July 14, 2016: Could there be A Democratic Wave?
Transcription
July 14, 2016: Could there be A Democratic Wave?
This issue brought to you by JAN. 2015 July 23, 14, 2016 Volume39, 38,No. No.14 2 Volume 2016 House Ratings Pure Toss-up (10R, 2D) az 1 (open; Kirkpatrick, d) NH 1 (Guinta, r) fl 18 (open; murphy, d) NV 3 (open; Heck, r) fl 26 (curbelo, r) Ny 22 (open; Hanna, r) ia 3 (young, r) Ny 24 (Katko, r) il 10 (dold, r) tX 23 (Hurd, r) me 2 (poliquin, r) Wi 8 (open; ribble, r) Toss-up/Tilt Dem (3R, 2D) Toss-up/Tilt GOP (4R) IA 1 (Blum, R) co 6 (coffman, r) MN 2 (Open; Kline, R) mi 7 (Walberg, r) Ne 2 (ashford, d) Ny 1 (zeldin, r) Ny 3 (open; israel, d) pa 8 (open; fitzpatrick, r) NV 4 (Hardy, R) lean Democratic (1D) lean Republican (3R) ca 7 (bera, d) mi 1 (open; benishek, r) Ny 19 (open; Gibson, r) Va 10 (comstock, r) Democrat Favored (1R, 1D) Republican Favored (8R) FL 13 (Jolly, R)* az 2 (mcsally, r) mN 8 (Nolan, dfl) ca 21 (Valadao, r) ca 25 (Knight, r) fl 7 (mica, r) iN 9 (open; young, r)# mN 3 (paulsen, r)# NJ 5 (Garrett, r) ut 4 (love, r) Safe Democrat (2R) Safe Republican (1D) FL 10 (Open; Webster, R) FL 2 (Open; Graham, D) VA 4 (Open; Forbes, R) Takeovers in Italics # moved benefiting Democrats, * moved benefiting Republicans GOP DEM 114th congress 247 188 currently safe 217 183 competitive 29 6 Needed for majority 218 2016 House Overview: Waiting for a Wave By Nathan L. Gonzales Donald Trump is supposed to be an anvil around the neck of Republican candidates down the ballot and around the country, but up to this point in the cycle, vulnerable GOP incumbents are holding their own. Democrats believe every Republican agrees with Trump and must publicly rebuke everything he has ever said or risk a backlash on Election Day. But voters have not yet punished GOP DEM for Trump’s sins. Democrats must litigate that Republican incumbents case over the next four months. 114th congress 54often shows Trump struggling in competitive districts Polling thus far 46race while GOP incumbents are leading their own rein the presidential election fights. Not up this cycle 30 months ago, it’s not difficult to see Democrats As we said three 36 seats in November in this environment. But picking gaining 10-20 House currently up 10 moresafe seats necessary for a majority is considerably harder and would require a 14 wave to pull unknown and underfinanced Democratic 8 challengers across the finish line. And Hillary Clinton’s unpopularity competitive could limit her party’s gains. 10 Of course, if an electoral wave develops nationally, the House might 2 be the last place it is felt. For example, in 2006, when Democrats gained 31 seats and took over the House majority, Republican incumbents such as Clay Shaw of Florida, Nancy Johnson of Connecticut, Ann Northup of Kentucky, John Sweeney of New York, Melissa Hart of Pennsylvania, and others, were still leading their races in late August and early September before the bottom dropped out and they all lost. Obviously, the 2006 and 2016 cycles are not identical, considering the Mark Foley scandal accelerated the decline of the Republicans that year and 2006 was a midterm election with an unpopular Republican in the White House. But it’s an important reminder that the House outlook can change quickly. We’re moving a couple more seats out of Safe from the Republican column as an acknowledgement of Trump’s potential to plummet in the suburbs (Minnesota’s 3rd District) or because of candidate-specific dynamics (Indiana’s 9th District) and not as specific signs of a wave. Now that the presidential nominating contests are over, both parties are currently polling dozens of House races across the country. We’ll have a better idea of the breadth of the battleground and starting point for these races in the next couple of weeks. RothenbergGonzales.com RothenbergGonzales.com Evan Bayh, Indiana and the Fight for the Senate 2016 Senate Ratings Pure Toss-up Ayotte (R-NH) By Nathan L. Gonzales Former Sen. Evan Bayh will run for the Senate after all, buoying Democrats’ chances of winning the open seat in Indiana and the Senate majority. Bayh’s decision was surprising, considering he didn’t seek re-election in 2010 and had shown no interest in running or serving again despite Democratic recruitment efforts earlier in the cycle. Democratic nominee/former Rep. Baron Hill stepped aside to allow the state party to replace him on the ballot. Rep. Todd Young, the GOP nominee, is a top-tier candidate in the race to replace retiring Republican Sen. Dan Coats. But Bayh immediately changes the dynamic. He starts the race with high and positive name identification and over $9 million in his campaign account. At a minimum, Republicans will now be forced to spend money defending a seat that the otherwise wouldn’t have had to exert energy defending. We’re changing our rating from Republican Favored to Toss-Up/Tilt Democratic. Bayh won’t have a lot of time to shake off any rust from his campaign apparatus, since he hasn’t been on the general election ballot since 2004, and there is plenty of fodder for Republican attacks. They’ll bring up his votes for the Affordable Care Act and lack of effectiveness while in the Senate, his lobbying record after he left, and highlight the lack of time he has spent in Indiana, including expensive homes in the Washington, D.C. area and Florida. And Bayh, a former two-term governor and son of a Senator, will be portrayed as a lifelong politician. Republicans will have to litigate that case and change voters’ minds about Bayh. The races aren’t over, but Democrats are well-positioned to take over seats in Illinois, Wisconsin, and Indiana. If they hold Nevada, they’d need to defeat just one more vulnerable GOP senator to gain control of the Senate, if Hillary Clinton becomes president. Rubio (R-FL) NV open (reid, d) Toss-up/Tilt Democrat Toss-up/Tilt Republican Johnson (R-WI) Portman (R-OH) IN Open (Coats, R)# Toomey (R-PA) lean Democrat lean Republican Kirk (R-IL) Burr (R-NC) Democrat Favored Republican Favored Bennet (D-CO) Blunt (R-MO) McCain (R-AZ) Safe Democrat Safe Republican Blumenthal (D-CT) Boozman (R-AR) Leahy (D-VT) Isakson (R-GA) Murray (D-WA) Lankford (R-OK) Schatz (D-HI) Crapo (R-ID) Schumer (D-NY) Grassley (R-IA) Wyden (D-OR) Hoeven (R-ND) CA Open (Boxer, D) Lee (R-UT) md open (mikulski, d) Moran (R-KS) Murkowski (R-AK) GOP DEM Paul (R-KY) 114th congress 54 46 Scott (R-SC) Not up this cycle 30 36 Shelby (R-AL) currently safe 14 8 Thune (R-SD) competitive 10 2 la open (Vitter, r) Takeovers in Italics # moved benefiting Democrats, * moved benefiting Republicans @InsideElections facebook.com/RPRPolitics Nathan L. Gonzales Editor & Publisher nathan@rothenberggonzales.com @nathanlgonzales Stuart Rothenberg Founding Editor & Publisher stu@rothenberggonzales.com @stupolitics Will Taylor Production Artist The Rothenberg & Gonzales Political Report is a nonpartisan publication that analyzes, handicaps and reports on U.S. House, Senate, and gubernatorial elections and presidential politics. It neither endorses candidates nor advocates positions in matters of public policy. The Rothenberg & Gonzales Political Report is published 24 times annually. Annual Subscription Rates: Individual - $249 + sales tax • Silver License - $2,500 (tax included) • Gold License - $5,000 (tax included) Copyright 2016, The Rothenberg & Gonzales Political Report, Inside Elections LLC. All rights reserved. 77 K Street NE • 7th Floor • Washington, DC 20002 • 202-546-2822 2 July 14, 2016 RothenbergGonzales.com rotHeNberGGoNzales.com Nonpartisan Analysis of Politics and Elections House Overview: Alaska-California Alaska. Aug. 16 primary At-Large District (Young, R). Democrats haven’t held the seat in over 40 years, but strategists think Don Young is vulnerable. Likely nominee Steve Lindbeck, the CEO of Alaska Public Media, and the state Democratic Party released a two-question poll conducted June 29-30 by PPP which showed that the congressman is unpopular but conspicuously didn’t include a ballot test or any information on the challenger. Lindbeck had a good fundraising quarter and showed $325,000 on hand at the end of June compared to $640,000 for Young. The congressman won re-election in 2014 with just 51 percent but the margin was 10 points because of a Libertarian candidate. This is a wave race. Safe GOP for now. 1st District (Open; Kirkpatrick, D). Ann Kirkpatrick’s Senate run leaves Democrats with a difficult open seat to defend. Her party has coalesced behind former GOP state Sen. Tom O’Halleran while Republicans have a crowded primary contest. Pinal County Sheriff Paul Babeu looks like the frontrunner and has a local and national profile for his antiillegal immigration views but has been dogged by negative press. Former secretary of state/2014 gubernatorial candidate Ken Gary Kiehne Bennett has some name identification but hasn’t been a good fundraiser and state Speaker David Gowan waded through some negative headlines. Rancher/2014 1st District candidate Gary Kiehne could be a factor with his personal money. This looks like a race that will be fought by the campaign committees and outside groups. Pure Toss-Up. 2nd District (McSally, R). Martha McSally was elected by just 167 votes in 2014 and the Tucson-area district is competitive, but Democratic enthusiasm about defeating her is muted in part because of her multimillion dollar campaign account. Former state Rep. Matt Heinz is the Democratic frontrunner but state Rep. Victoria Steele is running as well. The inexpensive media market might be the only thing keeping the race out of Safe. GOP Favored. 5th District (Open; Salmon, R). Matt Salmon is not seeking reelection and there is a crowded primary to replace the Freedom Caucus member in the safe GOP seat. Wealthy internet executive/2014 gubernatorial candidate Christine Jones, state Senate President Andy Biggs, state Rep. Justin Olsen, and former Maricopa County supervisor Don Stapley are running. California. 7th District (Bera, D). Bera topped Sacramento County Sheriff Scott Jones, 53-47 percent, in the June 7 primary in a preview of the general election since they were the only two candidates on the ballot. Bera is one of rothenbergGonzales.com Meredith Dake-O’Connor/CQ Roll Call Arizona. Aug. 30 primary. the few vulnerable incumbent Democratic incumbents and his re-election got more difficult when his father pleaded guilty to campaign finance violations for laundering over $250,000 in excessive contributions to help his son’s campaign. Bera claims to have known nothing about his 83-year-old father’s scheme. Jones got off to a slow fundraising start, but Republicans believe he’s picking up the pace. Lean Democratic. 10th District (Denham, R). Jeff Denham defeated Democrat Michael Eggman 56-44 percent in 2014 and finished ahead of Eggman 49-28 percent in the June 7 primary. A second GOP candidate received 10 percent, pushing the total Republican vote to close to 60 percent. Democrats still believe the demographics of the district (approximately 40 percent of the population is Hispanic) keep the seat in play. But Denham only loses in a GOP catastrophe. Safe Republican. 17th District (Honda, D). In 2014, Mike Honda finished ahead of former Obama administration aide Ro Khanna 48-28 percent in the primary and 52-48 percent in November. This year, Khanna finished narrowly ahead of the congressman, 39-37 percent. Honda is in significant danger, but the seat will stay in Democratic hands. 20th District (Open; Farr, D). Sam Farr is retiring and attorney/Navy veteran Jimmy Panetta will replace him. The Democratic son of former congressman/former White House chief of staff/former Defense Secretary Leon Panetta received 71 percent in the June primary. GOP nominee/ Pacific Grove City Councilwoman Casey Lucius received 20 percent. 21st District (Valadao, R). Democrats have to target this district because of its high Hispanic population, but David Valadao will be difficult to defeat. He finished first in the June primary with a considerable 58 percent and will face attorney Emilio Huerta, son of labor icon Dolores Huerta, in November. Huerta’s campaign hasn’t looked strong and he narrowly made the top two to move on. The only reason why this race isn’t safe is because of Donald Trump and the national environment. Republican Favored. 24th District (Open; Capps, D). Lois Capps’ retirement leaves a potentially competitive open seat. Santa Barbara County Supervisor Salud Carbajal (D) finished first in the June primary with 32 percent. He’ll face young GOP businessman Justin Fareed (21 percent in the primary) in November. Fareed is a credible candidate, but Republicans struggle in competitive California districts in presidential years. Still Safe for Democrats for now. 25th District (Knight, R). Steve Knight has had some unforced errors in his first term but he’s still the favorite for re-election against attorney Bryan Caforio. Democrats are targeting the district because President Barack Obama won the district by 2 points in 2008 (he lost it by 2 points in 2012) and they believe Knight is too conservative for the district. Caforio can probably overcome his recent move to the district but the Knight family has deep roots in the area. This is an expensive target for Democrats. Republican Favored, but could get more competitive. 36th District (Ruiz, D). Ruiz finished first in the primary with 57 percent and will face Republican state Sen. Jeff Stone (33 percent) in November. Another Republican candidate finished third with 10 percent. Republicans believe Stone, a former Riverside County supervisor, will develop into a top candidate, but he’s not there yet. Safe for Democrats. Continued on page 4 July 14, 2016 3 House Overview: Colorado-Florida Republican. Donald Trump is toxic in the district but Democrats still have to connect him to Coffman. Toss-Up/Tilt Republican. Continued from page 3 44th District (Open; Hahn, D). State Sen. Isadore Hall finished first in the June 7 primary with 42 percent in the race to replace Democratic Rep. Janice Hahn. He’ll face fellow Democrat/Hermosa Beach City Councilwoman Nanette Barragán (22 percent in the primary) in November. Barragán’s allies are excited about the opposition research against Hall, including some back rent and unpaid utility bills that resulted in a subpoena on primary night, but she still has some work to do, considering Hermosa Beach is not in the 44th and Hall represents part of the district in the Legislature. 46th District (Open; Sanchez, D). Former state Sen. Lou Correa finished first in the primary with 43 percent in the race to replace Senate candidate Loretta Sanchez. He faces fellow Democrat/Garden Grove Mayor Bao Nguyen in the November. House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi endorsed Correa’s candidacy. Safe for Democrats. 49th District (Issa, R). Democrats have renewed interested in defeating Darrell Issa after the congressman finished ahead of Democrat Doug Applegate in the primary, 52-45 percent. But Applegate had less than $14,000 in his cash account compared to $3.8 million for the congressman, who is also the wealthiest Member of Congress. It seems unlikely Democrats get into an arms race over this seat, even though the area is becoming more Hispanic. Safe for Republicans for now. 52nd District (Peters, D). After a close re-election race in 2014, Scott Peters finished first in this year’s primary with a considerable 58 percent and will face Republican consultant Denise Gitsham in November. Gitsham (17 percent in the primary) must overcome a significant fundraising gap and convince voters that the Chamber of Commerceendorsed incumbent isn’t the right fit for the district. Gitsham’s allies believe she will over-perform in the growing Asian American community to make this competitive. We’ll see. Safe for Democrats for now. Delaware. Sept. 13 primary. At-Large District (Open; Carney, D). John Carney’s gubernatorial bid opens up a safe Democratic seat and the next Member will essentially be chosen in the September. Former state Labor secretary Lisa Blunt Rochester is a top contender in a field that includes state Sen. Bryan Townsend, state Rep. Bryon Short, and Iraq war veteran/2014 state treasurer nominee Sean Barney. Florida. Aug. 30 primary. 3rd District (Tipton, R). Democrats believe there are at least a handful of late-breaking races and this is one of them. Former state Sen. Gail Schwartz, who did not seek re-election in 2014, is challenging Scott Tipton. The congressman has a modest fundraising head start but Romney Morgan Carroll won the district by 6 points in 2012 and it is covered by three media markets, making it an expensive target. Still Safe GOP for now. 6th District (Coffman, R). The race between Mike Coffman and Democratic state Sen. Morgan Carroll is one of the most competitive in the country - and it’s already underway. The congressman is airing a television ad with testimonials about how he’s different than a regular Republican while Democrats are determined to portray him as a Trump 4 July 14, 2016 Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call Colorado. 1st District (Open; Miller, R). Jeff Miller went from nearly running for the Senate to retiring from the House. Now there is an eightcandidate Republican field for the safe open seat, but state Rep. Matt Gaetz, son of state senator and Jeb Bush supporter Don Gaetz, looks like the frontrunner. 2nd District (Open; Graham, D). Democrats rejoiced over a new court-ordered map that created some takeover opportunities, but Gwen Graham’s district is a casualty considering Obama received 35 percent in the 2nd in 2012. On the Republican side, wealthy physician Neal Dunn looks like the pragmatic conservative while Mary Thomas, the IndianAmerican former in-house counsel to GOP Gov. Rick Scott, is trying to appeal to the most conservative voters in the party. One of them will be a Member next year. 4th District (Open; Crenshaw, R). Ander Crenshaw is retiring, leaving open another safe Republican seat. Wealthy attorney Hanz Tanzler III is in the top tier because of his personal money and former Duval County Sheriff John Rutherford (who has the support of Jacksonville Mayor Lenny Curry) should be well organized. State Rep. Lake Ray has a good reputation and a constituency in the district but might not be able to raise enough money to compete. 5th District (Brown, D). Corrine Brown is facing a tough fight for re-election against former state senator/2012 2nd District nominee Al Lawson. Her Duval County base still anchors the district that now includes part of Tallahassee, but she was indicted on fraud charges last week and temporarily stepped down as Ranking Member of the Veterans’ Affairs Committee. Under any scenario, the seat is Safe for Democrats. 6th District (DeSantis, R). Ron DeSantis was running for the Senate until Marco Rubio decided to seek re-election. Now the congressman is running for re-election and faces dentist/state Rep. Fred Costello and Realtor G.G. Galloway, who were running when it was an open seat. DeSantis is the favorite in the primary and the seat should stay in Republican hands in November. 7th District (Mica, R). Democrats are hoping to catch long-time Rep. John Mica off-guard in a redrawn district that gave Obama 50 percent in 2012. Former national security specialist/Rollins College business professor Stephanie Murphy (D), 37, entered the race just before the filing deadline. This race still needs to develop for Democrats. Republican Favored. 9th District (Open; Grayson, D). Alan Grayson is running for the Senate and leaving behind a Democratic-leaning open seat that Continued on page 5 Nonpartisan Analysis of Politics and Elections House Overview: Georgia-Illinois Republicans aren’t seriously challenging. Susannah Randolph (the congressman’s former district director) is facing off against biotechnology entrepreneur Dena Grayson (the congressman’s new wife) and state Sen. Darren Soto. Safe for Democrats. 10th District (Open; Webster, R). Dan Webster is running in a nearby district after the new lines made this virtually unwinnable for a Republican. Former Orlando police chief Val Demings (who lost to Webster in 2012) is a top contender against wealthy former state party chairman Bob Poe (who is gay and announced he is HIV positive) and state Sen. Geraldine Thompson Val Demings in the August primary. This district is home to the Pulse nightclub where a gunman shot and killed 49 people last month. Safe for Democrats. 11th District (Webster, R). Webster is running for re-election here, in retiring Rep. Richard Nugent’s district. He faces Nugent’s former chief of staff Justin Grabelle in the primary. A Republican should hold the seat. 13th District (Jolly, R). David Jolly left his seat to run for the Senate and returned to run for re-election as it became clear Rubio was running for re-election. Jolly has considerable name identification from his initial special election, but the redrawn district is more Democratic (Obama received 55 percent in 2012) and the congressman made some enemies within his own party by demonizing common fundraising practices and facilitating a hidden camera report from 60 Minutes inside the NRCC. Former Republican governor/Independent Senate candidate/2014 Democratic gubernatorial nominee Charlie Crist is running as a Democrat and is the frontrunner. Initial polling shows a competitive race and Crist has previously lost races he was supposed to win, but this is his home turf and there is no indication Jolly can raise the money necessary to compete in a competitive race. Move from Safe for Democrats to Democrat Favored. Public Policy Polling (D)(IVR) for Crist, June 6-7 (RVs)--General Election ballot: Crist over Jolly 46%-43%. McLaughlin & Assoc. (R) for Jolly, June 1-2 (RVs)--General Election ballot: Jolly over Crist 50%-38%. IDs: Jolly 46% favorable/13% unfavorable, Crist 37% favorable/41% unfavorable. 18th District (Open; Murphy, D). Patrick Murphy’s Senate run leaves Democrats with a difficult open seat to defend. Wealthy debris removal company/Ashbritt CEO Randy Perkins is the likely Democratic nominee. Martin County School Board member Rebecca Negron (state Sen. Joe Negron’s wife) and wealthy physician Mark Freeman look like the frontrunners in a crowded GOP field. Romney won the district in 2012, so this should be a good Republican takeover opportunity. Pure Toss-Up. 19th District (Open; Clawson, R). Curt Clawson is retiring after just two terms, leaving behind a safe Republican seat. Former ambassador to the Vatican/wealthy businessman Francis Rooney and Sanibel City rothenbergGonzales.com Chris Maddaloni/CQ Roll Call Continued from page 4 Councilman Chauncey Goss (who finished second in the 2012 primary to Trey Radel) look like the frontrunners while former Secret Service agent/2012 Maryland Senate nominee Dan Bongino is running as well. 26th District (Curbelo, R). Carlos Curbelo defeated embattled Democratic Rep. Joe Garcia in a district Obama won with 53 percent in 2012. But the new map made the district a couple points better for Democrats. Party strategists are excited about Annette Taddeo, who lost an uphill challenge to Ileana Ros-Lehtinen in 2008, a bid for Miami-Dade County Commissioner in 2010, and was on the losing gubernatorial ticket in 2014 as Crist’s running mate. But Taddeo must get past Garcia in the primary. Meanwhile, Curbelo is raising a lot of money and is regarded as a strong incumbent. Pure Toss-Up. 27th District (Ros-Lehtinen, R). Democrats are now talking about challenging the beloved Ileana Ros-Lehtinen. The district leans Democratic but the race is still Safe for the GOP pending more evidence. Georgia. July 26 run-off. 3rd District (Open; Westmoreland, R). Lynn Westmoreland is retiring, leaving a safe GOP open seat behind. State Sen. Mike Crane and dentist/former West Point Mayor Drew Ferguson finished a close first and second in the May primary and will face-off in the July 26 run-off. Third place finisher Jim Pace backed Ferguson. Crane has the Club for Growth’s endorsement. The seat is Safe for Republicans. Hawaii. August 13 primary 1st District (Open; Takai, D). Mark Takai announced he will not seek re-election in order to focus on his battle with pancreatic cancer. Former Rep. Colleen Hanabusa is the frontrunner to replace him in the August primary. She left the seat in 2014 to challenge appointed-Sen. Brian Schatz in the Democratic primary and lost. The seat is Safe for Democrats. Illinois. 10th District (Dold, R). Bob Dold and former Democratic Rep. Brad Schneider are locked in a competitive race for the third consecutive cycle. Trump is toxic in the suburban district but Republicans believe Dold’s brand can prevail. Pure Toss-Up. Normington, Petts, & Assoc for Schneider, June 6-9 (LVs)--General Election ballot: Schneider over Dold 47%-43%. Presidential: Clinton over Trump 53%35%. North Star Opinion Research (R), May 3-5 (LVs)--General Election ballot: Dold over Schneider 48%-41%. 12th District (Bost, R). Democratic attorney C.J. Baricevic had a strong fundraising quarter in the first three months of the year and caused party strategists to take a second look at his challenge to Mike Bost. Both sides are watching to see if he can keep up the fundraising pace. But Bost looks like a good fit for the Downstate district where Trump might actually do well. Still Safe for Republicans. Indiana. May 3 primary. 3rd District (Open; Stutzman, R). State Sen. Jim Banks, who also served in Afghanistan with the Navy Reserves, won the May GOP Continued on page 6 July 14, 2016 5 House Overview: Indiana-Michigan to enter the race before the filing deadline. Yoder has over $2 million in campaign funds and a significant early advantage. Still Safe GOP for now. Continued from page 5 Iowa. 1st District (Blum, R). Freshman Rod Blum is a Democratic target in a district Obama won with 56 percent. Cedar Rapids City Councilwoman Monica Vernon lost the 2014 primary but won this year’s primary over Pat Murphy. Blum is in significant danger and is still mending some bridges from within his own party after opposing John Boehner for Speaker. Toss-Up/Tilt Democratic. 3rd District (Young, R). David Young wasn’t the best candidate in 2014 but he is starting to get stronger as an incumbent. He still faces a difficult race in a competitive district Obama won by 4 points in 2012 against Jim Mowrer (who challenged Steve King unsuccessfully in 2014). This looks like another race where both parties will spend heavily. Pure Toss-Up. Kansas. Aug. 2 primary. 1st District (Huelskamp, R). Freedom Caucus Member Tim Huelskamp faces a competitive primary challenge from physician Roger Marshall. The Club for Growth is backing the congressman while the Kansas Farm Bureau endorsed the challenger. Huelskamp was removed from the Agriculture Committee in 2013. The group did not endorse a candidate in his 2014 race. Challenging a congressman has a conservative obstructionist isn’t usually a winning primary message, but Marshall is a credible foe. The race is worth keeping an eye on, but the seat will stay in GOP hands. POS (R) for Marshall, June 25-26 (LVs)--GOP Primary ballot: Huelskamp over Marshall 42%-41%. 3rd District (Yoder, R). Democrats believe Kevin Yoder’s suburban district is moving in their direction and convinced businessman Jay Sidie 6 July 14, 2016 Kentucky. 1st District (Open; Whitfield, R). Former state Agriculture Commissioner Jamie Comer, who lost the 2015 gubernatorial primary, won the May 17 Republican primary to replace the retiring congressman. Comer will be a Member of Congress next year and not likely to join the Freedom Caucus. Thomas McKinless/CQ Roll Call primary to replace Marlin Stutzman and will be a Member of Congress next year. He faces eight-time candidate/unemployed transient Tommy Schrader (D) in November. 9th District (Open; Young, R). Todd Young’s Senate run opens up this Republican seat. Businessman Trey Hollingsworth, who recently moved to the district from Tennessee, won the May primary by vastly outspending state Attorney General Greg Zoeller and state Sen. Erin Houchin. Democrats have a credible candidate with Monroe County Commissioner/ former Miss Indiana/2012 nominee Shelli Yoder who will Shelli Yoder be a stark contrast to Hollingsworth’s recent relocation to the area. The district still favors Republicans, but with a newly-competitive Senate race, this race could get tighter. Move from Safe GOP to Republican Favored. Garin Hart Yang (D) for Yoder, May 23-25 (LVs)--General Election ballot: Hollingsworth and Yoder tied at 41%. Louisiana. July 22 filing deadline. Nov. 8 primary. Dec. 10 run-off. 3rd District (Open; Boustany, R). Charles Boustany is running for David Vitter’s open Senate seat. Public Service Commissioner Scott Angelle is the frontrunner after he finished a close third (behind Vitter) in the 2015 gubernatorial primary but a handful of other Republicans are running. Safe GOP under virtually all scenarios. 4th District (Open; Fleming, R). John Fleming is also running for the Senate. His district is more competitive than the 3rd, but still likely to stay in Republican hands. The race also lacks a heavyweight such as Angelle. State Rep. Mike Johnson, physician Trey Baucum, former state Sen. Elbert Guillory, and others are running in a race that still hasn’t solidified. Safe GOP. Maine. 2nd District (Poliquin, R). Bruce Poliquin defeated Democrat Emily Cain 47-42 percent in 2014 to win a Democratic open seat. But Cain is back for a rematch and Democratic strategists dismiss the results as a midterm aberration. Poliquin is one of House Republicans’ best fundraisers and has personal money to invest in the race. Cain appears to be improving as a fundraiser and released a poll which showed her running even with the congressman at 45 percent. Trump could play well in the rural district (and contend for the single electoral vote), but Poliquin was conspicuously absent when the presumptive presidential nominee visited the district. Pure Toss-Up, but a must-win for Democrats. Normington Petts (D) for Cain, June 6-9 (LVs)--General Election ballot: Poliquin and Cain tied at 45%. Maryland. 4th District (Open; Edwards, D). Former Lt. Gov. Anthony Brown, who lost the 2014 gubernatorial race to Larry Hogan, won the April Democratic primary and will be a Member of Congress next year. 8th District (Open; Van Hollen, D). State Sen. Jamie Raskin won the April Democratic primary and will be a Member of Congress next year. Wealthy businessman Dave Trone spent over $12 million of his own money and finished in second place. Michigan. Aug. 2 primary. 1st District (Open; Benishek, R). Three-term Rep. Dan Benishek is retiring, leaving a potentially competitive open seat that Obama won by nearly 2 points in 2008 but lost by 9 points in 2012. Former state Democratic Party chairman Lon Johnson is the likely Democratic Continued on page 7 Nonpartisan Analysis of Politics and Elections House Overview: Minnesota-Nevada believe the damage they inflicted on Mills in 2014 is irreversible and the sale of the family company (Mills Fleet Farm stores) will negatively impact the community and result in a backlash against the Mills family. But, unlike last cycle, Mills is a full-time candidate and he’s committed some of his own money for early, positive ads. Meanwhile Nolan is consistently balancing a socially conservative district with his liberal tendencies, such as attending the Democratic sit-in on gun control. Democrat Favored, but this could develop into another interesting contest, in part because Clinton is not popular on the Iron Range. Continued from page 6 Minnesota. Aug. 9 primary. 2nd District (Open; Kline, R). Obama narrowly won this district twice, but John Kline crafted a moderate image that helped keep the seat in GOP hands and his retirement leaves a competitive open seat. Medical device company executive Angie Craig ($1.8 milion on hand on June 30) is the likely DFL nominee and one of Democrats’ best candidates around the country. Republicans have a competitive primary between radio talk show host Jason Lewis (who won the party endorsement but had sluggish early fundraising), businesswoman Darlene Miller (who is supported by Kline), and former state Sen. John Howe (who put in over $500,000 of his own money but it’s unclear if he’ll spend it). Some GOP strategists are concerned Lewis is too conservative for the district, but he’s a better candidate than his reputation. Craig is probably more liberal than the district, but her fundraising prowess and Trump at the top of the ticket give her an initial advantage. Toss-Up/Tilt Democratic. 3rd District (Paulsen, R). Democrats are trying to expand the House playing field by targeting suburban districts and believe state Sen. Terri Bonoff pulls this race into play. She dropped out of the 2008 race after young Iraq War veteran Ashwin Madia won the DFL endorsement. Party strategists were excited about her fundraising quarter, when she brought in over $600,000. Then Paulsen announced he raised $1 million in the quarter and still has an over $2 million cash advantage. The district is competitive enough (Obama won 50-49 percent in 2012) and Trump is toxic enough for this seat to be considered in play. Move from Safe GOP to Republican Favored. 8th District (Nolan, DFL). Rick Nolan defeated Republican Stewart Mills III in a close race, and Mills is back for a rematch. Democrats rothenbergGonzales.com Montana. At-Large District (Zinke, R). Democrats are targeting freshman Ryan Zinke with State Superintendent of Public Education Denise Juneau in an effort to expand the battleground map. She is a credible candidate but still faces an uphill battle against the congressman, who is a retired Navy Seal. Not a problem for Republicans yet but could develop into a headache. Nebraska. Thomas McKinless/CQ Roll Call nominee while former state Senate Majority Whip Jason Allen and state Sen. Tom Casperson are facing off in the Aug. 2 GOP primary. Benishek endorsed Casperson, while Allen lost the 2010 primary to Benishek by 15 votes. Lean Republican but could develop into a better Democratic opportunity. 7th District (Walberg, R). Tim Walberg is a consistent Democratic target and faces state Rep. Gretchen Driskell in November. Romney won the district by 3 points in 2012. This is the type of race Democrats need to win for a majority. Toss-Up/Tilt Republican. 8th District (Bishop, R). Democrats believe freshman Mike Bishop is untested since the party didn’t make a concerted effort here in 2014. But their candidate, actress Melissa Gilbert (of Little House on the Prairie fame) abruptly dropped out of the race citing health problems, and the party plans to replace her on the ballot with Macomb County assistant prosecutor Suzanna Shkreli. The 29-year-old attorney has a lot of ground to make up against the incumbent in a district Romney carried by 3 points. Still Safe GOP for now. 10th District (Open; Miller, R). Candice Miller is retiring, leaving behind a marginally competitive district that Democrats aren’t factoring into takeover plans. Wealthy businessman/2014 4th District candidate Paul Mitchell and state Sen. Phil Pavlov are the frontrunners in the August primary, while former state Sen. Alan Sanborn is running as well. Safe for the GOP. 2nd District (Ashford, D). Retired Brigadier General Donald “Bits” Bacon won the May GOP primary and will face Brad Ashford in the fall. Romney won the district in 2012 and Bacon could run up the score in Sarpy County with the proximity to Offutt Air Force Base. But Ashford is an relatively inoffensive Member who has been endorsed by Don Bacon the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the NFIB. A parade-goer recently asked the Congressman if he was a Republican and Ashford respond, “Ah...I don’t know. Whatever you want me to be.” That will come up later in the campaign. Both parties will spend heavily in the cheap Omaha media market. TossUp/Tilt Democratic. Nevada. 3rd District (Open; Heck, R). Joe Heck’s departure for the Senate race leaves Democrats with a good takeover opportunity. The party nominated Jacky Rosen, head of local synagogue, in the June primary. Former candidate Danny Tarkanian, son of the legendary UNLV basketball coach, won the GOP nomination over state Senate Majority Leader Michael Roberson (who had the support of GOP Gov. Brian Sandoval and others). Tarkanian has some baggage from past financial problems but Rosen is unproven as a candidate. This is going to be expensive for both parties. Pure Toss-Up. 4th District (Hardy, R). As a Republican representing a district Obama carried with 56 percent and 54 percent in the last two presidential elections, freshman Cresent Hardy is one of the most vulnerable Continued on page 8 July 14, 2016 7 House Overview: New Hampshire-Pennsylvania Continued from page 7 incumbents in the country. State Sen. Ruben Kihuen won the competitive Democratic primary and is the narrow favorite in the general election. Toss-Up/Tilt Democratic. Harper Polling (R)(IVR) for NRCC, July (LVs)--General Election ballot: Hardy over Kihuen 38%-36%. New Hampshire. Sept. 13 primary. 1st District (Guinta, R). Frank Guinta is vulnerable in the primary and general elections after tangling with the FEC over a campaign loan from his 2010 race (which he has since paid off). The congressman is more vulnerable in the primary now that the field has narrowed to essentially one challenger: businessman Rich Ashooh. GOP chances of holding the seat might increase if Guinta loses the primary. Democrats are poised to nominate former Rep. Carol Shea-Porter, whom Guinta defeated in 2010 and 2014 and lost to in 2012. Republicans’ saving grace might be Shawn O’Connor who abandoned his bid for the Democratic nomination and appears determined to run as an Independent. He’d likely pull disproportionately from Shea-Porter and make it difficult for her to win the competitive seat. Pure Toss-Up with a lot of uncertainty. New Jersey. 5th District (Garrett, R). Democratic strategists are determined to defeat Scott Garrett after he voiced disapproval of the NRCC for supporting gay candidates. The seven-term congressman has received some national media attention because some of his previous Wall Street contributors have declined to donate to him this cycle. Former Bill Clinton speechwriter Josh Gottheimer is energetic and a good fundraiser ($1.7 million) and gives Democrats a credible challenger. But he is still virtually unknown in an expensive district to advertise. Still Republican Favored but could get more competitive. New York. 1st District (Zeldin, R). Former Southampton Town Supervisor Anna Throne-Holst won the June 28 Democratic primary by 319 votes and will face Lee Zeldin in the general election. Democrats are emboldened by the way Zeldin has embraced Trump and stumbled through a CNN interview where he called President Obama a racist. But it’s not yet clear that Trump is a liability in the district, and ThroneHolst has to regroup from the primary. Lean Republican, but could get more competitive. 3rd District (Open; Israel, D). After defending House seats for a living as chairman of the DCCC, Steve Israel is leaving one behind with his retirement. Former Nassau County executive Tom Suozzi won the Democratic nomination and will face GOP state Sen. Jack Martins in November. This is a rare Republican takeover opportunity. Toss-Up/Tilt Democratic. 13th District (Open; Rangel, D). After two unsuccessful attempts to defeat long-time Rep. Charlie Rangel, state Sen. Adriano Espaillat won the Democratic primary to replace the retiring congressman with 37 percent. He’ll be a Member of Congress next year. 19th District (Open; Gibson, R). Chris Gibson stomped his 2014 opponent and promptly announced his retirement. Former state 8 July 14, 2016 Assembly Minority Leader John Faso won the competitive Republican primary while Fordham law school professor/2014 gubernatorial candidate Zephyr Teachout won the Democratic nomination. Faso has been around a long enough to be painted as a politician but Republicans feel comfortable running against Teachout, who ran to Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s left in the primary and recently relocated to the district from Brooklyn. Lean Republican. 21st District (Stefanik, R). Elise Stefanik easily won the open seat in 2014 but Democrats are trying to cultivate retired Army Officer Mike Derrick into a top-tier candidate. He’s not there yet. Still Safe Republican. 22nd District (Open; Hanna, R). Moderate Richard Hanna’s retirement creates an open seat opportunity for Democrats. Assemblywoman Claudia Tenney (who held Hanna to a 6-point primary victory in 2014) won the GOP nomination while Broome County Legislator Kim Myers, daughter of Dick’s Sporting Goods founder Dick Stack, is the Democratic nominee. The district is more Republican than Hanna’s reputation made it seem, but the race could get complicated if wealthy businessman Martin Babinec makes the ballot as an independent. He’s donated to Hillary Clinton and President Obama but is regarded as a center-right candidate. Pure Toss-Up. 23rd District (Reed, R). Democrats believe retired submarine officer John Plumb is considerably better than their 2014 nominee, Martha Robertson. But Democrats may have missed their chance to defeat Tom Reed (when he narrowly won in 2012) in a district Romney won by 2 points. Safe for Republicans. 24th District (Katko, R). Freshman John Katko is one of Republicans’ strongest vulnerable incumbents, but he also represents one of the most Democratic districts (Obama 57 percent in 2012). Colleen Deacon, Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand’s former regional director, won the Democratic primary and is a credible contender, although her fundraising for the primary was mediocre. Toss-Up. North Carolina. 2nd District (Holding & Ellmers, R). George Holding defeated Renee Ellmers in the June 7 primary after a redrawn congressional map pitted the two Republicans against each other. Ellmers home area is in the new 2nd, but Holding represented more territory. The seat is safe for Republicans. 13th District (Open; Holding, R). Holding ran for re-election in the 2nd District leaving a Republican leaning seat behind. Gun range owner Ted Budd finished on top of a 17-candidate primary field with 20 percent and will be a Member of Congress next year. Budd is likely to join the Freedom Caucus. Pennsylvania. 2nd District (VACANT; Fattah, D). State Rep. Dwight Evans defeated 11-term Rep. Chaka Fattah (who faced a 29-count indictment on corruption charges) in the April primary. Fattah was subsequently convicted and resigned. The special election will be held concurrent with the general election in November. This is a safe Democratic seat. 6th District (Costello, R). Democrats planned to challenge Ryan Continued on page 9 Nonpartisan Analysis of Politics and Elections House Overview: Tennessee-Utah primary and lost 50-41 percent. Carr lives just outside the district and Black had nearly $1.3 million in the bank on March 31. Black should be fine. 8th District (Open; Fincher, R). First elected in 2010, Stephen Fincher is retiring after just three terms. Thirteen Republicans filed for the open seat but the race looks likely to come down to former U.S. Attorney David Kustoff (who lost a 2002 primary to Marsha Blackburn), state Sen. Brian Kelsey (who represents over 250,000 people), and Shelby County Mayor Mark Luttrell (who has never experienced a serious partisan primary). Through the end of March, Kustoff had $316,000 in the bank to Kelsey’s $426,000 and Luttrell’s $143,000. The seat is safe for Republicans in November. Continued from page 8 Costello but after a number of candidates didn’t pan out, the freshman Republican is no longer in Democrats’ takeover plans. Mike Parrish is the Democratic nominee but either can’t or won’t raise money but somehow worked hard enough to keep Lindy Li (who could raise money) off the ballot. Safe GOP. 7th District (Meehan, R). Patrick Meehan represents a competitive district in the Philadelphia suburbs but Democrats have turned away from the race after their preferred candidate, Pastor Bill Golderer, was soundly defeated by 2014 nominee Mary Ellen Balchunis, 74-26 percent, in the primary. Safe for Republicans. 8th District (Open; Fitzpatrick R). Republicans initially lined up behind state Rep. Scott Petri but pushed him aside for Brian Fitzpatrick, the brother of retiring Rep. Mike Fitzpatrick was working for the FBI in California. He faces state Rep. Steve Santarsiero in the general election. This is a must-win seat for Democrats and will test the strength of the Republicans’ redistricting effort. Toss-Up/Tilt Republican. 16th District (Open; Pitts, R). GOP state Sen. Lloyd Smucker won the competitive Republican primary to replace retiring Rep. Joe Pitts, who is leaving a decade after his term limits pledge expired. Democrats nominated Christina Hartman and strategists are suddenly interested in the seat. Republicans transferred GOP voters out of the district during redistricting in order to shore up the more suburban GOP seats, but the 16th still leans Republican. Obama won the district, 50-49 percent in 2008 but lost it by 7 points in 2012. The interest in the 16th looks like an effort to keep multiple Pennsylvania districts on the map after the 6th and 7th have fallen off. Smucker is still recovering from the primary but is a considerable favorite in the general election. Still Safe GOP for now. PPP (D)(IVR) for Hartman, May 3-4 (RVs)--General Election ballot: Smucker over Hartman 48%-43%. Texas. 15th District (Open; Hinojosa, D). Ruben Hinojosa is retiring after 10 terms, leaving a safe Democratic open seat behind. Wealthy attorney Vicente Gonzales won the May 24 runoff over Edinburg School Board Board Member Juan “Sonny” Palacios Jr. and will be a Member of Congress next year. 19th District (Open; Neugebauer, R). Randy Neugebauer’s retirement creates a safe Republican open seat. Lubbock Mayor Glen Robertson won the runoff over former Texas Tech vice chancellor Jodey Arrington 54-46 percent and will be a Member of Congress next year. 23rd District (Hurd, R). With Donald Trump’s and Ted Cruz’s antiimmigration rhetoric potentially topping the GOP ticket, Democratic strategists are excited about taking back this seat. Will Hurd defeated Democratic Rep. Pete Gallego in a late-breaking race in 2014, and Gallego is back for a rematch. Hurd has developed into one of Republicans’ strongest new incumbents, but Democrats are committed to bringing back Gallego. The Democrats’ campaign released a poll which showed Gallego up by 8 points, 45-37 percent, but this race seems destined to be close. Romney won the district by 3 points in 2012. Toss-Up. Tennessee. Aug. 4 primary. rothenbergGonzales.com Utah. Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call 4th District (DesJarlais, R). Scott DesJarlais won the 2014 primary by 38 votes amidst stories about inappropriate relationships with patients, so his primary is worth watching this year. Conservative activist Grant Starrett has put together over a million dollars with a combination of fundraising and personal money, but he also started the Scott DesJarlais race without any name identification. It’s unclear whether Starrett is too polished for the rural district and if voters are finally ready to punish DesJarlais for sins committed a few years ago, but this looks like a serious race at least because of Starrett’s money. The seat is Safe for Republicans. 6th District (Black, R). Joe Carr is challenging Diane Black in the GOP primary. He challenged incumbent Lamar Alexander in the 2014 Senate 4th District (Love, R). Mitt Romney won the district with 68 percent in 2012 but that’s not stopping Democrats from targeting Mia Love, whom they believe is uniquely vulnerable. Love was initially elected narrowly, 51-46 percent, in 2014 over Democrat Doug Owens, and faced a series of negative headlines regarding flight reimbursements and travel after she took office. Owens is running again, and is a credible challenger, but he didn’t face any negative ads last time as Love tried to repair her image from a blistering race against Jim Matheson. Owens won’t be so fortunate this year and will have to answer for his connections and past support for Hillary Clinton and President Obama. Love will have to deal with Trump, who is deeply unpopular with Mormon voters. But Owens must run with an unpopular Clinton, a transgender activist running against GOP Sen. Mike Lee and a gubernatorial nominee whose wife is under investigation for using marijuana. We moved the race to Republican Favored two weeks ago but Democrats must still prove that this is a top takeover opportunity. Continued on page 10 July 14, 2016 9 House Overview: Virginia-Wyoming Continued from page 9 Virginia. 2nd District (Open; Rigell, R). Three-term GOP Rep. Scott Rigell isn’t seeking re-election but his colleague Randy Forbes decided to run for re-election here instead of the 4th, which was redrawn to be more Democratic. Forbes played up his seniority in Congress, had a significant financial advantage and was defeated by state Delegate Scott Taylor, 5341 percent in the June primary. Taylor is the prohibitive favorite in the general election against community organizer Shaun Brown, who lost four races for Newport News City Council. Safe GOP. 4th District (Open; Forbes, R). A court-ordered redraw of part of the congressional map turned this into a Democratic seat. State Sen. Donald McEachin won the Democratic primary and will be a Member of Congress next year. 5th District (Open; Hurt, R). Three-term GOP Rep. Robert Hurt is not seeking re-election but Republicans should hold his seat. GOP state Sen. Tom Garrett is the heavy favorite in November against Albemarle County Board Chairman Jane Dittmar. Safe for Republicans. 10th District (Comstock, R). Barbara Comstock is a polarizing figure running for re-election in a competitive Northern Virginia district. Democratic strategists are excited about real estate developer LuAnn Bennett, who is also the ex-wife of former 8th District Rep. Jim Moran. Comstock isn’t safe, but the district is more Republican than when GOP Candidate Conversation Tom Nelson (D) Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call Candidate for Wisconsin’s 8th District Interview Date: June 15, 2016 Date of Birth: March 3, 1976; St. Paul, Minn. Education: Carleton College (B.A. 1998); Princeton Univ. (M.P.A. 2004) Political Office: Outagamie County Executive; State Assembly (former); 2010 Lt. Gov. nominee Current Outlook: Nelson will be the Democratic nominee in the competitive open seat left by GOP Rep. Reid Ribble’s retirement. He’ll face either state Sen. Frank Lasee or former Scott Walker advisor Mike Gallagher in the general election. The GOP primary is August 9. The race is rated a Pure Tossup. Evaluation: Nelson was low-key and personable. This is his first run for Congress, but early in his career he worked for Democratic consultant Harrison Hickman and he’s run for office a half-dozen times, so he’s not a political neophyte. He might have been a little over-confident in how transferable his local profile is to a race for federal office, but Nelson looks like a good candidate and Republicans admit he is Democrats’ best recruit for the seat. The Democrat does have a long record (including tax increases) to be picked apart in the general election, but it’s still not clear how strong the Republican nominee will be. 10 July 14, 2016 Rep. Frank Wolf was in office and she had nearly $1.8 million in her campaign account on May 24. Bennett had $627,000 but has personal money to invest. Lean Republican and Democrats need it make it more competitive. Washington. August 2 Top Two primary. 7th District (Open; McDermott, D). Longtime liberal Rep. Jim McDermott is retiring from one of the most Democratic districts in the country, where Obama received 79 percent in 2012, and it looks likely that two Democrats will face off in November, due to Washington’s primary system. King County Council Chairman Joe McDermott (no relation to the congressman) is well-positioned for one runoff slot while state Rep. Brady Walkinshaw and state Sen. Pramila Jayapal battle for the other one. West Virginia. 2nd District (Mooney, R). Democrats would love to defeat Alex Mooney, the former Maryland state senator who won the GOP open seat in 2014. But former state Delegate Mark Hunt defeated Army attorney Cory Simpson (the party establishment’s preferred choice) in the May primary, putting an end to Democrats’ scenario to win the seat this cycle. Safe GOP. Wisconsin. Aug. 9 primary. 1st District (Ryan, R). Keeping the House Republican Conference together is more than a full-time job for Speaker Paul Ryan. He also faces a primary challenge from businessman Paul Nehlen. Nehlen describes Ryan as a “Globalist” and “not an American patriot.” If former Speaker John Boehner’s past primaries are a guide, it’s not hard to see Nehlen getting 35-40 percent of the vote. But defeating Ryan would be an epic upset. It doesn’t look like it’s happening. 8th District (Open; Ribble, R). Reid Ribble’s retirement presents Democrats with a good takeover opportunity. They are likely to nominate Outagamie County Executive Tom Nelson. Former Foreign Relations Committee staffer/Scott Walker foreign policy aide Mike Gallagher is the GOP frontrunner but faces state Sen. Frank Lasee in a competitive Republican primary. President Barack Obama carried the northeastern Wisconsin district, which includes Green Bay and Appleton, by 9 points in 2008 but lost it by 4 points in 2012. Pure Toss-Up. Wyoming. Aug. 16 primary. At-Large (Open; Lummis, R). Cynthia Lummis, the only female member of the House Freedom Caucus, is retiring, leaving a safe Republican open seat behind. Ten Republicans are running for the seat, but the top contenders are Liz Cheney, daughter of Vice President/ former Wyoming Rep. Dick Cheney, state Sen. Leland Christensen and state Rep. Tim Stubson. Cheney lapped the field in early fundraising (she raised over $750,000) compared to the $55,000 and $99,000 Christensen and Stubson had on hand on March 31. Cheney is a polarizing figure in local GOP circles for alleged carpetbagging and challenging Sen. Mike Enzi in 2014 (she dropped out before the primary). But the two Legislators might divide the anti-Cheney vote and her financial advantage might cure other problems. In any scenario, the seat should stay in GOP hands in November. Nonpartisan Analysis of Politics and Elections