Top Election Forecaster Issues Final Prediction On Senate Control
In a crucial update from a leading election forecaster, the Republicans are on the brink of retaking control of the U.S. Senate. According to the latest projections from Cook Political, the GOP could gain between two to five Senate seats in the upcoming elections. As of now, the Senate consists of 51 Democrats, including four independents, and 49 Republicans.
With 34 seats up for grabs in 2024, including a pivotal special election in Nebraska, the landscape is set for a significant change. The Republicans need a net addition of just two seats to secure a majority, or one seat if they also capture the White House.
“The battle for the Senate fundamentally ends where the cycle began — with an overwhelmingly favorable map that very likely portends a GOP majority,” Cook Political reported. “But the size of that majority is still up in the air. If Republicans sweep the ‘Blue Wall’ states, which have all tightened in the final weeks, they could reach as high as 54 or 55 seats — a cushion for a tougher 2026 midterm cycle.”
“However, if they only attain a narrow 51 or 52 seat majority, look for moderates like Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski and Maine Sen. Susan Collins to wield outsized influence in the next Congress. Democrats believe even if Vice President Kamala Harris narrowly loses in key swing states, their battle-tested members are still well-positioned to outrun her showing and hold on. This cycle has shown us that candidate quality still matters, and so does early spending, which is why Democrats remain on strong footing even as they’re facing late headwinds.”
“In our final analysis, we have to go back to the fundamental rule of the Trump era of politics: virtually every single Senate race has broken the same way as the presidential contest in that state,” Jessica Taylor finished.
Analysis from FiveThirtyEight also likes the GOP’s favorable odds. Utilizing a combination of polling, economic, and demographic data to simulate possible outcomes, their model predicts that Republicans will win control of the Senate in 90 out of 100 scenarios. The Democrats are favored to maintain control in only 10 of these simulations.
“Generally speaking, there is not much that could change the math for the Democrats at this point,” wrote G. Elliott Morris. “To win, the party needs not only to beat the polls significantly in Montana and hope they’re right in Ohio, but also defy electoral gravity in each (Trump is the easy favorite to win both races in the presidential election, for example). And barring a hard, late swing to Democrats Colin Allred in Texas or Debbie Murcasel-Powell in Florida, there’s nowhere else they can count on expanding their map, either.”
“In the Senate, the hope for the left is that polls are simply wrong. That’s happened before, but betting on bias is generally a bad campaign strategy. The Republicans have a better map, generally strong candidates in the states they are likely to flip and time is running out,” he finished.
In Ohio, Senator Sherrod Brown (D-OH) is barely edging out Republican challenger Bernie Moreno with a forecasted margin of victory of just 0.7%, according to FiveThirtyEight. Wisconsin sees Senator Tammy Baldwin (D-WI) holding a slightly more comfortable lead over Eric Hovde, projected at 2.5%. In Pennsylvania’s race, Senator Bob Casey (D-PA) is ahead of rival David McCormick by 2.9%.
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