Washington – Aides: Republicans May Be On Verge Of Losing Senate Majority

    11

    FILE - U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell speaks at the Republican National Convention in Cleveland, Ohio, U.S. July 19, 2016.  REUTERS/Mike SegarWashington – The Republican Party’s two-year run in the majority of the U.S. Senate is at serious risk and may well end on Nov. 8, senior congressional aides said on Wednesday, blaming Donald Trump as a drag on down-ballot Republican candidates.

    Join our WhatsApp group

    Subscribe to our Daily Roundup Email


    With 13 days to go before elections, several Senate aides from both parties privately warned of trouble for Republicans.

    “Things are not good … the Senate is gone,” said one Republican aide who asked not to be identified in order to candidly discuss the turbulent outlook for the 2016 campaign.

    Citing polling, the aide said Republicans could lose Senate seats in six battleground states: Pennsylvania, Illinois, Wisconsin, New Hampshire, North Carolina and Missouri.

    Republicans now hold 54 of the Senate’s 100 seats. Democrats must snatch four seats to win a majority, provided their presidential candidate Hillary Clinton beats Trump. That would make Clinton’s running mate, Tim Kaine, the tie-breaking Senate vote since the vice president votes in order to break a tie.

    On Tuesday, the non-partisan Cook Political Report predicted Democrats would gain five to seven seats. Such a result would leave them short of the 60 votes needed to easily get things done in the Senate, but it would provide a majority.

    A less pessimistic Senate Republican aide said Senate control still “could go either way” but sketched out problems.

    In Pennsylvania, the aide said, Senator Pat Toomey has to “fight off dead weight at the top of the ticket,” referring to Trump. He said Missouri Democrat Jason Kander, who is trying to unseat Senator Roy Blunt, is “a great candidate.”

    Nationally, “the reason we don’t hold the Senate, if we don’t, is because of Donald Trump,” the aide said.

    Of course, this has been a volatile and unpredictable year and there is still time for trends to reverse. Democrats stressed they are not breaking out the champagne.

    According to RealClear Politics, Toomey leads by 1.8 percentage points in Pennsylvania while Blunt is up by a point in strongly Republican Missouri and Senator Richard Burr has a 2.8-point lead in North Carolina over his Democratic challenger.

    Still, a senior Senate Democratic aide said, “We have a lot more paths to a majority than they do.”

    Republicans entered the 2016 Senate races at a disadvantage, having to defend 24 seats to only 10 for Democrats.

    Democratic President Barack Obama, who is still relatively popular, won at least one of his two White House races in most of the states where Republicans currently are struggling, such as New Hampshire, Pennsylvania and Nevada.

    Clinton leads Trump by about 5 points in some national polls. Studies show a pattern of voting in recent decades in which the outcome of Senate races has had a significant correlation to who wins the White House.

    Polling in the hardest-fought states points to extremely close races with Republican incumbents’ backs against the wall.

    In New Hampshire, Republican incumbent Kelly Ayotte is in a tough race with Democratic challenger Maggie Hassan. University of New Hampshire political science professor Dante Scala said Republican senators in that state and Pennsylvania face the “one-two punch” of independent voters potentially being turned off by Trump and an electorate that leans Democratic in presidential election years like 2016.

    “Given the overall environment, it tilts to Hassan,” Scala said.


    Listen to the VINnews podcast on:

    iTunes | Spotify | Google Podcasts | Stitcher | Podbean | Amazon

    Follow VINnews for Breaking News Updates


    Connect with VINnews

    Join our WhatsApp group


    11 Comments
    Most Voted
    Newest Oldest
    Inline Feedbacks
    View all comments
    yonasonw
    Member
    yonasonw
    7 years ago

    IY”H

    Boochie
    Boochie
    7 years ago

    Wrong wrong wrong if Pat Toomey looses its because Pat Toomey lost

    Stop blaming Trump your constituents are biting you out because your record stinks

    I hope Trump wins PA and Toomey looses, the problem in DC today is gridlock and the gridlock stems from hautyness

    7 years ago

    this BIASED media is reporting the wrong news – trying to influence to make americans for democRATS – it aint gonna work ‘cuz americans are fed up with this administration that doesn’t care about american LEGAL citizens – only caters to ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS.

    VOTE FOR PRESIDENT TRUMP and the entire REPUBLICAN PARTY in NOVEMBER

    yaakov doe
    Member
    yaakov doe
    7 years ago

    Even if all the VIN readers vote from Trump, he can’t win. He has alienated Women, Blacks and Hispanics who are more than half of the voters.

    Aron1
    Active Member
    Aron1
    7 years ago

    Ah, the lemmings are still about.