News · Press Release

RATINGS CHANGES: Cook Political Report Shifts 21 Races towards Democrats

Today, the non-partisan election forecaster Cook Political Report shifted a whopping 21 races towards Democrats. Citing strong Democratic fundraising and terrible district level polling for Republicans, including in districts that President Trump won by wide margins, Cook’s David Wasserman noted that, if anything, the new ratings probably “understates Democrats’ potential in individual races.”
“The DCCC has continued to expand what is likely the largest battlefield in history. Democrats are firmly on offense for a variety of reasons, including incredible candidate recruitment, record-breaking fundraising, a historically unpopular Republican agenda, and extensive district level polling showing Democrats already beating or in close competition with their opponents. We have a long way to go and won’t take anything for granted, but are on track to take back the House in November.” – DCCC Chairman Ben Ray Luján

Here’s a roundup of the districts that shifted towards Democrats:

  • AR-02 (French Hill) from Solid R to Likely R
  • CA-04 (Tom McClintock) from Solid R to Likely R
  • CA-10 (Jeff Denham) from Lean R to Toss Up
  • FL-07 (Stephanie Murphy) from Lean D to Likely D
  • FL-16 (Vern Buchanan) from Solid R to Likely R
  • FL-18 (Brian Mast) from Likely R to Lean R
  • IL-12 (Mike Bost) from Lean R to Toss Up
  • IN-02 (Jackie Walorski) from Solid R to Likely R
  • MI-06 (Fred Upton) from Solid R to Likely R
  • MN-03 (Erik Paulsen) from Lean R to Toss Up
  • MO-02 (Ann Wagner) from Solid R to Likely R
  • NC-13 (Ted Budd) from Likely R to Lean R
  • NH-01 (OPEN) from Toss Up to Lean D
  • NJ-02 (OPEN) from Toss Up to Lean D
  • NY-11 (Dan Donovan) from Likely R to Lean R
  • NY-22 (Claudia Tenney) from Lean R to Toss Up
  • OR-05 ( Kurt Schrader) from Likely D to Solid D
  • PA-07 (OPEN) from Toss Up to Lean D
  • TX-21 (OPEN) from Solid R to Likely R
  • VA-02 (Scott Taylor) from Likely R to Lean R
  • VA-07 (Dave Brat) from Likely R to Lean R

 


February House Overview: Ratings Changes in 21 Districts
Cook Political Report
By David Wasserman
https://www.cookpolitical.com/analysis/house/house-overview/february-house-overview

[…] However, most new district-by-district fundraising and polling numbers are downright terrible for Republicans, even in seats previously thought to be safe. In the fourth quarter of 2017, 39 Republican House incumbents were outraised by at least one Democratic challenger, and private polls and special election results suggest Democrats are highly competitive even in some districts President Trump won by wide margins.

At first glance, these two data trends might seem at odds with each other. How could Democrats’ lead in national polls be shrinking while their odds in individual districts improve? The answer: the “macro” outlook for the House (national polls) and the “micro” view (district-by-district) aren’t diverging; they’re coming into alignment.

Democrats probably need at least a six or seven point lead on the generic ballot to win the majority, thanks to the GOP’s redistricting edge and Democratic voters’ tendency to cluster and waste votes in safe districts. Democrats have been above that threshold most of the past year. However, only gradually have the GOP’s district-level problems come into view, as more Democrats announce candidacies and fundraising totals.

[…] This week, we’re shifting our ratings in 21 races towards Democrats. If anything, that still understates Democrats’ potential in individual races. If Democrats win the national House vote by six points (as today’s polls indicate), House control would be a coin flip.

[…] Although many Republicans are battle-tested and have been readying for a difficult cycle for months, more than a handful who have never experienced this kind of political climate (i.e., they were elected after 2008) look woefully underprepared. For example, freshman Rep. Ted Budd (NC-13) was outraised nearly three-to-one by a first-time Democratic candidate in a district that includes a lot of suburbs of Greensboro.

Budd isn’t alone. As Democratic donors have engaged earlier and more heavily than in past cycles, there are 38 other Republicans who were outraised by at least one Democrat and, by our count, 23 GOP-held districts (including open seats) where Democrats held a cash-on-hand advantage heading into 2018.

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