What states do you think will vote for a different party? (2018 Senate election) (user search)
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  What states do you think will vote for a different party? (2018 Senate election) (search mode)
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Poll
Question: Which states are likely to elect the opposite party of their incumbent senator in 2018?
#1
Arizona
 
#2
California
 
#3
Connecticut
 
#4
Delaware
 
#5
Florida
 
#6
Hawaii
 
#7
Indiana
 
#8
Maine
 
#9
Maryland
 
#10
Massachusetts
 
#11
Michigan
 
#12
Minnesota
 
#13
Mississippi
 
#14
Missouri
 
#15
Montana
 
#16
Nebraska
 
#17
Nevada
 
#18
New Jersey
 
#19
New Mexico
 
#20
New York
 
#21
North Dakota
 
#22
Ohio
 
#23
Pennsylvania
 
#24
Rhode Island
 
#25
Tennessee
 
#26
Texas
 
#27
Utah
 
#28
Vermont
 
#29
Virginia
 
#30
Washington
 
#31
West Virginia
 
#32
Wisconsin
 
#33
Wyoming
 
Show Pie Chart
Partisan results

Total Voters: 47

Calculate results by number of options selected
Author Topic: What states do you think will vote for a different party? (2018 Senate election)  (Read 4451 times)
Plate
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« on: June 02, 2017, 06:33:45 PM »

In the 2018 Senate elections, which states do you think are most likely to vote for a different party than the party of the incumbent who is up for election in 2018?
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Plate
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Posts: 46
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« Reply #1 on: June 02, 2017, 07:27:50 PM »

I chose Indiana, Michigan, Missouri, Montana, Nevada, Ohio, and West Virginia. I honestly don't understand why more people didn't pick Michigan, they were a red state in 2016, with a Republican governor, Republicans have control of the state House and Senate, and a majority of the state's representatives in the US House are Republicans. The state, in my opinion, is slowly getting more and more Republican.
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Plate
Rookie
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Posts: 46
United States


« Reply #2 on: June 02, 2017, 07:34:57 PM »

I chose Indiana, Michigan, Missouri, Montana, Nevada, Ohio, and West Virginia. I honestly don't understand why more people didn't pick Michigan, they were a red state in 2016, with a Republican governor, Republicans have control of the state House and Senate, and a majority of the state's representatives in the US House are Republicans. The state, in my opinion, is slowly getting more and more Republican.

Because that's not how politics works. Stabenow is entrenched, there's a weak field, Trump and Snyder are deeply unpopular there, etc

I do realize how much people don't like Snyder all across the state, but I think people are stating to not like Stabenow either. Like I said, Republicans got control of the state House and Senate.
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Plate
Rookie
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Posts: 46
United States


« Reply #3 on: June 02, 2017, 07:39:23 PM »

I chose Indiana, Michigan, Missouri, Montana, Nevada, Ohio, and West Virginia. I honestly don't understand why more people didn't pick Michigan, they were a red state in 2016, with a Republican governor, Republicans have control of the state House and Senate, and a majority of the state's representatives in the US House are Republicans. The state, in my opinion, is slowly getting more and more Republican.

Because that's not how politics works. Stabenow is entrenched, there's a weak field, Trump and Snyder are deeply unpopular there, etc

I do realize how much people don't like Snyder all across the state, but I think people are stating to not like Stabenow either. Like I said, Republicans got control of the state House and Senate.

I'm confused on how that has much relevance to the Us Senate race

If people vote Republicans for state legislature, they'll likely vote them for US legislature.
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Plate
Rookie
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Posts: 46
United States


« Reply #4 on: June 02, 2017, 09:04:21 PM »

Im guessing Montana, Nevada, North Dakota, Missouri, Indiana, West Virginia, and Florida. Still way too early to tell the political climate of 17 months from now
True, but let's hope that climate change really isn't real. Except for blue states.
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