Why the GOP may lose everything
Montana Gov. Steve Bullock (D) says that when he first announced he would run for the U.S. Senate, he didnt know what Montana and the country was going to look like in the short period thereafter. With the covid-19 crisis, all his time has been taken up by being a governor, not a candidate. So far, that has only helped him in his campaign to unseat Republican Sen. Steve Daines.
In Maine, House Speaker Sara Gideon, a Democrat seeking to end the long career of Republican Sen. Susan Collins, says the pandemic has laid bare the inequities that already existed and underscored the need for a vision of what it means to work together and for each other instead of trying to sow divisiveness. This brings home Gideons case against Collinss willingness to ally with President Trump and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), two of the most divisive figures in American politics.
Colorados former governor John Hickenlooper, a Democrat with a good chance of ousting incumbent Republican Sen. Cory Gardner, expresses a sense of gravity about this campaign that he never felt in his races for mayor of Denver or governor.
I will never forgive myself if I lose it, Hickenlooper told me, and I will do everything in my power, I will work as hard as humanly possible, to make sure that I win this, just because I feel in my bones that our democracy has been so weakened by this relentless partisanship, the constant division.
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