Strong showings in new Times/Siena College polls leave a narrow path open for Democrats to keep hold of the chamber, but Republicans maintain an advantage with the map.
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By Jonathan Weisman
Sept. 28, 2024, 5:03 a.m. ET
Democratic Senate candidates in the Upper Midwest states of Michigan, Ohio and Wisconsin hold leads over their Republican competitors, keeping a narrow path open to maintaining Democratic control of Congress’s upper chamber next year, according to new New York Times/Siena College polls.
And, in a surprise that could shake up the Senate battlefield, Dan Osborn, a union organizer and industrial mechanic running as an independent, has jumped to a strong lead in Nebraska’s Second Congressional District, in and around Omaha, over the incumbent Republican, Senator Deb Fischer, reaching a level of support that could keep him competitive in the heavily Republican state.
The showing in the Midwest is a testament to the ability of Democrats, as well as Mr. Osborn, to separate the Senate contests from the presidential race, and keep control of the chamber in play. Senators Tammy Baldwin of Wisconsin and Sherrod Brown of Ohio, veteran incumbents, have created political brands that appear to be independent of their national party, while in Michigan, Representative Elissa Slotkin may be drafting on the strength of Democratic women in her state who occupy the posts of governor, attorney general and secretary of state.
The New York Times/Siena College Poll
September surveys
If this year’s general election for the U.S Senate were held today, which candidate would you be more likely to vote for?
Wisconsin Pennsylvania Arizona Ohio Michigan
Among likely voters. Shaded areas represent margins of error.
Based on New York Times/Siena College polls of 680 voters in Wisconsin, 713 voters in Arizona, 687 voters in Ohio and 688 voters in Michigan and on a New York Times/Philadelphia Inquirer/Siena College poll of 713 voters in Pennsylvania. The polls of Michigan, Ohio and Wisconsin were conducted from Sept. 21 to 26. The poll of Arizona was conducted from Sept. 17 to 21. The poll of Pennsylvania was conducted from Sept. 11 to 16.
By Lily Boyce and June Kim
In Ohio, Mr. Brown leads his Republican challenger, Bernie Moreno, 47 percent to 43 percent, drawing in 10 percent of voters that support former President Donald J. Trump and 13 percent of those self-identified as Republicans. Ms. Baldwin leads her Republican challenger, the banker Eric Hovde, 50 to 43, in Wisconsin, while Ms. Slotkin leads the former congressman Mike Rogers, 47 percent to 42 percent, in the race to succeed Michigan’s retiring Democratic senator, Debbie Stabenow.
The strong showing by Democratic Senate candidates does not necessarily mean the party will maintain control of the chamber next year. Their current one-seat majority is almost certainly lost, with the retirement of Senator Joe Manchin III of West Virginia and the near certainty that the state’s Republican governor, Jim Justice, will succeed him.
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Source: nytimes.com