Some folks are saying that Harris has reset the race to where the polling was before the debate. That's no longer true - because Harris is now polling far better than Biden did at any point in 2024 in AZ, GA, NV & NC. 🧵
In fact, in our state polling average at RacetotheWH, Kamala Harris has outright taken the polling lead in MI, NV & WI. That gives her the lead in 256 worth of electoral votes. The last time Biden had that many? Nov 1st, 2023.
So what's the takeaway? Maybe the conventional wisdom is wrong. I don't think this is a Tilt R race anymore. I feel comfortable saying that Kamala is at least narrowly favored right now.
Voters BADLY wanted a new option. We saw it in the polls, in the focus groups. I've seen it with just about every swing voter I've talked to in the last year. Now that they have one, voters are giving Harris the benefit of the doubt, and so far they like what they see.
Yes - the attacks will come and the media coverage will get harsher. We will see if she can withstand it. So far, she's showing no signs of slowing down in the swing states - even as the Trump campaign got an early start on attacking her.
I think the odds are that Harris continues to pick up support, and takes a small lead entering the convention. This is still a race both parties can win, but I think Harris now has the clearer path to 270 electoral votes.
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I'm finishing my first forecast for the 2026 Senate cycle. Here are the five most important Senate races to watch this coming election cycle:
Dem Targets: Maine, North Carolina, Ohio, and Alaska (harder lift, but on the map)
GOP: Georgia🧵
The #1 target for Democrats is Maine. Susan Collins is an electoral juggernaut, but this will be her toughest election cycle yet, especially if Governor Janet Mills runs (In 2022, Mills beat former Governor LePage 56% to 42%).
Alaska's inclusion on the list will surprise many. However, no state in the union has moved more towards Democrats in the last 16 years then Alaska.
Despite razor-thin national polling on the generic ballot, Congressional Democrats are polling much stronger at the district level. In 66 races with at least one non-partisan poll since June, Democrats are exceeding the district's partisan lean by an average of 3.21%. 🧵
If we tighten our criteria to races with at least two non-partisan polls—one released since September 1st—Democrats edge over the partisan lean becomes 4.94% in those 36 races.
What does this mean for Election Day? If every district voted 3.2% more Democratic than its partisan lean, Democrats would win 220 seats. At a 4.94% overperformance, they'd secure 227 seats. It takes 218 seats to control the House.
Race for the House Majority Update for FL 13 - Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R) vs. Whitney Fox (D)
Rating Change: Likely R to Tilt R
Projection Lead: R+12.3% to R+2.5%
Chance to Win: Luna 94% to Luna 72% chance
Explanation in the next tweet.🧵
A week ago, FL-13 was not on my radar. The only polling we had was months out of date and only a minor factor, and the fundamentals of the race pointed to a double digit GOP victory.
However, we just got two back to back good polls for Fox. The first was a non-partisan poll by St. Pete showing Fox (!) up by 4%. That was the LAST thing I expected. I assumed it was an outlier, but a GOP internal poll showed Luna up by just 5%.
RacetotheWH House Forecast update - We now have our general election matchup set for the AL-2 between Shomari Figures (D) & Caroleene Dobson (R). We give Figures (D) an 81% chance at flipping the new district.
We have Figures on track to lead by 10.1%. With an open race, no polling and a long time until the election, our forecast assumes there's a wider chance for a misfire in this race (hence a 19% chance of an upset despite the big projected lead).
Unless we get contradictory information - like a sharp rise in fundraising by the GOP, or strong GOP polling, then we'll see Democrats chances rise slowly overtime.
Nikki Haley is surging in New Hampshire at the perfect time. She just broke 30% and has narrowed Donald Trump's lead to single digits. 🧵
Haley's support has risen significantly since September. She started that month at just 5.4%. Today, she is at 31%.
If Christie drops out, New Hampshire might genuinely become a tossup race. If we exclude Hutchinson, 83% of Christie supporters rank Haley as their second choice in the polls.
Jamal Bowman was censured for pulling the fire alarm. Folks, we went from six censures in 98 years to four censures in just two years. It used to be used to condemn crimes like bribery or attempted murder. Now it's just a slap on the wrist for annoying the House Majority 🧵
To showcase how silly the censure has become, here are a few examples of who the House used to censure:
In 1856, the House censured Congressman Keitt for nearly murdering Congressman Summers with a cane, after Summers spoke against expanding slavery into Kansas.
In the aftermath of Watergate, the House censured three Congressmen for absurd levels of corruption that involved fraud, bribery, illegal foreign influence, and misuse of campaign funds.