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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsThe 'dreamers' issue might make Democrats' election dreams come true
By Jennifer Rubin April 26 at 12:00 PM
Some stunning numbers from an Axios-SurveyMonkey poll show Democrats leading in Senate races in Arizona (by 8 percent to 29 percent depending on the opponent) and Nevada (by 6 percent). The Senate race in Tennessee is a dead heat. Weve been saying for a while now that the GOP cannot take the Senate majority for granted, and this seems to confirm that assessment. Losing both the House and the Senate to Democrats would be a clear repudiation of President Trump and his brand of Republicanism, writes Axioss Alexi McCammond. Democrats have been clearly outperforming in the special elections since Trump became president.
With regard to resolution of the dreamers issue which some White House advisers such as Stephen Miller and some on Capitol Hill, including Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.), thought would be a GOP winner there is evidence that Republicans badly misplayed their hand. As Axios notes, DACA [Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals] is the biggest warning sign for Republicans: 64% of voters across all three states support protections for immigrants brought illegally to the U.S. as children, and 71% support offering immigrants a chance to apply for citizenship rather than deporting them. Another GOP issue repeal of the Affordable Care Act is also a dud: Roughly half of voters in all three states want to fix the Affordable Care Act so it works better. Only about three in 10 want to repeal it.
Looking more carefully at the polling, voters who strongly disapprove of Trump outnumber those who strongly support Trump in both Arizona (+19) and Nevada (+16). In Tennessee, there are equal numbers who strongly approve and strongly disapprove, a stunning result for a state that Trump won by 26 points. In Nevada, incumbent Sen. Dean Hellers approval rating is high (48 percent), but so is his disapproval (45 percent, with 22 percent strongly disapproving).
If things are this bad in Tennessee, Arizona and Nevada for Republicans, one wonders where contests and voter opinion on DACA stand in Florida and Texas, both of which have large Hispanic populations. (Florida has also seen a large influx more than 135,000 by one count of Puerto Ricans who fled Hurricane Maria.) Mike Allen writes: Sen. Ted Cruz in Texas is Exhibit A [of GOP worries]. His Democratic rival, Beto ORourke, more than doubled Cruzs first quarter fundraising. Indeed, ORourke, who has set out to campaign in every Texas county including those that are overwhelmingly Republican, showed just how confident he is by telling progressive donor and impeachment cheerleader Tom Steyer to save his money. In Cruz, ORourke has a perfect foil someone who has treated his state like its still 1990, Democrats are a non-factor and the far right dominates.
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https://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/right-turn/wp/2018/04/26/the-dreamers-issue-might-make-democrats-election-dreams-come-true/
Fresh_Start
(11,330 posts)Losing both the House and the Senate to Democrats would be a clear repudiation of President Trump and his brand of Republicanism,
There is no Trump Republicanism versus other Republicanism
Republicans approve of Trump by > 80%.