With just five days to go until Election Day, the campaign season has finally reached a fever pitch.
Republicans, confident that they'll recapture the House and believing that they're now favored to take the Senate, are making eleventh-hour investments in key races. Meanwhile, former President Trump is setting out on a campaign blitz that will see him hold four rallies in five days across Florida, Iowa, Ohio and Pennsylvania.
Democrats are calling in the big guns, as well. Former President Obama has gone on the stump for several top Democratic candidates in recent days in a swing that has taken him through states like Georgia, Michigan and Wisconsin. President Biden is also making some high-profile campaign appearances. On Wednesday night, he delivered a prime-time speech in which he railed against Republicans for encouraging political violence and seeking to undermine core tenets of American democracy.
"As I stand here today, there are candidates running for every level of office in America – for governor, Congress, attorney general, secretary of state – who won't commit, they will not commit to accepting the results of the elections that they're running in," Biden said.
Unsteady ground: The flurry of campaign activity marks the culmination of a volatile election season that has seen public sentiment swing wildly as voters move from outrage over the Supreme Court's decision to overturn Roe v. Wade, the landmark abortion rights case, to angst and resentment over stubbornly high inflation and economic uncertainty.
A spate of new polling this week hasn't done much to calm the nerves of either party. A new survey from The Hill and Emerson College released on Thursday shows Sen. Raphael Warnock (D-Ga.) leading his Republican rival Herschel Walker by just 2 percentage points, a statistical dead heat given the poll's 3-point credibility interval.
Likewise, another Emerson College/The Hill poll out of Pennsylvania finds Republican Senate hopeful Mehmet Oz leading Democratic Lt. Gov John Fetterman for the first time, albeit by only a 2-point margin. Similarly, a Marquette University Law School poll out this week showed Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) ahead of his Democratic rival, Lt. Gov. Mandela Barnes, by just 2 points.
Reading the tea leaves: Taken together, the polling suggests that the nation's top Senate races could swing either way on Election Day, leaving control of the upper chamber as the biggest unknown in the final days of the campaigns.
When it comes to the House, however, the biggest question isn't necessarily whether Republicans will win back the majority, but by how much. The GOP is already set to gain a handful of seats thanks to the decennial redistricting process alone, and given that Democrats have unified control of Washington, Republicans are heading into Election Day with the political winds at their backs.
In a particularly ominous sign for Democrats, Republicans have taken the lead on the generic congressional ballot – a poll question that asks voters which party they plan to support in the midterms – marking a reversal from even just a month ago.
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