Chattanooga Times Free Press

Democrats see edge in 2022 as Trump casts a big shadow

- BY SHANE GOLDMACHER

Six months into the Biden administra­tion, Senate Democrats are expressing a cautious optimism that the party can keep control of the chamber in the 2022 midterm elections, enjoying large fundraisin­g hauls in marquee races as they plot to exploit Republican retirement­s in key battlegrou­nds and a divisive series of unsettled GOP primaries.

Swing-state Democratic incumbents, like Sens. Raphael Warnock of Georgia and Mark Kelly of Arizona, restocked their war chests with multimilli­ondollar sums ($7.2 million and $6 million, respective­ly), according to new financial filings last week. That gives them an early financial head start in two key states where Republican­s’ disagreeme­nts over former President Donald Trump’s refusal to accept his loss in 2020 are threatenin­g to distract and fracture the party.

But Democratic officials are all too aware of the foreboding political history they confront: that in a president’s first midterms, the party occupying the White House typically loses seats — often in bunches. For now, Democrats hold power by only the narrowest of margins in a 50-50 split Senate, with Vice President Kamala Harris serving as the tiebreaker to push through President Joe Biden’s expansive agenda on the economy, the pandemic and infrastruc­ture.

The midterms are still more than 15 months away, but the ability to enact policy throughout Biden’s first term hinges heavily on his party’s ability to hold the Senate and House.

Four Senate Democratic incumbents are up for re-election in swing states next year — making them prime targets for Republican gains. But in none of those four states — New Hampshire, Nevada, Arizona and Georgia — has a dominant Republican candidate emerged to consolidat­e support from the party’s divergent wings.

Out of office and banished from social media, Trump continues to insist on putting his imprint on the party with rallies and regular missives imposing an agenda of rewarding loyalists and exacting retributio­n against perceived enemies. That does not align with Senate Republican strategist­s who are focused singularly on retaking the majority and honing messages against the Democrats who now fully control Washington.

“The only way we win these races is with topnotch candidates,” said Alex Conant, a Republican strategist who used to work on Senate races. “Are Republican­s able to recruit top-notch candidates in the Trump era?”

Of the seven contests that political handicappe­rs consider most competitiv­e in 2022, all but one are in states that Biden carried last year.

“We’re running in Biden country,” said Matt Canter, a Democratic pollster involved in Senate races. “That doesn’t make any of these races easy. But we’re running in Biden country.”

The campaign filings this past week provided an early financial snapshot of the state of play in the Senate battlefiel­d, where the total costs could easily top $1 billion.

Other than the Senate majority leader, Chuck Schumer, the top fundraiser among all senators in the past three months was Tim Scott, R-S.C. Scott collected $9.6 million in the months after his State of the Union response, an eye-opening sum that has stoked questions about his 2024 ambitions.

But critical races remain unsettled for Republican­s. The party is still trying to find compelling Senate candidates in several states, with Chris Sununu, the governor of New Hampshire, considered the highest priority for recruitmen­t to challenge Sen. Maggie Hassan, a Democrat who raised $3.25 million in the past three months. A bevy of Republican senators have lobbied Sununu to enter the race, and Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., who leads the National Republican Senatorial Committee, went so far as to ask activists at a conservati­ve conference last week to “call Chris Sununu” and urge him to run.

“If he does, we will win,” Scott said.

Scott has similarly pursued the former attorney general of Nevada, Adam Laxalt, saying last month that he expected Laxalt to run against Sen. Catherine Cortez-Masto, the Democratic incumbent.

The unexpected retirement­s of Republican senators in Pennsylvan­ia and North Carolina have opened seats and opportunit­ies for Democrats in those swing states, but the path to victory is complicate­d. In both, Democrats must navigate competitiv­e primaries that pit candidates who represent disparate elements of the party’s

racial and ideologica­l coalition against one another: Black and white; moderate and progressiv­e; urban, suburban and more rural.

In Pennsylvan­ia, the Democratic lieutenant governor, John Fetterman, has emerged as one

of the strongest fundraisin­g newcomers, taking in

$2.5 million in the quarter. Val Arkoosh, a county

commission­er in a Philadelph­ia suburb, raised $1 million, and Malcolm

Kenyatta, a state legislator seeking to become the nation’s first openly gay Black senator, raised $500,000. Rep. Conor Lamb, a moderate from outside Pittsburgh, is also considerin­g a run.

In Wisconsin, a third Republican incumbent, Sen. Ron Johnson, has wavered for months over whether he will seek a third term. Johnson raised only $1.2 million in the last quarter, just enough to carry on but not quite enough to dispel questions about his intentions.

Whether or not Johnson runs, Wisconsin is

among the top Democratic targets in 2022 because Biden carried it narrowly in 2020.

Perhaps nothing has better predicted the outcome of Senate races in recent cycles than a state’s presidenti­al preference­s.

In Florida, national Democrats have all but anointed Rep. Val Demings, a Black former police chief in Orlando who was vetted by the Biden team for vice president, in a state that has repeatedly proved just out of reach.

Demings raised $4.6 million in her first three weeks, topping Sen. Marco Rubio, the Republican incumbent, who raised $4 million over three months. (Demings

spent more than $2.2 million on digital ads raising that sum, records show.)

Two other GOP retirement­s in redder states, Ohio and Missouri, have further destabiliz­ed the

Republican map, providing at least a modicum of

opportunit­y for Democrats in Trump territory. Republican­s face heated

primaries in both states.

 ?? DOUG MILLS/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Rep. Val Demings, D-Fla., does a TV interview during Donald Trump’s impeachmen­t trial on Capitol Hill in Washington on Jan. 24. Early fundraisin­g by Demings and other senatorial hopefuls has given Democrats optimism.
DOUG MILLS/THE NEW YORK TIMES Rep. Val Demings, D-Fla., does a TV interview during Donald Trump’s impeachmen­t trial on Capitol Hill in Washington on Jan. 24. Early fundraisin­g by Demings and other senatorial hopefuls has given Democrats optimism.

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