The Coming Tsunami
by BooMan
It was an earthmoving election night.
"No one could have imagined the tsunami that just
crashed on Republicans in Mississippi," Rep. Chris Van Hollen (Md.),
chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, said in an
interview after the victory. "There is no district that is safe for
Republican candidates."House Democrats now hold a 236 to 199 majority, up from 203 seats they controlled two years ago.
Van Hollen exaggerates. We saw a safe Republican seat in Louisiana's
First District two weeks ago, where the Democrat was held under thirty
percent of the vote. There are probably about 100 such safe Republican
seats. But there are at least 70 Republican-held seats that should now
be considered vulnerable because they have decently funded Democratic
challengers and less of an historical Republican lean than
Mississippi's First District. For perspective, every Republican-held
seat in Michigan has a PVI
rating lower than MS-01's rating of plus-ten. Can you imagine a
Michigan with no Republican House members? Neither can I. And it won't
happen because the Democrats have not fielded well funded candidates in
every GOP district in Michigan. But it could come close to happening.
There isn't a district in Illinois with a PVI rating higher than R+8.
There isn't a district in Minnesota with a PVI rating higher than R+6.
When Van Hollen says there are no safe Republican seats he is not off
by that much. Even in Indiana, where the Republican districts have
enormous PVI ratings, the Democrats are running strong challengers that
have a real chance to pick up at least two seats.
I'll have to do a thorough analysis to come up with a comprehensive
list of vulnerable House seats. What I'll do is look at fundraising and
PVI to find viable Democratic challengers in districts that have a PVI
of R+10 or less. Then I'll have to throw in a few wildcards for
extremely well-funded Democrats running in even more historically
Republican districts. I think the number will probably come out to
about 70-80 seats. How many will the Democrats win? My guess is at
least half. So, my preliminary analysis is that the Dems are poised to
pick up 35-40 seats.
Most of those seats are going to be in the Mid-Atlantic, Upper Midwest,
and California. Despite the two recent gains in the Deep South, I do
not think the Dems will pick up more than three or four more seats from
the region (excluding Florida, where there could be a rout). I do think
that it is quite likely that Ronnie Musgrove will win Trent Lott's old
senate seat. And Saxby Chambliss, Lamar Alexander, and, especially,
Liddy Dole, should be getting a little bit nervous.
The realignment is coming, and it is coming in force. After it is over,
the Republicans will be mostly a southern party. Meanwhile, the
Democrats will be a ruling majority party that is quite a bit more
ideologically diverse (conservative), but also very much reality-based.
- FILED UNDER: Guest Blogger, Campaigns, Congress, Democratic Party, Elections, Republican Party
- May 14, 2008








Tom Hartmann
stated today that there are 100 republican house seats in districts that are less conservative than this one. The Dems are going to out fundraise the repubs big time and the Repubs will be forced to spend that money in places they used to call safe.
- parent
By gt6May 14, 2008 - 5:12pm