preparing for all-but-certain defeat.
But those involved in the campaign acknowledge that Trump has just as narrow a path as he did then, along with a new set of hurdles to overcome, thanks to his sagging support among groups key to his 2016 victory, such as seniors and women.
“It could be a big Biden landslide, and I wouldn’t be that shocked. Or it could be a big Trump victory, and I wouldn’t be shocked,” said a former 2016 staffer close to the campaign. “I would be mentally prepared for both scenarios. I think both scenarios are plausible.”
One way or the other, Trump was as pugilistic as ever on Sunday. The president lashed out at the FBI for announcing it was investigating reports that a caravan of his supporters harassed a bus belonging to Biden’s campaign.
“In my opinion, these patriots did nothing wrong,” Trump said in a tweet. “Instead, the FBI & Justice should be investigating the terrorists, anarchists, and agitators of ANTIFA, who run around burning down our Democrat run cities and hurting our people!”
He also said he plans to send in his lawyers as soon as the election ends to review swing state votes.
“We’re going to go in night of, as soon as that election is over, we’re going in with our lawyers,” he told reporters Sunday.
Get all the latest developments on the final day of the campaign in our live blog.
NBC News Decision Desk is poised and at the ready for Tuesday night. Here’s a primer on how the Decision Desk operates and its process for verifying results before making any calls.
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Biden ahead by 10 points in final NBC/ WSJ poll, but Democrats haunted by ghosts of 2016
Biden is still maintaining his double-digit national lead over Trump, according to the final national NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll before the election.
Biden is ahead of Trump nationally by 10 points among registered voters, 52 percent to 42 percent, in what has been a remarkably stable race over the course of a tumultuous year in American politics.
With early voting setting records, over 85 million people have already cast their ballots. Polls show Biden with a lead among early voters, but Trump maintains a significant advantage among those who have yet to vote.
“This is the most competitive election I could imagine if you’re down 10 points nationally,” said Republican pollster Bill McInturff, who conducted this survey with Democratic pollster Peter Hart.
Many Democrats don’t believe the polls and are still haunted by the ghosts of 2016.
“I’m ping-ponging back and forth between utter dread and cautious optimism,” said Zac Petkanas, a Democratic strategist who worked as the director of rapid response on Hillary Clinton’s campaign.
With Pennsylvania emerging as one of the most pivotal battleground states, Trump won the state by just about 44,000 votes in 2016, Biden focused his attention there on Sunday.
“So every single vote matters,” Biden said in Philadelphia. “The power to change this country is literally in your hands.”
Biden criticized Trump’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic and race relations. “We’re tired of the tweets, the anger, the hate, the irresponsibility,” he said. “We’ve got a lot of work to do.”
With fears of a close race, two unique congressional districts— one in Maine and one in Nebraska — could decide the election if the Electoral College vote ends up in a tie. Biden appears to be up in both.
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White House blasts Fauci for saying the U.S. is ‘poorly’ prepared for the coming Covid-19 winter
The White House is strongly pushing back against an interview in which Dr. Anthony Fauci, the government’s leading infectious disease expert, said the U.S. is in a terrible position to face the coming months of the coronavirus pandemic.
“We’re in for a whole lot of hurt. It’s not a good situation,” Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, told The Washington Post on Friday.
Fauci said the country needs to make an “abrupt change” in its public health practices and behaviors as the holiday season nears. He also said Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden’s campaign “is taking it seriously from a public health perspective,” while President Trump is “looking at it from a different perspective,” which he said was “the economy and reopening the country.”
The White House slammed Fauci for speaking out, saying it was “unacceptable” for him “to choose three days before an election to play politics.”
Trump even went so far as to suggest he might fire Fauci after the election at his final campaign rally on Sunday.
New Covid-19 infections are on the rise in most states. Case counts have reached records highs in recent days — nearly hitting 100,000 in a single day just last week. More than 232,000 people have died in the U.S. from coronavirus, according to NBC News’ latest count.
“All the stars are aligned in the wrong place as you go into the fall and winter season, with people congregating at home indoors. You could not possibly be positioned more poorly,” Fauci told The Washington Post on Friday. (Photo: Win McNamee / Getty Images file)
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Plus
- Prince William tested positive for coronavirus in April, the British media reported Sunday.
- Actor Johnny Depp lost his libel case against a British tabloid after it described him as a “wife beater.”
- An activist’s dreams “were about to come true.” Then, a horrific accident in Arches National Park cut her life short.
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THINK about it
Here’s why Trump is probably going to win again — just like he did in 2016, Keith Koffler writes in an opinion piece.
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Live BETTER
Are outdoor dining bubbles safe? Here’s what experts want you to know.
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Shopping
Sunrise clocks simulate the rising and setting sun to help you learn better sleeping habits. We asked experts if they’re worth trying out.
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One fun thing
With everything else going on, we could all use a little more of the chill vibe Matthew McConaughey personifies.
In this week’s Sunday Sitdown, McConaughey opened up to Willie Geist about the stories in his new candid memoir, “Greenlights.”
The actor also recalls his illustrious run through Hollywood, from rom-com heartthrob to winning an Oscar, which all started with his iconic line, “All right, all right, all right.”
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NBC FIRST READ
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From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, Carrie Dann and Melissa Holzberg
FIRST READ: Biden leads Trump, but it’s much closer in the battleground states
There are three major findings in our final national NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll for the 2020 election.
One, Trump versus Biden has been a remarkably stable race. (Our July 2019 poll had the contest at Biden 51 percent, Trump 42 percent among registered voters; the poll yesterday showed it at Biden 52 percent, Trump 42 percent.)
Two, the overall fundamentals are difficult if you’re an incumbent president. (Trump’s job rating is in the mid-40s and his approval for handling the coronavirus is lower than that.)
And three, the race is tighter in the key battlegrounds.
REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton
In the 12 most competitive battlegrounds – Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Iowa, Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin – Biden is ahead of Trump by a combined 5 points, 51 percent to 46 percent, according toa survey of 800 additional registered voters in those states interviewed Sunday by NBC/WSJ pollsters.
Biden’s lead in these states was 6 points in our Oct. 29-31 NBC News/WSJ poll, 51 percent to 45 percent, although that movement is within the margin of error.
Important context, however: Trump won these same states by a combined 2 points in 2016, 49 percent to 47 percent.
And here are the fundamentals in these 12 states:
- Fifty-seven percent say the country is on the wrong track (compared with 60 percent overall)
- The president’s job-approval rating is at 47 percent (compared with 45 percent overall).
- Trump has a net-negative favorable/unfavorable rating at 44 percent/52 percent (compared with 43 percent/52 percent overall).
- And when it comes to the coronavirus, 42 percent of voters approve of his handling of the issue, (compared with 40 percent overall).
So it’s closer in the battlegrounds, and that’s how Trump still can pull off a victory. (It also explains how it COULD take a while to count all of the votes to determine a winner.)
But he’s still behind in these states he won four years ago.
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Trump’s closing argument: Fire Fauci?
Speaking of Trump’s handling of the coronavirus, the president seemed to suggest Sunday night that he’d fire Dr. Anthony Fauci if he wins re-election.
When “Fire Fauci!” chants erupted at Trump’s final rally in Florida last night, the president said, “Don’t tell anybody but let me wait till a little bit after the election.”
Fauci just happens to be the most popular figure in our new NBC News/WSJ poll, with a 50 percent positive, 13 percent negative fav/unfav rating (compared with Trump’s rating of 43 percent positive, 52 percent negative).
Yet look at Fauci’s numbers by party:
Among Democrats: 73 percent positive, 4 percent negative (+69)
Among independents: 51 percent positive, 12 percent negative (+39)
Among Republicans: 27 percent positive, 23 percent negative (+4)
Among Republicans who support Trump more than party: 14 percent positive, 30 percent negative (-16)
Among Republicans who support the party more than Trump: 44 percent positive, 13 percent negative (+31)
That “Fire Fauci” argument plays only to the Trump base – and not anyone else.
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TWEET OF THE DAY: There isn’t a winner until you count the votes – all of them
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DATA DOWNLOAD: The numbers you need to know today
9,288,506: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 257,013 more than Friday morning.)
232,158: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far. (That’s 2,224 more than Friday morning.)
147.22 million: The number of coronavirus tests that have been administered in the United States so far, according to researchers at The COVID Tracking Project.
47,502: The number of people currently hospitalized for Covid-19 in the U.S., per the Covid Tracking Project.
93,354,695: The number of people who have voted early, either by mail or in person, according to NBC and TargetSmart.
52 percent to 42 percent: Biden’s lead in the final NBC/WSJ national poll, released yesterday
68 percent: The share of voters in the poll who say they have already voted or plan to vote early. Biden leads with these voters, 61 percent to 35 percent.
28 percent: The share who say they plan to vote on Election Day. Trump leads with these voters, 61 percent to 32 percent.
62 percent to 29 percent: Biden’s national margin with Latinos, according to an NBC/WSJ/Telemundo survey also released yesterday.
50 percent to 45 percent: Biden’s advantage in Pennsylvania with registered voters, according to a final Monmouth poll of the state this morning
Seven: The number of counties in Pennsylvania that will wait until AFTER Election Day to process mail-in ballots.
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2020 VISION: The final countdown
On the campaign trail today: In the final day of campaigning, President Trump holds rallies in Fayetteville, N.C.; Scranton, Pa.; Traverse City, Mich.; Kenosha, Wis.; and Grand Rapids, Mich… Joe Biden has events in Cleveland and Pittsburgh… Barack Obama is in Atlanta and Miami… Mike Pence hits Latrobe, Pa., and Erie, Pa… And Kamala Harris also is Pennsylvania.
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What’s old is new again
For President Trump, what’s old was new again during his final weekend rallies.
In North Carolina, Trump told voters to get Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper to open up the state: “Tell your governor to open up North Carolina. It’s time. It’s time. It’s time. It’s ridiculous. It’s ridiculous. They’ll probably announce it on November 4th, we’re going to open up now.” North Carolina, like most states, is seeing a spike in Covid-19 cases and Trump’s statement comes on the heels of Dr. Anthony Fauci lamenting the state of the pandemic.
In Iowa, the president attacked the media and accused big tech companies of censoring him: “The media doesn’t want to talk about it, they put silence on it. They put silence on it, and big tech, they’ll have to do something with Section 230,” Trump said. He added, “What’s going on could kill this country.”
And in Michigan, Trump targeted resettling refugees: “One of the biggest issues for Michigan in this election is the subject of refugees. With this weather, you don’t have to worry about it. They’ll never come. They’re never coming. You send them here, they’re saying, I’m going back. This is terrible.” Trump used similar lines back in 2016 – here’s what he said about Syrian refugees then: “This could be one of the great tactical ploys of all time. A 200,000-man army maybe, or if you said 50,000 or 80,000 or 100,000, we got problems and that could be possible. I don’t know that it is, but it could be possible so they’re going back — they’re going back.”
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AD WATCH from Ben Kamisar
Today’s Ad Watch is not about the top presidential ad spender in Florida, or the second or the third… but the 11th — Florida Republican Sen. Rick Scott.
Scott, who won in 2018 and is out of cycle, actually spent more on the TV/radio airwaves this weekend in Florida than President Trump did — $75,000 to $54,000, per Advertising Analytics.
Trump did get a boost from the RNC, which paid for $424,000 in Florida TV/radio time this weekend. But it’s striking to see the candidate getting outspent by Scott, another rich Floridian with his eyes on his own political future.
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THE LID: Sense of the Senate
Don’t miss the pod from Friday, when we broke down the Dem-vs.-GOP battle for the Senate.
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ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
Ever wonder how networks project the winners of elections? Our Decision Desk walks you through the process.
Trump is lashing out at the FBI after it announced it will investigate reports of a caravan of Trump supporters harassing a Biden campaign bus.
And the president suggested he might fire Anthony Fauci after the election.
Voters of color in some key swing states are having their mail ballots rejected at disproportionately higher rates.
Police deployed pepper spray and made arrests during a peaceful march to the polls in Alamance County, North Carolina.
Democrats have a lot of 2016 PTSD.
Trump says his team will send lawyers to swing states “night of.”
The Biden campaign released a list of its biggest fundraisers.
CBS
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REASON
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MANHATTAN INSTITUTE
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LOUDER WITH CROWDER
Kamala Harris has always been among the most radical leftists in the Senate. That’s not news (see REMINDER: KAMALA ‘PRAGMATIC MODERATE’ HARRIS WANT TO CONFISCATE YOUR GUNS and KAMALA HARRIS STRUGGLES … MORE
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Biden wins – 271-267. Biden wins by flipping AZ, WI, and MI. I think the surprise is that the GOP holds the Senate, probably by one Senator. I expect Tom Tillis to barely hold on to his seat in NC.
The election will take a while to be called. I think we will likely have a good idea of the winner late tomorrow night/early Wednesday morning, but the election will not be called for a few days after that.
That said – as my 4 ECV margin for Biden indicates, I think this race is *extremely* close, much closer than public polling indicates. Every non-polling indicator I follow predicts that Trump wins reelection. These have a track record at least as good as polling. The reason I pick Biden? One of those non-polling indicators indicates an advantage for Biden in AZ, and thus I think that in a year where Ds have a large national lead, that state will push him over the finish line.
That said, if Ann Selzer is right about Iowa being Trump +7 (and Ann Selzer is probably the best pollster in America) Trump *WILL* almost certainly win the election.
It is entirely plausible that Trump wins. I think the race is a borderline tossup, but I think it does just slightly lean D (only because Trump is *really, really* unpopular and Biden has a wider margin of error than Trump.) That said, Trump’s approval ratings have been rising recently, so maybe even that is off the table.
Ds have made clear they’re worried. Some of that may be exacerbated by 2016. I think a lot of it is justified based on early voting numbers being disappointing for Ds in states like FL. The election comes down to tomorrow’s in-person turnout. In probably every state, it will lean heavily R. Polling indicates that in-person votes tomorrow could be for Trump by more than a 50 point margin. There is lots of evidence that Trump voters are much more likely to wait for election day than Biden voters. If election day turnout is heavy in the swing states, then Trump has likely won the election.
I do not expect either candidate to concede. One of both of them will sue and try to get disputed ballots counted/thrown out.
“Which Senate incumbents lose, and which party will control Congress’ upper chamber come January?”
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My scalding hot take is that Trump will win New Hampshire and Nevada and still lose.