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Election Analysis: 3 Reasons Democrats Could Do Better Than Most Expect
Christian Post ^ | 11/1/2014 | Napp Nazworth

Posted on 11/01/2014 6:30:19 PM PDT by SeekAndFind

Most pundits and pollsters expect the Republican Party to do well in Tuesday's midterm elections. The Democratic Party may outperform expectations, however, for these three reasons.

1. Democrats raised and spent a lot of money, and spent it well.

In overall campaign spending, Republicans have done better than Democrats. Democrats, however, have kept the spending race close. Plus, the Republican advantage is mostly in House races, where the outcome is more certain, than in the races that will determine which party controls the Senate. And, Democratic candidates in several tight races have spent their campaign funds more wisely than their Republican challengers.

Republicans do have a sizable advantage in House races. Republican House candidates have outspent Democratic House candidates by about $98 million ($444 million to $346 million), according to OpenSecrets.org. But, since Democrats have little chance of taking control of the House, the Senate races are where most of the action lies.

There are a significant number of tight Senate races that will determine control of the next Senate. In those races, Republican Senate candidates have outspent Democratic Senate candidates by only about $15 million ($263 million to $248 million). Plus, Democrats have a spending advantage with advocacy groups. Liberal advocacy groups have outspent outside conservative advocacy groups by $41 million ($66 million to $25 million) in federal races.

Additionally, spending is only one measure of a successful campaign. How that money is spent is another.

In many of the key Senate races, the Democratic candidate prudently bought much of the available ad time early. This strategy had several advantages: It means they were able to run more ads than their challengers, they bought the ads when it was cheaper, and it drove up the prices for the ads that Republicans eventually bought.

An Oct. 9 Slate article pointed out, for instance, that Democratic candidates and liberal groups aired more TV ads than their opponents in seven of the nine most competitive Senate races.

2. Democrats still have the sophisticated turnout operation that helped Obama win in 2012.

Democrats built a sophisticated voter turnout operation to help President Barack Obama beat Republican candidate Mitt Romney in 2012. That operation involves a mixed use of large amounts of data with new Internet technologies and active volunteers.

Republicans have generally done better in midterm elections because they get most of their support from demographic groups that vote at higher rates in midterms — voters that are older, white and have higher levels of income.

For Democrats to do well, they must get non-whites, the younger and those with lower levels of income to vote at higher rates than they normally do in midterm elections. If they are able to do that, many of the polls that are based upon "likely voters" could be off by several percentage points.

The Democrat's voter turnout operation already appears to be showing some results in Colorado, Georgia, Iowa and North Carolina. As Nate Cohn pointed out for The New York Times, over 20 percent of the early voters so far in those states did not vote in the 2010 midterm elections.

3. The demographic shift that is expected to hurt Republicans in the future may already be here.

The Republican Party has some significant demographic challenges it must overcome to remain competitive at the national level. Since the country's becoming increasingly racially and ethnically diverse, Republicans will need to do a better job at reaching out to non-whites.

Some Republican strategists have argued that the Party does not need to do that yet. In the short term, they argue, they can win elections by mobilizing more white voters. (An Aug. 1 Christian Post analysis pointed out why that strategy would be a disaster.)

It could be, however, (and this dovetails with reason #2) that the demographic shift that Republicans are dreading is already here. They would know this is the case if non-whites turnout in high numbers and prevent the big Republican wave that the pundits and pollsters are expecting on Tuesday. After all, if Republicans cannot win in 2014, when can they?


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2014; democrats; elections
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To: The Ghost of FReepers Past

bingo


21 posted on 11/01/2014 7:36:38 PM PDT by jonno (Having an opinion is not the same as having the answer...)
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To: The Ghost of FReepers Past
We live in rural Alaska, no cell phones, ect. In last 3 weeks have received over 100 calls (dem polls trying to get ya to vote for Begich) for all four family members; several a night actually. My son even had a call to go to a party at bar for the pot initiative; I asked the girl if she'd email her pict and I said I'd look for her, ha. We have only had 2 calls from the repub party, where I was talking to an actual person.

The dems are really going after the rural, mostly Indian votes. They are making sure the Indians vote enmass for the dems this time; usually Indians don't vote at all. We have 100,000 Indians in Alaska; I sure hope they all don't vote.

22 posted on 11/01/2014 8:06:58 PM PDT by Eska
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To: SeekAndFind

1. Fraud
2. Stupidity
3. Intimidation

The 3 pillars of rat politics.


23 posted on 11/01/2014 8:43:58 PM PDT by Some Fat Guy in L.A. (Still bitterly clinging to rational thought despite it's unfashionability)
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To: SeekAndFind

They’ll continue this BS right up until Tuesday. Then all these articles will be flushed from memory. And they’ll start over talking about how the GOP is going to lose in 2016. How they need to reach out to Democrats. How they need to work with Obama. Etc.


24 posted on 11/01/2014 9:12:44 PM PDT by nhwingut (This tagline for lease)
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To: SeekAndFind

1: Voter fraud on an epic scale

2: RINO war on the Tea Party

3: Alienating blue collar whites with shamnesty


25 posted on 11/01/2014 9:50:31 PM PDT by Viennacon
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To: The Ghost of FReepers Past

Exactly. Suddenly there are headlines everywhere about nasty Republicans gaining in the polls blah blah even on Drudge (Ernst up by 7 points Aaaaagh the horror!!) - all to panic demoncRATS into getting off their arses to vote. It’s all slickery like media manipulation and head games. Nothing is real anymore. Can’t trust a damn thing going on out there. And if all else fails the ballot stuffing and dead people voting and illegals voting multiple times will seal the deal. And if that fails lawsuits and recounts will jack things up for months. Ain’t much USA left. The lunatics are running the asylum.


26 posted on 11/01/2014 11:05:39 PM PDT by bluejean (Ronnie - where are you? The Shining City on the hill is going dark!)
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To: bluejean
Fix is in here in Alaska. Two weeks back, dem donors funded program to get out the vote in rural villages. Indians stick together. Here in our village, even the Repub registered Indians are voting for Begich. I argued about how Begich will vote for left wing Sup Ct justices and void 2nd amendment and they didn't care; highly unusual. Promises of big money have been made to the villages. How it works in America I guess.

I'm worried it will throw a close election in dems favor and I am seeing it first hand, completely legal too. Indians are too stupid to realize they'll screw them too after Begich gets in, GRATES ME TO NO END.

27 posted on 11/02/2014 4:29:53 AM PST by Eska
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To: Eska
Fix is in here in Alaska.

Heard about it on a Hugh Hewitt replay the other night. The DNC has a ground game in your state that they hope will save them.

The E-GOP is so disjointed nationwide, and many like me won't volunteer after all the snubbing and sticking it in our ear, aka Mississippi and all the anti-teaparty shenanigans. And they have no master-plan or central website like this and they are 10 years behind.

http://neworganizing.com/

And people wonder why we want a new party? The E-GOP has to be torn down to the Foundations and a new house needs to be constructed...

28 posted on 11/02/2014 4:36:26 AM PST by taildragger (Not my Circus, Not my Monkey ( Boy does that apply to DC...))
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To: taildragger
Like I was saying, I only had a couple calls from Repubs, had over 100 from dems; we live in a rural community that has an Indian Village 6 miles from town. Everybody here has had all kinds of calls.

Be close, sure hope the Repubs turn out to vote. There's 100,000 Indians, I bet 30-40 thou vote from dems ground game. Only 547,000 reg voters in Ak, more Repubs than dems, but 35K Indian votes can throw election in dems favor. You'd have thought the Repubs would have done better, must not care about Ak?

29 posted on 11/02/2014 5:18:15 AM PST by Eska
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To: FreedomStar3028
I didn’t receive a ballot. I am registered as a republican

Hmmm.

In 2010, we (all 7 of us) never saw a census taker. That was OK with me then, but now I wonder.

30 posted on 11/02/2014 5:27:05 AM PST by Jim Noble (When strong, avoid them. Attack their weaknesses. Emerge to their surprise.)
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To: SeekAndFind

This statement is bogus:

In many of the key Senate races, the Democratic candidate prudently bought much of the available ad time early. This strategy had several advantages: It means they were able to run more ads than their challengers, they bought the ads when it was cheaper, and it drove up the prices for the ads that Republicans eventually bought.

Evidently the writer never heard of the “lowest unit rate” requirement spelled out in 47 U.S.C. Sec. 315. The GOP would be entitled to buy the same advertising at the same rate the ‘Rats bought it.


31 posted on 11/02/2014 8:37:36 AM PST by nd76
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To: FreedomStar3028

Depends on where you live? Just Google for info.


32 posted on 11/02/2014 10:13:26 AM PST by pollywog ( " O thou who changest not....ABIDE with me")
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To: FreedomStar3028
I didn’t receive a ballot.

I know a Democrat. I can get you a ballot. Just tell me which state. You won't even have to mark it; it comes that way.

33 posted on 11/02/2014 11:59:45 AM PST by Scoutmaster (Opinions don't affect facts. But facts should affect opinions, and do, if you're rational)
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