WASHINGTON — While it would take a Kerry victory of enormous
proportions to cause the House of Representatives to restore
Democratic control, the Senate is a far different matter. There are
enough Senate seats at play that if Democrats get all the breaks,
they could well end up controlling that body again. Some years one
party or the other gets almost all of the breaks. That is why,
although political analyst Stu Rothenberg says the Republicans
still have a slight edge, it is simply impossible to say that
Democratic control is out of the question. In fact, it is very much
THE question.
Oklahoma, for example, is a strongly conservative state. Don
Nickles has been in the Senate for 24 years and had he chosen to
run for another term, he would have no major contest. Nickles,
however, is retiring and the Republicans unexpectedly named former
Congressman Tom Coburn as their nominee. Democrats have Congressman
Brad Carson, who took Coburn’s place when Coburn voluntarily left
the House after three terms. The first polls after the primary
showed Coburn with a nine-point lead. Carson has a lot of money in
the bank. He began to advertise immediately. Coburn could not
afford to be on TV when he should have been. In addition, the
Tulsa World has gone after Coburn with a vengeance,
determined to defeat him. Meanwhile, the Daily Oklahoman,
once a bastion of conservative thinking, without Pat McGuigan there
to write solid editorials, has been critical of Coburn as well. The
result is that the latest poll shows Carson in the lead by five
points. The Coburn campaign also suffers from having more amateurs
than professionals running it. The race can still be won, but in
Carson you have a liberal Democrat who claims to be a moderate. He
is running as a moderate and running away from the national ticket.
This ought to be a state where the Republican candidate should be
mopping up the floor with the Democratic candidate. Instead, Coburn
is now the underdog. It remains to be seen if the Republican Party
can turn this race around.
In Colorado, Senator Ben Nighthorse Campbell almost certainly
would have been re-elected had he run again. Unexpected health
problems prompted his retirement. Democrats nominated Attorney
General Ken Salazar. Republicans had a bitterly contested primary
between Coors Beer executive Peter Coors and former Congressman Bob
Schaffer. Coors won convincingly, and Schaffer has endorsed him,
but Coors is running behind Salazar. Because the Campbell campaign
staff is largely running the Coors campaign, there is no one who
understands how to deal with Evangelical Christians. As a matter of
fact, the Campbell people HATE the social issues. Therefore, Coors
has not been able to take advantage of a growing social-issue
constituency in the state. In addition, Salazar is not the
dime-a-dozen liberal. He is conservative on some social issues,
which somewhat neutralizes Coors. Coors thinks he can catch up to
Salazar but Bush is not doing well in Colorado. The hope had been
that Bush would win by a convincing margin thereby carrying Coors
with him. First, Colorado is a notorious ticket-splitting state.
Second, Bush may lose Colorado or carry it by a very slim margin.
Can Coors still win? Sure. But it is by no means certain.
THE TWO SOUTHERN STATES where Republicans can offset likely losses
are Georgia and South Carolina. So far Republican victories in
those states seem solid. If Republicans could win in the other
three Southern states where incumbents are retiring, then they
almost certainly would retain control of the Senate. In North
Carolina, Congressman Richard Burr is running consistently behind
former Clinton Chief of Staff Erskine Bowles. There is a feeling
that Burr is not reaching out to Helms-type conservatives — which
even Elizabeth Dole did in 2002. Unless there are drastic changes,
this race does not look doable for Burr.
In Louisiana has a peculiar system in which all candidates,
regardless of party, run against each other. (One campaign saw two
Republicans running against each other!) Congressman David Vitter
is running a good race. He is way ahead of his rival, Congressman.
Chris John. The question boils down to this: Can Vitter get more
than 50% of the vote on November 2nd? If he fails to get an
outright majority, he will then face a runoff three weeks after the
general election. Republicans time and again have failed to get a
majority when forced into a runoff. Louisiana is the only Southern
state never to have elected a Republican Senator.
Florida Republicans selected former Bush cabinet official Mel
Martinez for the Senate race. At first his main primary opponent,
Rep. Bill McCullom, refused to endorse Martinez but now has come
around and is on board. It is anyone’s guess who will vote — given
the devastation from four hurricanes that Florida has suffered —
or if voters will know where to vote since many polling places have
been destroyed. Anyone who claims to be able to call this one is
either brilliant beyond calculation or is exaggerating madly.
Alaska is a big problem for Republicans. Senator Lisa Murkowski
was appointed by her father, who is Governor. He had been Senator
when he went home and ran for Governor. He is incredibly unpopular
and a lot of that has rubbed off on his daughter. She is running
against former two-term Governor Tony Knowles. Murkowski had a
tough primary from a former State Senate leader. The race is 50-50.
Republicans could lose this Senate seat despite Bush’s being
stronger in Alaska than perhaps anywhere else in the country.
REPUBLICANS HAVE BEEN running an aggressive campaign in South
Dakota, where former Congressman John Thune is challenging Senate
Minority Leader Tom Daschle. This race will likely be won or lost
by as few as several hundred votes.
Thune lost to Senator Tim Johnson in 2002 by 500-plus votes.
Many South Dakotans charged that the race was stolen by rigging
votes at Indian Reservations. Thune, with an eye on 2004, and Tom
Daschle declined to pursue that issue.
Thune has run a competent campaign. The President is doing
reasonably well in that state. Can Daschle be defeated? If the
perception is that Bush will be re-elected on November 2nd, then
yes, voters there might think it would be better to have one
Republican Senator to deal with the Bush Administration. If the
perception is that Kerry will be the next President, then Daschle
could be re-elected as the swing voters would think it better to
have a Democrat Leader to deal with a Democrat Administration.
Another “dark horse” race is taking place in Washington State
between Senator Patty Murray and Congressman George Nethercutt.
Nethercutt has been running a very aggressive campaign and some
polls suggest Senator Murray’s lead is down to single digits. But
this is Washington State. Slade Gorton was elected Senator then
re-elected…then defeated…then elected again to the other Senate
seat…then narrowly defeated again. Slade is a moderate Republican
and Nethercutt is a strong conservative. It certainly is a long
shot to think that a conservative can be elected in Washington
State.
In Illinois, despite a valiant effort by Alan Keyes (who is
being criticized as a carpetbagger), the state is just too liberal
and Democratic for a last-minute campaign. The Keyes campaign does
not have the money to overcome a huge lead by Barak Obama, rising
ultra-liberal star in Democrat circles. This was a Republican seat,
but Senator Peter Fitzgerald did not think he could be re-elected
so he retired.
There are other races which may be in play before all is said
and done. Wisconsin comes to mind. An unexpected primary victory by
a good candidate could give Senator Feingold some problems but
Wisconsin is a liberal state in which it is difficult to elect a
conservative.
OF THE ELEVEN RACES in play Republicans must win four to stay even.
Democrats must win eight if Kerry wins the Presidency, nine if Bush
wins the Presidency, to take control. Can they do it? Look at 1980.
There was a massive defeat of Democrats. In 1986 there was a shift
back to a Democratic majority. In 1994, there was a major shift
back to the Republicans. But in 2001, with so many Republicans
having been defeated in 2000, a switch of one Senator brought the
Democrats back in control. That was short-lived. The defeat of a
couple of incumbents and victory in an open seat brought
Republicans back by a one-vote majority.
So yes, the Democrats can do it. Kerry has the reputation of
being a strong closer. If “undecideds” break for him, it is
entirely possible that the Democrats could win the Senate. A
sobering thought.