2020 election toolbox...13-24 25-44 45-64 65+ 22.2% 31.1% 45.7% 39.1% 27.6% 24.2% trump biden 8 a...

17
2020 Election Toolbox A guide to the 2020 presidential, congressional, and gubernatorial elections July 14, 2020 Producer National Journal Presentation Center

Upload: others

Post on 02-Aug-2020

2 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: 2020 Election Toolbox...13-24 25-44 45-64 65+ 22.2% 31.1% 45.7% 39.1% 27.6% 24.2% Trump Biden 8 A number of major polls show Joe Biden with a lead over President Trump 38 41 43 42

2020 Election Toolbox

A guide to the 2020 presidential, congressional, and gubernatorial elections

July 14, 2020

Producer National Journal Presentation Center

Page 2: 2020 Election Toolbox...13-24 25-44 45-64 65+ 22.2% 31.1% 45.7% 39.1% 27.6% 24.2% Trump Biden 8 A number of major polls show Joe Biden with a lead over President Trump 38 41 43 42

Roadmap

Presidential election

Congressional elections

Gubernatorial elections

Page 3: 2020 Election Toolbox...13-24 25-44 45-64 65+ 22.2% 31.1% 45.7% 39.1% 27.6% 24.2% Trump Biden 8 A number of major polls show Joe Biden with a lead over President Trump 38 41 43 42

3

Keys to the 2020 presidential election

Zachary Goldstein | Slide last updated on: May 26, 2020

Sources: US News & World Report, Migration Policy Institute, New York Times, Vox, FiveThirtyEight, Washington Post.

President Trump’s approval rating has fluctuated due to the COVID-19 outbreak• In estimates based on 2018 midterm exit polls and results, President Trump received strong approval ratings in

solidly red states and majority support in key states such as Georgia (51.0%), Texas (50.7%), and Florida (50.2%)• However, the coronavirus outbreak led to an initial spike in approval followed by a fairly steady decrease since the

end of March 2020

Suburban districts may play an important role in 2020 elections• Many suburban districts flipped from red to blue in the 2018 congressional midterm elections: of the 69 suburban

districts held by Republicans before the midterms, 37 voted for the Democratic House candidate• These suburban voters could play a significant role in both the 2020 presidential election and 2020 congressional

races

Changing demographics in key states could make them more competitive• Metropolitan areas in Texas are projected to double in population from 2010 to 2050• Texas experienced the largest absolute growth in immigrant population of any state from 2000 to 2017• If Clinton won Texas, she would have reached the 270 electoral votes needed to win the presidential election• Changing demographics in swing states such as Arizona and Florida will also play a role in the election outcome

A transition to virtual campaigns may impact candidate support• In 2016 and following his election, rallies have played a major role in garnering support and boosting President

Trump’s campaign• Trump has held 400 rallies since announcing his candidacy for the 2016 election and had been holding one or two

rallies each week prior to the shutdown due to the coronavirus outbreak

Page 4: 2020 Election Toolbox...13-24 25-44 45-64 65+ 22.2% 31.1% 45.7% 39.1% 27.6% 24.2% Trump Biden 8 A number of major polls show Joe Biden with a lead over President Trump 38 41 43 42

2016 election

outcome

Clinton EC votes, 222

MN10

PA20

MI16

NC15

FL29

AZ11

GA16

Trump EC votes, 189WI10

4

Potential 2020 electoral college scenarios based on performance in swing states

Alice Johnson | Slide last updated on: May 28, 2019

2% shift

towards Clinton

in swing states

Clinton EC votes, 222

MN10

PA20

MI16

NC15

FL29

AZ11

GA16

Trump EC votes, 189WI10

4% shift

towards Clinton

in swing states

Clinton EC votes, 222

MN10

PA20

MI16

NC15

FL29

AZ11

GA16

Trump EC votes, 189WI10

*North Carolina did not have a Senate election in 2018

Sources: Swing states based on Cook Political Report rankings270 Electoral College votes needed to win

2018 Senate race

outcomes in swing

states

Clinton EC votes, 222

MN10

PA20

MI16

NC*15

FL29

AZ11

GA16

Trump EC votes, 189WI10

Page 5: 2020 Election Toolbox...13-24 25-44 45-64 65+ 22.2% 31.1% 45.7% 39.1% 27.6% 24.2% Trump Biden 8 A number of major polls show Joe Biden with a lead over President Trump 38 41 43 42

YearRecession in 2 years before

election?President Reelection?

1912 YES Taft NO

1916 NO Wilson YES

1924 YES Coolidge YES

1932 YES Hoover NO

1936 NO FDR YES

1940 NO FDR YES

1944 NO FDR YES

1948 NO Truman YES

1956 NO Eisenhower YES

1964 NO Johnson YES

1972 NO Nixon YES

1976 YES Ford NO

1980 YES Carter NO

1984 NO Reagan YES

1992 YES H.W. Bush NO

1996 NO Clinton YES

2004 NO W. Bush YES

2012 NO Obama YES

5

How does a recession impact a president’s reelection bid?

Alice Johnson | Slide last updated on: March 17, 2020

Sources: Mehlman Castagnetti

presidents since 1912

have faced a recession

within 2 years before their

reelection bid

6

5 of those 6presidents lost reelection

Page 6: 2020 Election Toolbox...13-24 25-44 45-64 65+ 22.2% 31.1% 45.7% 39.1% 27.6% 24.2% Trump Biden 8 A number of major polls show Joe Biden with a lead over President Trump 38 41 43 42

6

Financial summary at the end of May 2020

$287

$215

$187

$133

$108

$82

Trump Biden

■ Total receipts ■ Total disbursements ■ Ending cash on hand

MILLIONS OF DOLLARS

Sources: Federal Election Commission.

President Trump has spent over $187 million during his presidential campaign

Slide last updated on: June 22, 2020

Page 7: 2020 Election Toolbox...13-24 25-44 45-64 65+ 22.2% 31.1% 45.7% 39.1% 27.6% 24.2% Trump Biden 8 A number of major polls show Joe Biden with a lead over President Trump 38 41 43 42

Note: Social media counts are sourced from campaign social media accounts for contenders that also have official House or Senate accounts

Sources: National Journal Research, Bully Pulpit Interactive.

Trump has spent more than double the amount that Biden’s campaign has on Facebook spending

7

Spending between Jan. 5, 2019 and July 4, 2020

■ Facebook spending ■ Google spending

Yanelle Cruz | Slide last updated on: July 14, 2020

Donald TrumpFacebook likes: 28.3 millionTwitter followers: 83.4 millionInstagram followers: 20.9 million

Joe BidenFacebook likes: 2.1 millionTwitter followers: 6.9 millionInstagram followers: 2.7 million

53.8M

25.3M

31.7M

14.6M

Donald Trump Joe Biden

Targeted Facebook spending by demographic

■ Male ■ Female ■ Unknown

50.4%

62.9%

48.9%

36.0%

Trump

Biden

■ 13-24 ■ 25-44 ■ 45-64 ■ 65+

22.2%

31.1%

45.7%

39.1%

27.6%

24.2%

Trump

Biden

Page 8: 2020 Election Toolbox...13-24 25-44 45-64 65+ 22.2% 31.1% 45.7% 39.1% 27.6% 24.2% Trump Biden 8 A number of major polls show Joe Biden with a lead over President Trump 38 41 43 42

8

A number of major polls show Joe Biden with a lead over President Trump

38

41

43

42

50

53

53

49

5

4

1

5

5

2

1

3

2Fox News

(June 13-16, 2020)

Monmouth University

(June 26-June 30,

2020)

ABC/Washington Post

(May 25-28, 2020)

NBC/WSJ

(May 28-June 2,

2020)

■ Trump ■ Biden ■ Other/Neither ■ Undecided/Not sure ■ Wouldn’t vote/No one

Head-to-head general election polls

Sources: Fox News, NBC/WSJ, ABC/Washington Post, Monmouth University.

Slide last updated on: July 6, 2020

AMONG REGISTERED VOTERS

Page 9: 2020 Election Toolbox...13-24 25-44 45-64 65+ 22.2% 31.1% 45.7% 39.1% 27.6% 24.2% Trump Biden 8 A number of major polls show Joe Biden with a lead over President Trump 38 41 43 42

Roadmap

Presidential election

Congressional elections

Gubernatorial elections

Page 10: 2020 Election Toolbox...13-24 25-44 45-64 65+ 22.2% 31.1% 45.7% 39.1% 27.6% 24.2% Trump Biden 8 A number of major polls show Joe Biden with a lead over President Trump 38 41 43 42

10

Keys to the 2020 congressional races

• To win the majority in the House, Republicans must pick up 18 seats • Out of the 22 seats rated as Toss Ups by The Cook Political Report, 16 belong to incumbent Democrats while six belong to incumbent

Republicans• Out of the 88 seats rated as competitive, 50 belong to Democrats and 33 belong to Republicans

Democrats’ strong position in the House• Heading into the 2020 election, about three times as many Republicans (27) will not seeking reelection as Democrats (10)• Only one of these seats (Rep. Dave Loebsack (IA-2) is at risk of flipping from D to R• Democrats hold a wide lead in most generic ballot polls and hold a strong advantage due to strong fundraising efforts at the

candidate level and weak recruitment efforts for House Republicans

• To gain majority in the Senate, Democrats would need to gain four seats or three seats and the presidency for power in a tie-break• Out of the 35 seats up for reelection, 12 are currently held by Democrats and 23 are currently held by Republicans• Four of the Republican seats are rated as Toss Up by The Cook Political Report (Arizona, Colorado, Maine, and North Carolina)

Multiple competitive races in one state has compounding effect• In Arizona, the race between incumbent Sen. Martha McSally (R-AZ) and retired astronaut Mark Kelly (D) has become increasingly

competitive and Arizona’s role as a swing state in the presidential election will bring a slew of spending and effort to increase turnout for both elections

• In North Carolina, the 2020 Senate, gubernatorial, and presidential race are all competitive

Senate Republicans mostly on defense for 2020• The 2020 Senate election map put Senate Republicans on defense for this election• Sen. Doug Jones (D-AL), currently rated as Lean R, and Sen. Gary Peters (D-MI), currently rated as Lean D, seem to be the only

opportunity for Republicans to increase their majority in the Senate• Senate Republicans and their allied PAC have reserved $94 million of air time for June 1st through election day on behalf of seven

incumbents

10

Sources:

Slide last updated on: May 26, 2020

Keys to the House

Keys to the Senate

Page 11: 2020 Election Toolbox...13-24 25-44 45-64 65+ 22.2% 31.1% 45.7% 39.1% 27.6% 24.2% Trump Biden 8 A number of major polls show Joe Biden with a lead over President Trump 38 41 43 42

Slide last updated on: May 26, 2020

Sources: United States Senate: Class II Roster

11

Senators up for re-election in states won by the opposing party’s 2016 presidential candidate

NH

VT

OH

WVVA

PA

NY

ME

NC

SC

GA

TN*

KY

IN

MI

WI

MN

IL

LATX

OK

ID

NV

OR

WA

CA

AZNM*

CO

WY*

MT ND

SD

IA

UT

FL

AR

MO

MS AL

NE

KS*

AK

HI

Democrats (12) Republicans (23)

Doug Jones (AL) Jeanne Shaheen (NH) Dan Sullivan (AK) Jim Risch (ID) Cindy Hyde-Smith (MS) Lamar Alexander (TN)*

Chris Coons (DE) Cory Booker (NJ) Martha McSally (AZ) Joni Ernst (IA) Steve Daines (MT) Lindsey Graham (SC)

Dick Durbin (IL) Tom Udall (NM)* Tom Cotton (AR) Pat Roberts (KS)* Ben Sasse (NE) John Cornyn (TX)

Ed Markey (MA) Jeff Merkley (OR) Cory Gardner (CO) Mitch McConnell (KY) Thom Tillis (NC) Shelley Moore Capito (WV)

Gary Peters (MI) Jack Reed (RI) David Perdue (GA) Bill Cassidy (LA) Jim Inhofe (OK) Mike Enzi (WY)*

Tina Smith (MN) Mark Warner (VA) Kelly Loeffler (GA) Susan Collins (ME) Mike Rounds (SD)

*Senators not seeking reelection in 2020

■ Democratic senator Trump victory

■ Republican senator Clinton victoryGary Peters (D) won in 2014 by 13.3%

Doug Jones (D) won in a 2017 special election by 1.5%

Cory Gardner (R) won in 2014 by 1.9%

Susan Collins (R) won in 2014 by 37.0%

Page 12: 2020 Election Toolbox...13-24 25-44 45-64 65+ 22.2% 31.1% 45.7% 39.1% 27.6% 24.2% Trump Biden 8 A number of major polls show Joe Biden with a lead over President Trump 38 41 43 42

■ Seat held by a Republican ■ Seat held by a Democrat ■ Top five states most likely to flip

12Slide last updated on: May 19, 2020

Sources: National Journal

IN ORDER HOW LIKELY THEY ARE TO FLIP PARTY CONTROL

Hotline’s 2020 Senate power rankings

Hotline: Only two Democratic Senate seats are in the top ten most likely to flip party control

3

1

2

4

5

8

6

7

10

*List of challengers is not exhaustive

6. Iowa — Joni Ernst (R)

7. Montana — Steve Daines (R)

8. Georgia — Kelly Loeffler (R)

Georgia — David Perdue (R)

9. Michigan — Gary Peters (D)

10. Kansas — Open seat (R)

1. Alabama:• Incumbent: Doug Jones (D)• Challengers: Former Attorney General Jeff Sessions (R),

former Auburn football coach Tommy Tuberville (R)

2. Colorado: • Incumbent: Cory Gardner (R)• Challengers: Former Gov. John Hickenlooper (D), former

State House Speaker Andrew Romanoff (D),

3. Arizona:• Incumbent: Martha McSally (R)• Challengers: Veteran & retired astronaut Mark Kelly (D)

4. North Carolina:• Incumbent: Thom Tillis (R)• Challengers: Former State Sen. Cal Cunningham (D)

5. Maine: • Incumbent: Susan Collins (R)• Challengers: State House Speaker Sara Gideon (D),

former gov. candidate Betsy Sweet, attorney Bre Kidman

9

Page 13: 2020 Election Toolbox...13-24 25-44 45-64 65+ 22.2% 31.1% 45.7% 39.1% 27.6% 24.2% Trump Biden 8 A number of major polls show Joe Biden with a lead over President Trump 38 41 43 42

■ Seat held by a Republican ■ Seat held by a Democrat

13Slide last updated on: March 18, 2020

* Incumbent not seeking reelection in 2020Sources: National Journal

IN ORDER HOW LIKELY THEY ARE TO FLIP PARTY CONTROL

Hotline’s 2020 House power rankings

Hotline: Fourteen Democrat-held House seats are in the top 20 most likely to flip party control

1. TX-23: Rep. Will Hurd (R)*

2. OK-5: Rep. Kendra Horn (D)

3. SC-1: Rep. Joe Cunningham (D)

4. NM-2: Rep. Xochitl Torres Small (D)

5. NY-22: Rep. Anthony Brindisi (D)

6. GA-7: Rep. Rob Woodall (R)*

7. IA-1: Rep. Abby Finkenauer (D)

8. GA-6: Rep. Lucy McBath (D)

9. MN-7: Rep. Collin Peterson (D)

10. IA-3: Rep. Cindy Axne (D)

11. ME-2: Rep. Jared Golden (D)

12. TX-24: Rep. Kenny Marchant (R)*

13. NY-11: Rep. Max Rose (D)

14. CA-21: Rep. T.J. Cox (D)

15. PA-10: Rep. Scott Perry (R)

16. TX-7: Rep. Lizzie Fletcher (D)

17. NJ-3: Rep. Andy Kim (D)

18. IL-13: Rep. Rodney Davis (R)

19. CA-48: Rep. Harley Rouda (D)

20. TX-22: Rep. Pete Olson (R)*

Page 14: 2020 Election Toolbox...13-24 25-44 45-64 65+ 22.2% 31.1% 45.7% 39.1% 27.6% 24.2% Trump Biden 8 A number of major polls show Joe Biden with a lead over President Trump 38 41 43 42

14

The national GOP committees have raised about $161 million more than their Democratic counterparts so far

Sources: FEC

$372,874,541

$190,701,986

$174,753,273

$146,507,681

$119,599,909

$111,550,572

$477,005,831

$638,982,130

RNC

DCCC

DNC

NRCC

NRSC

DSCC

Total Dem

Total GOP

Total receipts by national party PACs

AS OF MAY 31, 2020

Alice Johnson | Slide last updated on: June 22, 2020

■ Democratic PAC ■ Republican PAC

Page 15: 2020 Election Toolbox...13-24 25-44 45-64 65+ 22.2% 31.1% 45.7% 39.1% 27.6% 24.2% Trump Biden 8 A number of major polls show Joe Biden with a lead over President Trump 38 41 43 42

Roadmap

Presidential election

Congressional elections

Gubernatorial elections

Page 16: 2020 Election Toolbox...13-24 25-44 45-64 65+ 22.2% 31.1% 45.7% 39.1% 27.6% 24.2% Trump Biden 8 A number of major polls show Joe Biden with a lead over President Trump 38 41 43 42

16

Keys to 2020 gubernatorial races

Slide last updated on: May 26, 2020

Sources: Cook Political Report, Ballotpedia,

High visibility during COVID-19 outbreak could favor incumbents• State response has been in the spotlight during the COVID-19 outbreak, leading to coverage of governors and more

exposure to the public• In multiple public polls, most governors have a higher approval rating than President Trump on their handling of

the coronavirus

Few possibilities for party flips• Currently, Democrats hold 24 governorships while Republicans hold 26• In the 2020 elections, seven GOP seats are up for election while four Democratic seats are up for election• However, only two seats are likely to possibly flip parties (NC-Cooper (D) and MT-Open (D))• Montana’s seat is open because incumbent Gov. Steve Bullock (D) is term-limited

Governorships do not always align with partisanship for other offices• Presidential and Senate elections do not necessarily indicate which party will win the governor seat in a state• Although President Trump won Montana by 20 points in 2016, Gov. Steve Bullock (D-MT) won his election

although it was a slimmer margin• Gov. Larry Hogan (R-MD) (up for reelection in 2022) has won two consecutive gubernatorial elections despite

Maryland electing two Democratic senators and Democrats winning the state in presidential elections since 1992• This indicates that voters may be willing to split the ticket for gubernatorial elections

North Carolina is home to many competitive races in 2020• In addition to having a gubernatorial race rated as Lean D by The Cook Political Report, North Carolina also has a

competitive Senate race, is considered a presidential swing state, and has three competitive House races in 2020• An influx of spending, ads, and efforts from campaigns and outside groups will work to raise voter registration,

turnout, and support for their respective sides in 2020

Page 17: 2020 Election Toolbox...13-24 25-44 45-64 65+ 22.2% 31.1% 45.7% 39.1% 27.6% 24.2% Trump Biden 8 A number of major polls show Joe Biden with a lead over President Trump 38 41 43 42

17

There are only two open seats up for election in 2020

*“Open seats” are governorships where incumbent governors are term-limited, they have announced that they are not running for re-election, or lost their primary

Sources: Cook Political Report, 2019

■ Dem. incumbent (3) ■ Dem. open* (1)

■ GOP incumbent (6) ■ GOP open* (1)

Slide last updated on: Dec. 13, 2019

2020 gubernatorial races by incumbent and status

NH

VT

OH

WVVA

PA

NY

ME

NC

SC

GA

TN

KY

IN

MI

WI

MN

IL

LATX

OK

ID

NV

OR

WA

CA

AZNM

CO

WY

MT ND

SD

IA

UT

FL

AR

MO

MS AL

NE

KS

AK

HI

MD

MA

RI

CT

DC

DE

NJ