This is the senate in 2025. What were the 2024 results?
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  This is the senate in 2025. What were the 2024 results?
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Author Topic: This is the senate in 2025. What were the 2024 results?  (Read 714 times)
Tekken_Guy
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« on: November 17, 2019, 10:40:31 PM »

Here is a hypothetical 2025 senate. Based on this, what were the results of the 2024 Presidential election

Alabama: Tommy Tuberville & Robert Aderholt
Alaska: Dan Sullivan & Sarah Palin
Arizona: Kyrsten Sinema & Doug Ducey
Arkansas: Tom Cotton & Leslie Rutledge
California: Christy Smith & Katie Porter
Colorado: Michael Bennet & John Hickenlooper
Connecticut: Chris Murphy & Jim Himes
Delaware: Chris Coons & Lisa Blunt Rochester
Florida: Ted Deutch & Nikki Fried
Georgia: David Perdue & Doug Collins
Hawaii: Brian Schatz & Kai Kahele
Idaho: Mike Crapo & Jim Risch
Illinois: Dick Durbin & Tammy Duckworth
Indiana: Todd Young & Mike Braun
Iowa: Joni Ernst & Kim Reynolds
Kansas: Roger Marshall & Mike Pompeo
Kentucky: Mitch McConnell & Rand Paul
Louisiana: Bill Cassidy & Steve Scalise
Maine: Sara Gideon & Hannah Pingree
Maryland: Chris Van Hollen & John Sarbanes
Massachusetts: Joe Kennedy & Ayanna Pressley
Michigan: Gary Peters & Haley Stevens
Minnesota: Tina Smith & Dean Phillips
Mississippi: Cindy Hyde-Smith & Michael Guest
Missouri: Josh Hawley & Jason Smith
Montana: Steve Daines & Greg Gianforte
Nebraska: Deb Fischer & Ben Sasse
Nevada: Catherine Cortez Masto & Jacky Rosen
New Hampshire: Jeanne Shaheen & Chris Sununu
New Jersey: Corey Booker & Josh Gottheimer
New Mexico: Martin Heinrich & Ben Ray Lujan
New York: Chuck Schumer & Kirsten Gillibrand
North Carolina: Cal Cunningham & Dan Bishop
North Dakota: Kevin Cramer & Kelly Armstrong
Ohio: Rob Portman & Anthony Gonzalez
Oklahoma: James Lankford & Markwayne Mullin
Oregon: Jeff Merkley & Ted Wheeler
Pennsylvania: Bob Casey & Tom Wolf
Rhode Island: Sheldon Whitehouse & David Cicilline
South Carolina: Lindsey Graham & Tim Scott
South Dakota: John Thunder & Mike Rounds
Tennessee: Marsha Blackburn & Bill Hagerty
Texas: John Cornyn & Dan Crenshaw
Utah: Mike Lee & Chris Stewart
Vermont: TJ Donovan & Miro Weinberger
Virginia: Mark Warner & Tim Kaine
Washington: Maria Cantwell & Suzan DelBene
West Virginia: Shelley Moore Capito & Mac Warner
Wisconsin: Tammy Baldwin & Mike Gallagher
Wyoming: John Barrasso & Cynthia Lummis
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scooby
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« Reply #1 on: November 17, 2019, 10:47:31 PM »


ew
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Epaminondas
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« Reply #2 on: November 20, 2019, 09:09:19 AM »

Come on, man, pony up a map for the sake of our eyes.
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Skill and Chance
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« Reply #3 on: November 20, 2019, 08:51:59 PM »



This is very different.  You have 52R/48D, D+1 vs. today, but with Democrats somehow picking up both seats in Florida while not really making any other meaningful progress in the Sunbelt and losing ground elsewhere.

In 2020, Collins, Tillis, and Gardner lost while Peters and Tina Smith won.  Jones clearly lost.  With Ducey, who is not running this year, being the R senator from AZ with Sinema, it looks like Kelly flipped AZ in 2020 (which would give Dems 50/50 control with a Dem president) and then Ducey flipped it back in 2022, which strongly suggests Trump lost to a Democrat.  It's possible the GA special also flipped and then flipped back to Collins in 2022.  So there was a D majority in 2021, either with 50 or 51 seats.

Speaking of 2022, Hassan loses to Sununu and AZ/maybe GA flip back in what looks like a mildly R leaning election, although it's clearly enough to give them control.  Rubio apparently replicated Bill Nelson's "feat" of losing in an opposite party president's midterm. 

Now, 2024... this map strongly suggests a Dem presidential win in Florida, which is probably enough for the Dem to win the election outright, but the results in the Midwest do not suggest a Dem wave as they were not able to hold onto any of the serious Trump margin seats.  WV/MT/OH all flipped, but interestingly WI and MI did not and Sinema held on in AZ.  GA and NC don't have senate elections that year, but ME does and the Dem won, which is encouraging for the Dem president.

I'm going with this?


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MarkD
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« Reply #4 on: November 22, 2019, 04:40:43 PM »

Don't assume that swing states like Colorado, Florida, Michigan, and Wisconsin will always vote the same way for President as it does for Senator and vice versa. Just because it happened that way in 2016 does not mean it will likely happen that way in the future too.
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