What's more likely to flip? (user search)
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  What's more likely to flip? (search mode)
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Question: ?
#1
GA-Sen 2022
 
#2
PA-Sen 2022
 
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Partisan results

Total Voters: 64

Author Topic: What's more likely to flip?  (Read 2128 times)
Pericles
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Posts: 17,156


« on: January 21, 2021, 04:12:44 PM »

GA-Sen IMO, I think people forget the nature of off years and how both PA and GA voted notably to the right of the nation.

It'll be interesting to see if Democrat's strong ground game in GA continues and how much canidate quality ends up mattering in both races.

GA has the benefit of having an incumbent and an electorate that is largely unaffected by the national environment. Deal was one of the few Republican governors to do worse in 2014 than in 2010 despite being uncontroversial his whole tenure.

You have excuse Progressive Moderate map seriously, Rs aren't gonna sweep every competetive race out there, that's an R dream map.

He is only 15 yrs old, most of us been thru the riggers of college which are liberal institutions and College Professors have PHDs

lmao savage

Yeah, Georgia is not flipping with Stacey Abrams at the top of the ballot. I actually think it will probably be even bluer in 22 than 20. The trends there are devastating for Republicans, and Kemp's primary is going to make things worse for them.

Meanwhile, we've seen that even in GOP wave years (which is not guaranteed what 2022 is gonna be anyway) PA is willing to elect Democrats statewide. Fetterman is a very good recruit, while the GOP's best options would flounder in a primary and they will probably be stuck with someone crazy. Is it a done deal? Absolutely not. But it's definitely more competitive than Georgia

Technically it could be bluer than 2020 and Warnock still loses, given in the general election the combined Republican vote was 1% higher than the combined Democratic vote.
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