The 2022 Senate Campaign: Updates

This isn’t the last roundup. Not yet. In other news…

  • Alaska’s Senator Murkowski (R) has been endorsed by Alaska Rep Peltola (D), who shockingly won the special election to replace the late Rep Don Young (R) last month, and Murkowski has endorsed Peltola. Or at least that’s how I read this: Asked if she would rank Peltola first on her ballot next month in Alaska’s new ranked-choice voting system, Murkowski paused. After a full 18 seconds, she said, “Yeah, I am.” She then mumbled, “I’m going to get in so much trouble.” And in return: Asked to respond to Murkowski’s de facto endorsement, Peltola said, “I’m voting for her, so we’re even-steven.” In case you missed it, my take on this is here.
  • CNN and SSRS, the latter only C rated, suggest that Senator Johnson (R) of Wisconsin holds a 1 point lead at 50% to 49%, with a margin of error of ± 4.5 points for likely voters. Salt shaker? Yes.
  • CNN and SSRS also suggest that Lt. Governor Fetterman’s (D) hunt for the soon-to-be empty Pennsylvania Senate seat is going well, giving him a 51% to 45% lead over Dr. Oz Mehmet (R), with a ± 4.6 point margin of error. Again, salt shaker. Maybe hang them from your ears. CBS News/YouGov, on the other hand, gives Fetterman a much smaller lead of 51% to 49%. In other news, unaffiliated Senate candidate Everett Stern (I), who was supposedly polling at 3% – he doesn’t show up in the aforementioned CNN/SSRS poll – has dropped out, according to sharecare on Daily Kos. No data sources are given by sharecare, but a tweet from Stern announces his withdrawal and endorsement of Fetterman. Take it for what you will, but he is listed on Ballotpedia as a candidate for this Senate seat, so this may be more or less accurate information. If Fetterman wins by less than 3 points, he’ll owe Stern a beer.
  • Paywalled The New York Times reports Senator McConnell’s (R) Senate Leadership Fund is canceling any further support for challenger Don Bolduc’s (R) pursuit of Senator Hassasn (D) in New Hampshire. Meanwhile, Emerson College gives Hassan a 48% to 45% lead and GOP aligned Insider Advantage, B rated, gives Hassan a 47.6% to 47.1% advantage. Question: If it’s that close, you’d think the SLF would stick around, wouldn’t you? Perhaps Bolduc is simply too revolting even for McConnell. Or maybe SLF’s internal polling isn’t congruent with Insider Advantage.
  • WaPo notes that the ranks of independent voters are growing, suggesting unhappiness with at least one party. Notable: Christopher Cooper, political science professor at Western Carolina University, recently co-wrote research examining the rise of the unaffiliated voter in North Carolina and nationally. “Voters are signaling something to us. A lot of smart folks might disagree with me and say, ‘Look, so many of these are shadow partisans. Don’t worry about them,’ ” said Cooper, referring to voters who say they are nonpartisan but lean toward one party mostly. “I think the voters are trying to say they may not be able to escape the two-party system, but they’re going to push back on it when they can.” In other words, cut out the extremism, the bulging eyes, the hair-on-fire arrogance of modern politics. If you can’t cut it out, then return to the barstools from whence you came, because positions ranging from strict anti-abortionism to defunding the police are not acceptable to many voters, and they’re leaving the parties and making a point. How this will affect the Senate races? I’m guessing independents, appalled by Dobbs, will lean to the Democrats, but they may just stay home out of disgust.
  • In Connecticut a Quinnipiac University poll gives Senator Blumenthal (D) a 56% – 41% lead over challenger Leora Levy (R), which seems far more reasonable than the last Connecticut Senate poll from ten or so days ago, in which pollster Fabrizio found Blumenthal had only a five point lead. Fabrizio is B/C rated, while QU is A- rated. Final results will show if Fabrizio has improved and QU degraded – or not.
  • GOP-aligned Trafalgar is now giving challenger Herschel Walker (R) a 48.9% to 46.5% lead over Senator Warnock (D) in Georgia. Chase Oliver (L) has a 4.6% proportion of the survey, and the survey has a margin of error of ± 2.9 points.
  • B+ rated Cygnal gives J. D. Vance (R) a 46.9% to 43.3% lead over Rep Tim Ryan (D) in Ohio.
  • Oregon’s Senator Wyden (D) continues to lead challenger Jo Rae Perkins, 51% to 40%, according to B rated Data For Progress. While closer than the last poll, Perkins still has an immense amount of ground to make up in the next two weeks against a sitting Senator, even with this poll’s margin of error of ± 3 points.

Last update here.

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About Hue White

Former BBS operator; software engineer; cat lackey.

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