Dayton Daily News

With primaries done, it’s on to the midterms

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The general election has begun, and the two parties have their standard-bearers. At stake: The balance of power in D.C., states.

Primary season is over: Democrats and Republican­s have chosen their standard- bearers and defined their major arguments, and the general election has begun.

The midterm campaigns not only will determine the balance of power in Congress and the states but also will shape the strategies and identities of the two parties heading into the 2020 presidenti­al race.

Here are some of themain lessons we’ve taken from the primaries and the start of the fall campaign.

Two paths emerging for the Democrats

Democrats hope to use the midterm elections to position themselves for a comeback in the 2020 presidenti­al election, by retaking or capturing two swaths of the country President Donald Trump carried in 2016: the industrial Midwest, stretching from Wisconsin to Pennsylvan­ia, and the diverse Sun Belt battlegrou­nds of Florida, Arizona and Georgia.

They have nominated starkly di ff ff ff ff ff ff e rent sets of candidates in the two regions, representi­ng two broad paths forward for the party. In the Midwest, the party has largely fifielded well-known white politician­s who are modestly to the left of center— fifififigu­res like Richard Cordray, the former bank overseer in the Obama administra­tion who is locked in a close race for governor in Ohio; and Gretchen Whitmer, the former Democratic leader in the Michigan state Senate who is leading in the governor’s race. These candidates are seeking to reassemble the traditiona­l, union-heavy Rust Belt Democratic coalition that frayed in 2016.

The Democratic tickets in the Sun Belt are more diverse and more liberal, led by candidates such as Andrew Gil- lum, the progressiv­e Talla-hassee mayor who seized the nomination for Florida governor in an upset and Stacey Abrams, the former Democratic leader in the Georgia House. The candidates are counting on mobilizing voters who have not typically turned out in midterms, to transform these Republican-leaning states into purple swing states before 2020.

Democrats are likely to gain across both regions, overall. But if they fare markedly better in one than another, it could shape Democrats’ thinking about 2020.

A new generation rising, led by women

A record number of women emerged from primary elections this year, powered by strong turnout among female voters and an apparent hunger across the electorate for candidates promising change. There are 257 women running for House and Senate seats around the country — 197 of them Democrats — and more than a dozen female nominees for governor. This class of candidates has the potential to create a dramatic change in the image and culture of U.S. government.

On the Democratic side, the appeal of female candidates appeared to transcend ideologica­l fault lines in the party. Democrats nominated liberal women and moderate women, military veterans and activists, corporate lawyers and Bernie Sanders organizers. They nominated women who worked for Hillary Clinton’s historic presidenti­al campaign, and women who pledged never to help Nancy P el osi,t he barrier- breaking former House speaker, reclaim that job.

Polls suggest the country is headed for a gaping gender gap in November, as moderate women flee the Trump-led Republican Party but whitemen remain mostly loyal. That could set up a powerful contrast in the new Congress between an incoming class of female lawmakers, and a president who has been accused by numerous women of serious sexual misconduct.

There are new rules for both parties

Republican candidates jockeyed to see who could hug Trump tighter in this year’s primaries, while Democratic hopefuls veered to the left in a series of nominating contests. But even as the two parties seem to be pulling further apart from one another, it was what they had in common this primary season that illustrate­s how much politics is being transforme­d: Republican­s and Democrats in 2018 paid little heed to the decorous rules and precedents that have long governed how they choose candidates.

Trump ran through the Republican primaries, ignoring the tradition of presidenti­al neutrality by taking sides in nominating contests and even opposing a handful of incumbents. His interventi­ons largely pleased Senate Republican­s, who kept him out of some races and prodded himinto others. But his endorsemen­ts in governor’s races blindsided the party and in some cases may have propelled weaker general election candidates to wins.

For their part, a group of Democratic insurgents targeted incumbent lawmakers who had nowhiffff of scandal and reliably liberal voting records. And incumbency, corruption-free service and voting the right way did not prove sufficient for Reps. Joseph Crowley of New York and Michael P. Capuano of Massachuse­tts, who were upset by women of color, Alexandria Ocasio- Cortez and Ayanna Pressley, who argued that this moment demanded something more.

Republican­s bleeding in open seats

The Republican House majority is beleaguere­d, bur- dened by Trump’s intense unpopulari­ty and battling an imposing set of Democratic challenger­s with broad appeal. But at the outset of the general election, there is no more urgent problem for the party than the dozens of open seats Republican­s must defend, where long- serving incumbents chose to retire and the party has struggled to fifield strong replacemen­ts.

Democrats must gain 23 seats to take control of the House, and they could win a quarter ormore just from these vacancies. Democrats might have struggled to beat Rep. Dave Reichert in the Seattle suburbs or Rep. Frank LoBiondo in southern New Jersey, and it could have been impossible to defeat Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen in Miami. But all three incumbents retired, and their seats are now tossups or leaning toward the Democrats.

The challenge extends to the Senate, too, where Democrats have a slim-but-plausible pathway to taking control in large part because Sen. Bob Corker of Tennessee decided to retire and former Gov. Phil Bredesen, a popular moderate Democrat, entered the race to replace him. (He faces Rep. Marsha Blackburn.)

Republican­s may yet keep their control of the House, with a powerfully funded, overwhelmi­ngly negative campaign aimed at disqualify­ing Democratic challenger­s in swing seats. But their margin for error is slim.

Senate Democrats #Resistance(ish)

With strategist­s in both parties increasing­ly convinced Democrats are well positioned to take control of the House, the center-stage drama this fall may be the battle for the Senate majority.

So with the Senate election this year mostly being fought in conservati­ve-leaning states, this turn of events has created an odd juxtaposit­ion: The full success of the anti-Trump forces in the midterms could hinge on Senate Democratic candidates who spend more time discussing howthey can work with the president than they do vowing to block his agenda.

From North Dakota and West Virginia to Tennessee and Arizona, Democratic candidates are benefiting from their party’s disdain for Trump, raising money from all over the country, while down playing their objections to his presidency.

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