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Senate contest a toss-up

Tuesday, April 26, 2016

By Albert R. HUNT

Bloomberg View

There is a second critical contest in the 2016 U.S. elections: the battle for control of the Senate.

Republicans, pessimistic about their presidential prospects, feel an urgency to hold onto the Senate. They have a 54-to-46 advantage in the chamber now, but more than twice as many of their seats are at stake in this cycle. (Democrats would have to score a net gain of 30 seats to win the majority in the House, almost impossible short of a landslide in the presidential race.)

Both parties acknowledge that the Senate contest is a toss-up that will be affected by the presidential election. But there are two other, perhaps more important, factors: the outcome of a number of remaining primaries and whether congressional Republicans, especially House Speaker Paul Ryan, can fashion an agenda that, if necessary, strikes a distance from the debates of the presidential race.

Strategists on both sides suggest that there are two Republican-held seats that lean Democratic, along with several toss-ups. There is only one Democratic-held seat, that of the party’s Senate leader, Harry Reid of Nevada, who is retiring, that seems competitive now. But three or four other Republican-held seats might be vulnerable if the presidential race is a landslide for Democrats.

Democrats, however, say that a couple primaries will be critical: In Pennsylvania, party leaders believe that if Katie McGinty, an environmentalist, can win today’s close race, she has a chance of unseating Sen. Pat Toomey, the incumbent Republican, in November. Later, if Rep. Patrick Murphy, a Florida Democrat, is able to defeat a left-wing challenger who faces ethics charges, he would be the favorite to take the seat vacated by Sen. Marco Rubio.

Right-wing challengers

On the Republican side, the issue is the extent of the damage that a few right-wing challengers could inflict on mainstream candidates. An example: The party has felt confident about Nevada since it settled on Joe Heck, a popular congressman, as its candidate. This month, however, Sharron Angle, a prominent tea party activist, jumped into the race. Angle won a multicandidate primary in 2010, but lost to Reid after asserting that Sharia law was spreading and making other dubious claims. She’s not likely to win this time but could damage Heck.

Democrats believe that Senate Majority leader Mitch McConnell’s refusal to allow a hearing on President Barack Obama’s Supreme Court nominee, Merrick Garland, will hurt Republican incumbents in states such as New Hampshire, Pennsylvania and Ohio. “They try to stress their independence,” notes J.B. Poersch, a top Democratic political strategist. “But they’re carrying McConnell’s baggage.”

Republicans counter that these races are local contests and that their stronger incumbents will prevail in Ohio and elsewhere. Mc-Connell thinks the best strategy is to avoid any controversy. Ironically, one of the Republicans’ models is a Democrat, North Dakota’s Heidi Heitkamp, who was elected to the Senate in 2012 despite Obama’s losing her state by almost 20 points.

Ryan, who again took himself out of consideration for a presidential run, has a different take, however. He thinks that it’s important for congressional Republicans to frame a message – and policy prescriptions – that could separate them from an unpopular presidential candidate.

Albert R. Hunt is a Bloomberg View columnist. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.