Posted on 12/29/2013 1:15:41 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
Democrats and Republicans are amassing enormous war chests for a midterm battle that will decide who controls the Senate for the remainder of President Obamas term.
Republicans need a net gain of six seats to reclaim the Senate majority, and are gunning for Democratic incumbents in conservative-leaning states like Arkansas, Alaska, North Carolina, West Virginia and Louisiana.
Democrats are mostly playing defense, but see a few opportunities to peel away seats from the GOP column.
Here are the five Senate races to watch in 2014.
KENTUCKY
The reelection bid of Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) is the marquee race of the election cycle.
Outside groups on both sides have already spent more than $3.5 million dollars on the race, and are prepared to spend tens of millions more.
Republicans are looking to make healthcare reform and Obamas environmental policies which impact Kentuckys coal industry liabilities for Democrat Alison Lundergan Grimes, McConnells likely opponent.
McConnell also has the backing of deep-pocketed groups like the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, which this month launched an ad touting his work defending the states coal industry.
But Democrats say McConnell can be beaten, and are pointing to his low approval ratings in Kentucky as they fundraise against him. They also think they have a strong candidate in Lundergan Grimes.
Plus, McConnell cant focus on the general election just yet, as he is trying to beat back a primary challenge from conservative Matt Bevin.
NORTH CAROLINA
The Senate race in North Carolina could be a bellwether for 2014.
Of all the states where Republicans are fighting this election cycle, North Carolina is the one that went for Mitt Romney by the slimmest margin in 2012. If the GOP cant knock off incumbent Sen. Kay Hagan (D-N.C.), their bid for the majority may well come up short.
But recent polling has shown Hagan taking a serious hit from the botched rollout of ObamaCare, with her disapproval rating jumping 10 percent in just two months, to nearly half the electorate.
Millions of dollars in outside spending is pouring into North Carolina, making it the most expensive race of the 2014 cycle thus far, according to a Roll Call analysis. Republicans are more than doubling the money spent by Democratic groups.
While the GOP wants to nationalize the race, Democrats are framing it as a referendum on the conservative agenda passed by the legislature under state House Speaker Thom Tillis, the establishment candidate.
Polling has shown Tillis support dropping in recent months, and he is facing questions from local activists about his conservative bona fides. A bruising fight between the five candidates in the GOP primary could hurt the partys chances at taking back the seat.
ARKANSAS
The political terrain in Arkansas is such that even an error-free campaign backed by millions from outside groups might not be enough for Democratic Sen. Mark Pryor.
Pryor, the last Democrat remaining in Arkansass congressional delegation, is trying to appeal to voters on a personal level by touting his religious faith and his constituent services.
Hes also distancing himself from President Obama by touting his centrist record, which includes votes against expanded gun-control measures and support for fixes to ObamaCare.
But Republicans have a dream candidate in freshman Rep. Tom Cotton, a Harvard-educated Iraq and Afghanistan war veteran who has managed to win the backing of the establishment and the conservative grassroots. He has tied or led Pryor in two recent polls.
Republicans see the race as a referendum on Obama and his healthcare law, while Democrats hope painting the GOP as extremist and obstructionist will drag Cotton down.
Look for big-name party leaders to make a splash here. Former President Bill Clinton (D) and Mike Huckabee (R) remain popular with their respective parties in the state, and as both look towards a potential presidential run Clinton for his wife, Huckabee for himself the race could be a proving ground for both.
GEORGIA
Republicans are facing a crowded primary in Georgias Senate race that could cause fallout across the electoral map.
Sen. Saxby Chambliss (R-Ga.) retirement announcement prompted eight Republicans to jump into the partys primary, and all of them are jockeying for support from the GOPs right flank.
The candidates include three Georgia congressmen: Reps. Phil Gingrey, Paul Broun and Jack Kingston.
Democrats are hopeful that whichever candidate emerges will have cut too far to the right to remain competitive in the general election. They think they could win the seat with former nonprofit CEO Michelle Nunn, who has built-in name recognition from her father, former Sen. Sam Nunn (D).
LOUISIANA
Democratic Sen. Mary Landrieu is another top target for Republicans in 2014.
GOP operatives believe their preferred candidate, Rep. Bill Cassidy, is in a good position to take advantage of dissatisfaction with ObamaCare as a physician and outspoken critic of the law.
Still, Democrats hope to make Gov. Bobby Jindals rejection of the Medicaid expansion under ObamaCare an issue for Cassidy, who has criticized that portion of the law.
Landrieu is also battle-tested, and stands to benefit from the changing demographics of the state. Shes also in line to pick up the Energy Committee gavel thanks to Sen. Max Baucus (D-Mont.) likely exit for an ambassadorship, a plum perch for a Democrat running in an oil-heavy state.
And though Cassidy has begun to coalesce some conservative support behind him, Republicans privately admit he could suffer if outside conservative groups back his main conservative challenger, retired Air Force colonel Rob Maness.
Thanks for the synopsis! It’s sometimes hard to keep the players straight when you don’t live in these states........yet they are important to all of us, especially this election cycle....
I'm sorry, but this person was an intern two years ago and barely out of diapers in my opinion. There isn't any real analysis here except for what she's heard around the water cooler, or lattes or whatever these young reporters do now to goof off.
For Georgia, she's just parroting the same old tired party line with respect to Michelle Nunn and her [ooga-booga] name recognition. They wish. The truth is Sam Nunn deserted the US in 1997 and hasn't done anything noteworthy Georgia-wide since then except take some cush gigs at the University System and to join all the boards of directors he can.
He, his name, is a generation long dormant in my opinion. I haven't heard his name in over a decade anywhere except those now saying how much gravitas it has for his unphotogenic, bland daughter.
I also think she is blowing off the real situations in NC and Kentucky all too lightly. Again, mainly from a view point as to how the Democrats can win instead of concentrating on the fact that the GOPe has a REAL problem with conservatives.
If all goes well, the GOP should see a gain of three or four seats in the Senate next year. Georgia is a worry, however, with no advantages of incumbency, combined with the name-recognition advantage for Nunn.
It seems there’s too much southern common sense in Georgia (outside of Atlanta) to elect a Democtratic in this era of Obie
Another Race to watch:
The Illinois Senate Race Dick Durbin’s most likely contender
Jim Oberweis.
Jim has money and has friends that have money.
The recent pole shows Oberweis 11 percentage points trailing Dickie Durbin
I would suggest all of them, but for sure, SD, MS, ID, NE, and MN as well as those listed.
My take on these:
McConnell survives
Hagan’s gone
AR is an open seat and will go GOP
GA easily stays GOP
LA is a toss up, but with a good candidate, the GOP can win
> Democrats are mostly playing defense, but see a few opportunities to peel away seats from the GOP column.
Thanks Cincinatus’ Wife.
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