Gubernatorial and
legislative elections in four states Tuesday will test voter enthusiasm
and party organization amid impeachment proceedings against President
Donald Trump and a fevered Democratic presidential primary scramble.
Results
in Kentucky, Mississippi, New Jersey and Virginia won’t necessarily
predict whether Trump will be reelected or which party will control
Congress after the general election next fall. But partisans of all
stripes invariably will use these odd-year elections for clues about how
voters are reacting to the impeachment saga and whether the president
is losing ground among suburban voters who rewarded Democrats in the
2018 midterms and will prove critical again next November.
Trump
is eager to nationalize whatever happens, campaigning Monday evening in
Kentucky for embattled Republican Gov. Matt Bevin, a first-term Trump
ally, as he tries to withstand Democrat Andy Beshear, the attorney
general whose father was the state’s last Democratic governor. The
president campaigned in Mississippi on Friday, trying to boost
Republican Tate Reeves in a tight governor’s race against Democrat Jim
Hood. Reeves is lieutenant governor; Hood is attorney general.
Legislative
seats are on the ballots in New Jersey and Virginia, with the latter
presidential battleground state offering perhaps the best 2020
bellwether. Democrats had a big 2017 in the state, sweeping statewide
offices by wide margins and gaining seats in the legislature largely on
the strength of a strong suburban vote that previewed how Democrats
would go on to flip the U.S. House a year later. This time, Virginia
Democrats are looking to add to their momentum by flipping enough
Republican seats to gain trifecta control of the statehouse: meaning the
governor’s office and both legislative chambers.
In
New Jersey, Democrats are looking to maintain their legislative
supermajorities and ward off any concerns that Trump and Republicans
could widen their reach into Democratic-controlled areas.
Both parties see reasons for confidence.
“With
a Democratic Party engaged in a race to the left and promoting an
increasingly radical impeachment agenda, the choice for voters is
extremely clear,” said Amelia Chase of the Republican Governors
Association, predicting victories for Kentucky’s Bevin and Mississippi’s
Reeves.
Yet
Democrats point to their expanded party infrastructure in states like
Virginia and believe it positions them to capitalize on the GOP’s
embrace of a president with job approval ratings below 40%.
“Republicans
are sweating elections in traditionally conservative areas,” said
Democratic National Committee Chairman Tom Perez. “Democrats are making
historic, early investments to lay the groundwork for our eventual
nominee to win the White House in 2020 and for Democrats to win at every
level.”
Indeed,
Kentucky and Mississippi are expected to be closer than the states’
usual partisan leanings would suggest, though that has as much to do
with local dynamics as with any national trends.
Bevin’s
first term as Kentucky governor has been marked by pitched battles
against state lawmakers — including Republicans — and teachers. Beshear,
meanwhile, is well known as state attorney general and the son of Steve
Beshear, who won two terms as governor even as the state trended more
solidly Republican in federal elections.
Given
Bevin’s weakness, Trump would claim a big victory if the governor
manages a second term. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, who
easily defeated Bevin in a 2014 Senate primary, also has a vested
interest in the outcome. McConnell is favored to win reelection next
year in Kentucky, even as national Democrats harbor hopes of defeating
him. And the powerful senator would quell some of those hopes with a
Bevin victory.
As
with the 2018 midterms nationally, Beshear is looking for wide margins
in cities and an improved Democratic performance in the suburbs,
particularly in formerly GOP territory south of Cincinnati.
In
Mississippi, Republicans have controlled the governor’s office for two
decades. But Phil Bryant is term-limited, leaving two other statewide
officials to battle for a promotion. Reeves and Republicans have sought
to capitalize on the state’s GOP leanings with the Democrat Hood
acknowledging that he voted for Hillary Clinton over Trump in 2016. Hood
would need a high turnout of the state’s African American voters and a
better-than-usual share of the white vote to pull off the upset.
Virginia is where national Democrats are putting much of their attention.
For
this cycle, the DNC has steered $200,000 to the state party for its
statewide coordinated campaign effort that now has 108 field organizers
and 16 other field staffers in what the party describes as its
largest-ever legislative campaign effort. At the DNC, Perez and his
aides bill it as a preview of what they’re trying to build to combat the
fundraising and organizing juggernaut that the Republican National
Committee and Trump’s reelection campaign are building in battleground
states.
___
AP National Political Writer Steve Peoples in New York contributed to this report.
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