Chattanooga Times Free Press

AVOIDING A SENATE BLOODBATH

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Karl Rove, an influentia­l Republican strategist, wrote in The Wall Street Journal that President Trump’s political prospects are “more dire” than they were four years ago. “In such a bizarre year, anything is possible. But possible doesn’t mean likely. As insurance, Republican­s better fight like hell to keep the Senate.”

Yes, anything is possible. But the idea that Republican­s need to focus on the Senate, not the White House, is spreading rapidly. Sort of like a virus. When folks don’t wear masks.

“Republican­s on Capitol Hill are beginning to publicly distance themselves from the president,” reports The New York Times. “The shift … indicates that many Republican­s have concluded that Mr. Trump is heading for a loss in November. And they are grasping to save themselves and rushing to re-establish their reputation­s for a coming struggle for their party’s identity.”

Since the House is virtually certain to remain in Democratic hands, a Trump loss would leave the Senate as the GOP’s only possible outpost of effective power in Washington. But here’s their problem. To “fight like hell” for their majority, as Rove suggests, could mean slighting a president who then explodes at their heresy.

Republican candidates have to tread a very fine line — appealing to moderate swing voters who are backing Biden while not alienating Trump’s hardcore base of fervent acolytes.

“If you’re able to say it out loud, there is an effective message that a Republican Senate can be a check on a Democratic-run Washington,” Brendan Buck, a former top aide to House Republican­s, told the Times. “It’s just hard to say that out loud because you have to concede the president is done.”

One critical sign that Republican­s are taking Rove’s advice is campaign cash. As Fred Zeidman, a big Republican backer from Texas, said on CNN: “GOP major donors are redirectin­g money to the Senate races. The Senate is the firewall. We have got to make sure that we hold the Senate no matter who is elected president.”

The battle for the Senate is still very much in doubt. Republican­s hold a 53-to-47 edge, and Democrat Doug Jones is facing almost certain defeat in Alabama. So, assuming Trump loses, Democrats need a net gain of four seats in the remaining races to reach 50 and allow Vice President Kamala Harris the opportunit­y to break ties.

The Economist and the website FiveThirty­Eight both give Democrats a three-out-of-four chance of achieving that goal. The Cook Political Report predicts a 51-seat Democratic edge, while Sabato’s Crystal Ball says 52.

But races can be swayed by local — and sudden — surprises. Democratic challenger Cal Cunningham was steadily leading Republican Sen. Thom Tillis in North Carolina until a messy sexting scandal erased his advantage. And it’s entirely possible that Cunningham’s zipper problem could cost the Democrats the majority.

Meanwhile Republican­s are grappling with their Trump problem in different ways.

Sen. Susan Collins, facing an uphill re-election fight in Maine, urges voters in her latest TV ads to support her “no matter who you’re voting for for president.”

Republican­s who are more comfortabl­y ahead, and less concerned about risking Trump’s wrath, are speaking out more boldly. Sen. John Cornyn of Texas told the Fort Worth Star-Telegram that GOP senators feel “like a lot of women who get married and think they’re going to change their spouse, and that doesn’t usually work out very well.”

If Republican­s can somehow avoid a bloodbath, and preserve their Senate majority, a President Biden would have a far more difficult time governing the country.

 ??  ?? Steven Roberts
Steven Roberts

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