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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsDemocrats Hold Big Lead In Congressional Ballot
anuary 18, 2018 at 4:26 pm EST By Taegan Goddard
A new Pew Research survey finds that 53% of registered voters say they will vote for or lean toward the Democratic Partys candidate for Congress in their district, compared with 39% who say they would vote for or lean toward the Republican Partys candidate.
The educational divide is particularly interesting:
A substantial majority (70%) of registered voters with a postgraduate degree say they would vote for or lean toward the Democratic candidate. A smaller majority (58%) of those with a college degree say the same. By contrast, those with a high school degree or less education are more divided (45% support the Democratic candidate, 48% the Republican candidate).
Among whites, the education divide is even wider. By roughly two-to-one, a majority of whites with a postgraduate degree say they support the Democratic candidate over the Republican candidate (65% vs. 29%). Among whites with a high school degree or less education, the reverse is true: 65% support the Republican candidate, compared with just about a quarter (28%) who prefer the Democratic candidate.
A new Quinnipiac poll finds Democrats leading the generic congressional ballot, 50% to 39%.
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https://politicalwire.com/2018/01/18/democrats-hold-big-lead-congressional-ballot/
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Midterm Math Looks Similar to 2006
January 18, 2018 at 4:17 pm EST By Taegan Goddard
Amy Walter: In fact, when you look more closely at the kinds of districts Republicans are defending in 2018, they dont look much different from those they had to defend in 2006. For example, there are about as many competitive GOP-held seats in play today in districts with a slight GOP lean (PVI of R+1 to R+5) (23) as there were right before the election in 2006 (22). And, while its true that there are few low hanging fruit type of districts for Democrats to pick-off (just 23 districts held by Republicans voted for Hillary Clinton), there werent many easy lay-ups in 2006, either. Back in 2006, Republicans held just 18 seats won by Democrat John Kerry in the previous presidential election. By the election of 2006, just 15 GOP-held seats (or 27 percent of the total number of GOP-held competitive districts), were in districts that had a slight Democratic lean (a PVI of Even to D+8). Today, of the 40 most competitive seats held by Republicans, 10 (or 25 percent), have a slight Democratic lean (Even to D+5).
The 2018 map is not easy for Democrats, but its not any more challenging than the one Democrats faced in 2006. Midterm elections are a referendum on the party in power, not the party out of power. However, the dislike for the Democratic party among GOP partisans is more intense today than it has ever been. The question is whether that antipathy to Democrats will be enough to match the anger and opposition to Trump among Democrats and Democratic-leaning voters.
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https://politicalwire.com/2018/01/18/years-midterm-math-looks-similar-2006/
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Democrats Hold Big Lead In Congressional Ballot (Original Post)
DonViejo
Jan 2018
OP
Sounds like the "Future Billionaires and Trailor Parkers for Trump" group is doing well for him
world wide wally
Jan 2018
#1
world wide wally
(21,754 posts)1. Sounds like the "Future Billionaires and Trailor Parkers for Trump" group is doing well for him