A rundown on the race for U.S. Senate: How a few seats could shape history - Action News
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A rundown on the race for U.S. Senate: How a few seats could shape history

Winning the presidency is one thing. Being a successful president is another. And Joe Bidens fate could be determined, on both counts, in the coming days. His hope of passing landmark legislation hinges on controlling the U.S. Senate. A look at the key Senate battles and their outsized importance.

Would a Biden presidency achieve much? That's being decided in these Senate races

Seven toss-up races on Nov. 3 will determine who controls the Senate and with it the composition of the U.S. Congress. It's now a tight race, though Democrats have an edge. (Kevin Lamarque/Reuters)

Winning the presidency is one thing. Being a successful president is an entirely different matter. And Joe Biden's fate could be determined, on both counts, inthe coming days.

The Democratic candidate's hope of signinglandmark legislation if he's elected president on Nov. 3 may rest on a handful of races that will decide which party wins the U.S. Senate.

Biden's ambitions include a proposed public health-care option, reforms limitingmoney in politicsand a $2 trillion climate andinfrastructure plan.

Such policieshinge on Democrats getting bills through Congress, which would be hard to near-impossible in the current Republican-controlled Senate.

Consider that the most important legislative achievements of recent presidents only occurred in the brief window of time when their party held the Washington trifecta: the White House, the House of Representatives and the Senate.

That applies to the Obamacare health reform when Democrats controlled all three from 2009 to 2011and to tax reform when Republicans were similarly dominant from 2017 to 2019.

"When we've seen big, sweeping changes pushed through, it's been when there has been unified government," said Jessica Taylor, the Senate editor for the election-forecast outfit Cook Political Report.

"Democrats winning the Senate is crucial to a number of things Joe Biden wants to advance."

U.S. Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden promises landmark bills on health care, climate change and political reform. He can't do much without the Senate. (Tom Brenner/Reuters)

It's now a tight race though Democrats have an edge.

The Cook Political Report sees Biden's party likely holding at least 48 Senate seats in next month's election andRepublicans likely holding at least 45, with seven other toss-ups in mostly conservative-leaning states.

Passing legislation would be especially important to Biden given the increasingly conservative composition of the courts.

If he tried advancing priorities by other means, namely, through executive orders, they would face greater risk of being struck down by unfriendly courts.

There is also pressure onBiden, who served as vice-president under Barack Obama,to deliverin an era of sustained bitterness toward democratic institutions that Americans see as ineffectual.

Democrats are so eager to churn out changes if they take power that they're already embroiled in impassioned debates about whether to undo Senate procedural rules.

(CBC News)

The Senate's decades-old filibuster norm requires a 60 per cent majority to advance most legislation, and many Democrats want it gone.

Yetregardless of the outcome of that debate, merely winning a 51-seat majority would open up new avenues of possibility for Biden and the Democrats.

A simple majority would allow them to pass some tax and fiscal measures; confirm judges; decide which bills are allowed for a vote; and give them control of committees using them to push legislation, instead of investigations into Biden's White House.

Magic number for Democrats: 3, 4or 5

In the current Senate composition, Republicans hold 53 seats, while Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents hold 47. Thirty-five of 100 seats are up for grabs in this election.

The math for the coming weeks is simple:It involves three magic numbers.

Democrats must gain three Senate seats to win a de-facto majorityif they also winthe White House, because the vice-president would vote to break a 50-50 tie.

But they probably really need four, if, as expected, Democrats lose an Alabama seat they won under extraordinary circumstances in a 2017 special election.

The worst scenario for Democrats? They'll need five new seatsif they suffer an upset loss in Michigan.

Former astronaut Mark Kelly, shown in 2019, is heavily favoured to pick up an Arizona seat for the Democrats over Republican Sen. Martha McSally. (Mike Christy/Arizona Daily Star via The Associated Press)

Polls have them heavily favoured to gain two (Arizona and Colorado), while they're leading in three others (Maine, Iowa and North Carolina)and competitive in seven other races (Montana, South Carolina, Kansas, Alaska, Texas and two in Georgia).

"All signs that we see point to pretty sizable Democratic gains in the Senate or at least enough for a majority at this point," Taylor of Cook Political Report said.

"Democrats at this point have multiple paths to the majority."

The race-by-race rundown

Another election-forecast team at the University of Virginia's Centerfor Politics broke down all of these races in a recent online briefing.

Democrats are, in some ways, starting this election with a one-seat deficit.

That's because they hold the likeliest seat to flip: in Alabama. Democrat Doug Jones won the seat in a miracle upset in 2017, thanks to an underage sex scandal involving an already controversial candidate, Roy Moore.

Jones is running a decent race this time around but would still be doomed even if he ends up performing a dozen points ahead of other Democrats running in Alabama, said Miles Coleman of the Centerfor Politics.

"That's just how red the state is," he said.

That's where the good news stops for Republicans. They hold thenext six seats identified as likeliest to flip by the Centerfor Politics.

A look at the U.S. Senate, with Democrats enjoying far greater opportunities for pickups among the 35 seats up for election on Nov. 3. (CBC News)

In Colorado, a major Democratic donor group has reportedly stopped spending money on the raceand shifted resources elsewhere, so confident that the seat is destined to flip to Democrats.

Former Colorado governor John Hickenlooper should easily defeat first-term Sen.Cory Gardner, said the director of Centerfor Politics, Larry Sabato.

He said Gardner was elected in a particularly good year for Republicans in 2014, but this is not a particularly good year for Republicans, and the state is already trending blue.

"Donald Trump is not their cup of tea [in Colorado].... Trump is going to lose Colorado rather badly. And that pretty much condemns Cory Gardner to being a one-term Republican," Sabato said.

Easy races, tough races

In Arizona, Democrat Mark Kelly has held strong, sustained leads in the polls for months over Republican Sen. Martha McSally.

He's an astronaut and husband of former lawmaker GabrielleGiffords, who survived an assassination attempt in 2011 and became a gun-control activist.

In Maine, Trump has all but written off longtime incumbent Susan Collins. She appeared unbeatable until recently, winningher last race, in 2014, by 37 points.

She's now trailing in the polls to the speaker of Maine's legislature, Sara Gideon. Coleman said Collins is being pulled apart by the polarized politics of our time.

Collins frequently enrages Democrats and moderates by voting with Trump. Yet she also infuriates Trump allies; a research project by the news website Axios found that Collins is actually the No. 1 most likely of all congressional Republicans to condemn Trump in a controversy.

"She's really tried to walk the line of being a moderate in the Trump era. And that's just very hard," Coleman said.

The tipping point struckbyscandal

Democrats were displeased, to put it mildly, when their North Carolina candidate, Cal Cunningham, was caught this month in a sexting scandal with a woman who isn't his wife.

"You epic f***ingidiot," tweeted Patrick Dillon whose wife, Jen O'Malley Dillon, is Biden's campaign manager.

Democratic challenger Cal Cunningham, left, infuriated members of his party with a sexting scandal in the midst of his North Carolina race against Republican Sen. Thom Tillis, right. (Gerry Broom/The Associated Press)

Such anger is understandable. Biden's ability to ever pass landmark bills could hinge on the result in North Carolina.

That state andIowaare deemed the likeliest contenders to deliver Democrats their so-called tipping point win the majority-claiming 50th seat.

Democrats were displeased that all of their country-shaping legislative hopes might have been undermined by an adulterous affair.

"I mean, you never want a sex scandal to pop up in October. And certainly not in one of the most important states," Taylor said.

What do you want to know about the U.S. election? Email us atAsk@cbc.ca

Yet the worst fears of Democrats, it appears, are not materializing so far. Cunningham, a state senator, is still leading most pollsin a close race against Sen. Thom Tillis.

Sabato said he believes this caseproves we are now in a post-scandal era, as Democratsand Republicans having both excused Bill Clinton and Donald Trump can't get too worked up over adultery lest they reveal themselves as hypocrites.

It's unclear if the scandal cost Cunningham a point or two, he said, creating a tougher fight in a race that appeared to have been won.

Another potential tipping-point state is Iowa.

Theresa Greenfield, president of a real estate company, is looking to knock off first-term Republican Sen. Joni Ernst.

Most but not all surveys show Greenfield ahead. Ernst is trying to use Greenfield's real estate practices against her, blaming her for displacing tenants.

Yet Greenfield leads most surveys. She also upstaged Ernst in a debate in the farming state by sounding more knowledgeable about the cost of commodities.

"The polls are not good for Joni Ernst," Taylor said, adding that Greenfield's campaign is flush with cash and flooding the airwaves with ads.

The suspense over the Senate could last until January.

That's because there are two races in Georgia that would head to a run-off election in early 2021 if nobody wins an outright majority. Both races are close.

Democrats are also more competitive than usual in conservative-leaning states such asMontana, whereDemocratic Gov.Steve Bullock is on the ticket, as well as in Alaska,Kansasand South Carolina.

In South Carolina, the Democratic challenger to Sen. Lindsey Graham, Jaime Harrison, has raised a historic $57 million in a single quarter, smashingfundraising records for a legislative candidate.

Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Jaime Harrison has smashed fundraising records in his bid to upset Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham in South Carolina. (Meg Kinnard/The Associated Press)

Graham, a former Trump critic turned staunch defender, has been making appearances on Fox News to plead for donations.

That illustrates just how badly Democrats want to unseat Graham. No other Republican running this year provokes such deep enmity from Democrats aside from Trump, of course, Sabato said.

"What an upset that would be," Sabato said of a win by Harrison, who is African-American. "South Carolina would have two African-American senators [along with Tim Scott] one Republican, one Democratic. Who'd have thunk it?"

That said, Graham remains favoured in the polls and in forecasters' projections.

Hopes for a Republican upset

Another African-American newcomer is hoping to land an upset. And if it occurs, it would deal a blow to Democrats' hopes of winning the Senate.

Veteran, businessmanand RepublicanJohn James is hoping to upset a low-key first-term Democratic senator, Gary Peters of Michigan.

Some surveys show the Republican is closeor even ahead. Yet the overall pollingand the national dynamicsfavour the Democrat, Sabato said.

Republican U.S. Senate candidate John James is competitive in Michigan, and a win there could deal a major blow to Democrats. (David Eggert/The Associated Press)

"Peters has something James could only dream of," he said. Biden, his party's presidential nominee, is heavily favoured in Michigan.

He said Biden voters picking Democrats down the ticket may be enough to pull Peters across the finish line.

"But by no means is that a sure thing," Sabatosaid.

And an upset in Michigan would complicate the math for Democrats' hopes of achieving that coveted Washington trifecta.