It is officially four weeks to Election Day, with early voting already underway or about to start in key states.
And several crucial Senate races that could determine whether Democrats keep control of the Senate or Republicans can snap their razor-thin majority appear to be at a lock, according to recent surveys.
Democrats have a slight edge in recent generic polls on who should control Congress, though Republicans are still expected to take the House. The Senate is far closer and remains up for grabs.
Polls on where specific races stand suggest that Democrats and Republicans could end up with the same 50-50 split they currently hold. That would keep Democrats' majority in-tact, with Vice President Harris able to cast tie-breaking votes.
Several particularly close races have the potential to make or break Senate control.
In Georgia, GOP nominee Herschel Walker has seen his campaign rocked by scandal surrounding abortion, with the race against Sen. Raphael Warnock (D) also seeing allegations of domestic violence, secret children, unpaid child support and more. The pair face each other on Friday in their only scheduled debate.
Walker, a former football star who has disclosed mental health issues in the past, still has the support of the GOP heavy-hitters as the party hopes to reclaim control of the Senate and serve as a foil to President Biden in the second half of his term.
Farther north, Ohio Rep. Tim Ryan (D) and GOP challenger J.D. Vance are locked in a tight race. The pair went head-to-head in a televised debate Monday hosted by The Hill parent company Nexstar, with both lobbying accusations against each other over their records and political associations. Early voting in the state starts Wednesday.
Meanwhile in Pennsylvania, Lt. Gov. John Fetterman (D) — who is facing celebrity doctor Mehmet Oz (R) in the battle for an open Senate seat — sat down for his first one-on-one interview since a near-fatal stroke earlier this year.
"I always thought I was very empathetic before having a stroke. But now, after having that stroke, I really understand, you know, much more kinda the challenges that Americans have day in and day out," Fetterman said in the NBC News interview, where he admitted he struggles with verbalizing his thoughts since the stroke but has full reading comprehension.
No comments:
Post a Comment