Los Angeles Times

VOTERS SEND MIXED FALL SIGNALS

GOP has advantage of being out of power, but abortion issue has energized Democrats.

- By Melanie Mason

At the start of 2022, the political consensus was Democrats were toast. Inf lation was at record highs, President Biden’s approval numbers were slumping and precedent pointed to odds heavily stacked against the party that held the White House in the November midterms.

Nine months later, inflation is still high, Biden’s ratings remain subpar and the history books are unchanged. Yet the chatter among pundits and party strategist­s now centers on whether the Democrats might avoid a rout this fall — or even, improbably, keep their hold of Congress.

The narrative may flip once, or a few times, more during this nine-week sprint to the general election that customaril­y begins in earnest after Labor Day. Although convention­al wisdom often churns during the campaign season, the state of play is particular­ly enigmatic in this unsettled political moment.

Since the last national vote in 2020, the country has endured, among other things, an attack on the U.S. Capitol, an ugly withdrawal from a 20-year war in Afghanista­n, the reversal of Roe vs. Wade and an FBI search of a former president’s home. There have been the continuing horrors of mass shootings in schools, supermarke­ts and even at a 4th of July parade. And the COVID-19 pandemic, while waning from the political forefront, still weighs on the nation’s physical and mental state.

Polarizati­on has turned personal, as a recent Pew report found Democrats and Republican­s increasing­ly view people in opposite parties as immoral and dishonest. Faith in the country’s institutio­ns, such as the presidency and the Supreme Court, has hit a record low average, according to Gallup. Nearly 6 in 10 of American voters in a New York Times/Siena College poll said the country’s system of government needs to be majorly reformed or completely replaced.

“It feels really fragile right now. To me, that’s what is unpreceden­ted about this moment,” said Christophe­r Ojeda, a UC Merced political scientist who researches how politics affects mental health. “People are really wondering — is this democratic experiment going to keep working as we move toward the 2024 election?”

All of which is to say, it’s

weird out there.

By traditiona­l metrics, Democrats remain disadvanta­ged. In the post-World War II era, the president’s party has lost House seats in every midterm election except in 1998 (during President Clinton’s impeachmen­t, widely seen as GOP overreach) and 2002 (in the aftermath of 9/11). The Senate is only slightly friendlier, with the ruling party avoiding losses five times in the last 19 midterm cycles.

Republican­s are in prime position after redistrict­ing, needing to flip only five seats to capture the House majority. And voters’ pessimism on the erratic economy — hiring is strong, but inf lation is at a four-decade high — is an advantage for the GOP.

“The numbers and fundamenta­ls don’t lie,” said Matt Gorman, a GOP strategist and former communicat­ions director of the National Republican Congressio­nal Committee, which works to elect Republican­s to the House. He pointed to Biden’s approval rating, which still averages in the low 40s, as “the one number above all others that I’m looking at.”

Still, election prognostic­ators have recently recalibrat­ed their views, churning out analyses that GOP control of the House is “no longer a foregone conclusion,” and “the Senate majority is up for grabs.”

Recent polls have shown some movement in Democrats’ favor. Since midAugust, they’ve claimed a slight edge, on average, when voters are asked which party they will back in congressio­nal elections this fall, after trailing Republican­s for the entirety of 2022. In pivotal Senate races, Democratic candidates have largely outpolled their opponents, and although the House is a stronger playing field for Republican­s, forecaster­s have revised downward the number of seats the GOP is likely to pick up.

Those shifts are attributed to several factors, including Democrats’ recent legislativ­e success and steadily dropping gas prices. But none loom quite as large

as the Supreme Court’s decision in Dobbs vs. Jackson Women’s Health Organizati­on. The ruling, released in late June, overturned Roe vs. Wade, which for nearly 50 years had guaranteed a federal right to abortion. It set off a ripple of sweeping bans in conservati­ve states, including ones that make no exceptions for cases of rape, incest or threats to the woman’s life.

Prior to the decision, abortion had generally been a bigger motivator for those who oppose it, and the issue had ranked low in polls on voters’ priorities, lagging behind economic concerns. But in five special elections held since Dobbs, Democrats won a higher vote percentage than did Biden in those districts in 2020, and in Kansas, abortion rights supporters decisively defeated an antiaborti­on constituti­onal amendment — fueling the sense of an electoral earthquake.

A dramatic spike in new

voter registrati­on among women foreshadow­ed the surprise Kansas vote, said Tom Bonier, the chief executive of the Democratic political data firm TargetSmar­t. He since has seen women make up surging numbers of new registrant­s in battlegrou­nd states such as Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvan­ia. Although newcomers constitute a small percentage of voters, he said those trends could reflect the intense reaction to Dobbs from the electorate overall.

“I’ve gone from surprised that we’re seeing these unpreceden­ted numbers in registrati­on and turnout to a point where I would be surprised if we don’t look back and see Dobbs as an inflection point,” Bonier said. “I do think it is that type of beforeand-after moment where everything changed.”

Ken Spain, a Republican strategist and former spokesman for the House GOP campaign arm, agreed

that Dobbs roused lethargic Democrats but said it’s often the case that disaffecte­d base voters come home to their party as the midterms near.

“The question is, is this the consolidat­ion that would normally take place post-Labor Day happening earlier? Or is there a fundamenta­l shift in the trajectory of the election?” he said. “I don’t think anybody knows the answer to that.”

Although the landscape still favors his party, Spain said, the GOP has hampered itself by not keeping a relentless focus on Biden.

“Republican­s today have not done a very good job of making this a referendum election and tying Democratic candidates to the president,” he said.

The missed opportunit­y is partially of the GOP’s own making. In key battlegrou­nd states such as Pennsylvan­ia and Arizona, Republican primary voters picked political novices for Senate who

had embraced hard-line positions. Those candidates have struggled to pivot to a more moderate general electorate, drawing the focus to themselves instead of Biden and their opponents.

“Candidate quality still matters in a deeply polarized electorate,” said Shana Kushner Gadarian, a professor of political science at Syracuse University. “The party who wants to win is going to run more moderate candidates.”

The GOP also strains to keep the spotlight on Biden when another political leader — Trump — continues to command attention. His myriad legal battles, including the FBI search of Mar-a-Lago for classified documents and the ongoing hearings on the effort to overturn the 2020 election and the Jan. 6, 2021, assault on the Capitol, are constant reminders of the volatile politics of the Trump era.

Biden, meanwhile, appears to be receding in people’s minds; a recent Pew Research Center poll found that nearly half of registered voters said Biden will not be much of a factor when they cast their ballot, compared with 31% who think of their midterm vote as a sign of opposition to Biden and 19% whose vote signals support. Those seeing Biden as a nonfactor went up 11 points in August, compared with five months ago.

In 2018, 60% said Trump was a factor in their vote — 37% against him and 23% for him, Pew’s numbers showed.

Biden’s decreasing significan­ce in determinin­g how people vote is “pretty unusual ... especially in this era, when the president is so dominant in terms of policy,” said Carroll Doherty, Pew’s director of political research.

Surveys have sent other idiosyncra­tic signals, tilting more favorably toward Democrats even as overwhelmi­ng majorities continue to say the country is on the wrong track. A Wall Street Journal poll last week found that Biden’s approval rating has ticked up to 45%, and the generic congressio­nal ballot has swung eight points in the Democrats’ direction since March — all while just a quarter of respondent­s said the nation is headed in the right direction.

“There’s a lot of data coming out that is contradict­ing itself, going both directions, and it’s hard to know what to make of it,” said Ryan Enos, professor of government and director of the Center for American Political Studies at Harvard University.

The haziness has led to a familiar refrain among those who have made politics their profession: “I don’t know.”

“We have to engage in this election with an acceptance of a broader sense of uncertaint­y,” said Bonier, the Democratic data analyst. “This still could end up being a wave election for the Republican­s. Or it could be a colossal failure for Republican­s and a deviation from the historical precedent of half a century, and Democrats could hold on to the Congress.”

 ?? THE SUPREME COURT Andrew Harnik Associated Press ?? decision to overturn Roe vs. Wade has scrambled the election calculus for November. There has been a dramatic spike in new voter registrati­on among women, one data analyst has found.
THE SUPREME COURT Andrew Harnik Associated Press decision to overturn Roe vs. Wade has scrambled the election calculus for November. There has been a dramatic spike in new voter registrati­on among women, one data analyst has found.

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