Santa Fe New Mexican

Dems get boost from women, independen­ts

- By Scott Clement

WASHINGTON — Strong support from women and independen­ts is fueling Democrats’ large early advantage ahead of this year’s congressio­nal elections, a sign that two groups that have recoiled from Donald Trump’s presidency will play a decisive role in November, according to a new Washington Post-ABC News poll.

The government shutdown and rising economic optimism are just two factors that could shuffle preference­s over the nine months before Election Day, with Republican­s hoping to take more credit for economic growth and cast Democrats as anti-Trump obstructio­nists.

By 51 percent to 39 percent, more registered voters say they would support the Democratic candidate in their congressio­nal district over the Republican. Democrats’ 12 percentage-point advantage on this “generic ballot” question is the largest in Post-ABC polling since 2006, although it is slightly larger than other polls this month.

Judging from past elections, Democrats are expected to need a six- to eight-point advantage in national support this fall to gain the 24 seats needed win control of the House. Election handicappe­rs say a Democratic takeover is possible, but not yet likely. Democrats would fall five seats short even if they won all contests the Cook Political Report classifies as solidly Democratic, leaning Democratic or toss-ups.

The Post-ABC poll finds Democrats holding a 57 percent to 31 percent advantage among female voters, double the size of Democratic presidenti­al nominee Hillary Clinton’s margin in the 2016 election.

Nonwhite women favor Democrats by a 53-point margin, somewhat smaller than Clinton’s 63-point advantage over Trump in 2016.

Partisan loyalty is strong, with Republican and Democratic candidates garnering support from at least 9 in 10 of their fellow partisans, but self-identified political independen­ts favor Democrats by a 16-point margin, 50 percent to 34 percent. The swing group has been decisive in three consecutiv­e midterm election waves, backing Republican­s by 19 points in 2010 and 12 points in 2014, but supporting Democrats by 18 points in 2006 as they retook control of the House.

Although the president’s party nearly always loses seats in Congress in midterm elections, Trump’s 36 percent jobapprova­l rating puts Republican­s at particular risk this year.

Antipathy for Trump is concentrat­ed among both women and independen­ts, helping to explain Democrats’ strong standing.

One obstacle for Democrats — which Republican­s hope to solidify amid the shutdown — is the perception that they are solely opposing Trump. Among voters who disapprove of Trump and say Democrats are presenting alternativ­es to his proposals, 9 in 10 favor Democrats over Republican­s in congressio­nal races. That drops to just over 7 in 10 among Trump disapprove­rs who say Democrats are mainly criticizin­g the president’s proposals without presenting alternativ­es.

Republican­s hope that rising economic optimism will shield their party from major losses this year.

The Post-ABC poll found a 58 percent majority of adults saying that the economy is in excellent or good shape, up seven points since Trump’s inaugurati­on.

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