Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

GOP struggles to keep control

With House race still up in air, Dem fervor jumps for midterms

- By Michael Finnegan

Ohio cliffhange­r signals GOP peril in battle for control of Congress as their spending power wanes.

Republican­s’ brush with defeat in an Ohio House district that President Donald Trump easily won fits the nationwide pattern for special elections during his White House tenure: Democrats are faring far better than they did in 2016.

Even if the final vote count confirms that GOP candidate Troy Balderson squeaked to a slim victory Tuesday, the lackluster support spells trouble for Republican­s from coast to coast as they fight to keep control of the House in November’s midterm elections.

“Whether it’s Montana or Kansas or South Carolina or Arizona, Pennsylvan­ia, now Ohio, Democrats have been overperfor­ming that 2016 baseline, and I think that’s good news for Democrats,” said Nathan Gonzales, editor and publisher of the nonpartisa­n Inside Elections guide.

The fervor of the president’s opposition was a potent force in the Ohio contest. Turnout was high in the Columbus suburbs that favor Democrats, but modest in rural areas that backed Trump in 2016.

“Democratic energy and enthusiasm is far superior to that of Republican­s, and that’s because anger is a stronger motivator than love in politics,” said David Wasserman, who tracks House races for the nonpartisa­n Cook Political Report.

That dynamic has encouraged Democrats, who hope to seize House seats held by Republican­s in districts that Trump lost to Hillary Clinton in 2016. Some, if not all, could be easier for Democrats to win than the one in Ohio, which Trump carried by 11 points.

“We’ve got the intensity, and they don’t,” said Sean Clegg, a Democratic consultant working on some of the California races. Trump’s racial provocatio­ns and separation of immigrant children from their parents at border crossings, he suggested, are sure to damage the GOP.

“It’s hard to go back from Charlottes­ville and putting kids in cages,” he said. “You’ve got about 55 percent of the country who are looking at this and saying, ‘This is a horror show.’ ”

Also disturbing for Republican­s were the results Tuesday from House primaries in Washington state. Two GOP incumbents, Reps. Cathy McMorris Rodgers and Jaime Herrera Beutler, finished with less than 50 percent of the vote, a sign of danger in November.

Republican­s conceded Wednesday that the Ohio vote was worrisome.

Trump might have “driven suburban women and other elements of the Republican coalition away from the party,” said Doug Preisse, the Republican chairman in Ohio’s Franklin County. But it’s not unusual for a new president to suffer setbacks in his first midterm election, he said, and the GOP appears to have kept the Ohio seat.

“It’s a warning, but it’s not a disaster siren,” Preisse said.

Michael Steele, who was Republican National Committee chairman when the GOP retook control of the House under President Barack Obama in 2010, said the party needed to quickly figure out how to match Democrats’ enthusiasm in an election that’s just three months away.

“There is a lack of energy on the Republican side that we are not acknowledg­ing,” he told MSNBC.

The Cook Political Report estimates that Republican­s hold 68 seats in districts that are less favorable to the GOP than the one that gave the party a scare in Ohio. Democrats need to pick up 23 seats to capture control of the House.

In a string of special elections for House seats, Republican­s have consistent­ly fallen short of their 2016 vote. Even before the Ohio election, nonpartisa­n analysts were projecting a Democratic takeover of the House in November.

In Ohio, Democratic candidate Danny O’Connor raised far more money than Balderson, so outside groups came to the Republican’s rescue, spending over $3.5 million on his behalf.

That kind of assistance is all but impossible for GOP forces to provide on a national scale for the November elections.

The lackluster showings by GOP candidates has also reignited a debate within the GOP over whether Trump will be a drag on the party’s chances in November and should stay out of some of the country’s most hotly-contested races.

Inside the White House, Trump aides are mapping out plans for the fall that would offer a variety of options to Republican candidates, be it a visit from the president’s daughter, Ivanka Trump, to a blue state or a presidenti­al tweet for a red-state ally.

Trump took a different lesson from the outcomes, crowing in a series of tweets that his presence on the campaign trail and his record could lift his party and prompt a “giant Red Wave!”

“As long as I campaign and/or support Senate and House candidates (within reason), they will win!” Trump wrote.

White House officials acknowledg­ed that GOP candidates will likely need different types of support depending on the dynamics of each race, according to two people briefed on the debate, who requested anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss internal deliberati­ons.

Ivanka Trump visited Illinois on Wednesday, speaking at Lewis and Clark Community College in Godfrey, alongside Rep. Rodney Davis, R-Ill. While the visit was an official White House endeavor, Davis is a self-described “Main Street Republican” facing a tough re-election. His Democratic opponent, Betsy Dirksen Londrigan, raised more money than he did during the last quarter.

 ?? JUSTIN MERRIMAN/GETTY ?? GOP candidate Troy Balderson celebrates his slim lead over Danny O’Connor on Tuesday night in Newark, Ohio.
JUSTIN MERRIMAN/GETTY GOP candidate Troy Balderson celebrates his slim lead over Danny O’Connor on Tuesday night in Newark, Ohio.

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