Welcome to The Hill’s Campaign Report, your daily rundown on all the latest news in the 2020 presidential, Senate and House races. Did someone forward this to you? Click here to subscribe.
We’re Julia Manchester, Max Greenwood and Jonathan Easley. Here’s what we’re watching today on the campaign trail.
LEADING THE DAY:
200 DAYS OUT: We’re officially 200 days away from Election Day in November, and while America’s attention is on the coronavirus pandemic, campaigns are gearing up.
Former Vice President Joe Biden scored three major back-to-back endorsements this week from Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), former President Barack Obama and Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass).
The show of unity from the party’s leadership demonstrates Democrats’ urgency to unify ahead of November. It also puts Biden in a better position than 2016 Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton was in four years ago. Sanders did not endorse Clinton until the summer of 2016, leading to questions about how deep the party’s divisions were. Additionally, Biden racked up larger wins over Sanders than Clinton did in 2016.
In terms of a head-to-head matchup against President Trump, Biden leads the president in a number of key swing states according to recent polls. Biden currently leads Trump in Arizona, Florida, Michigan, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, according to the RealClearPolitics polling average.
However, Trump has the advantage of having a massive financial war chest, thanks to his campaign and the Republican National Committee (RNC). Trump has also gotten massive media exposure due to his daily White House coronavirus task force briefings.
Meanwhile, in the Senate, Democrats need to win the White House and a net three seats to get a majority in the upper chamber. However, they will have to win four Republican seats to flip the Senate. Sen. Doug Jones (D-Ala.) is facing an uphill reelection battle in Alabama, which Trump is likely to sweep in November.
Democrats will have to unseat Sens. Martha McSally, Cory Gardner and Susan Collins in Arizona, Colorado, and Maine, respectively, in addition to winning a fourth seat. The party appears to have a decent shot in all three of the contests.
The House, on the other hand, is the least likely chamber to flip in the general election. The GOP needs a net gain of 20 seats to take back the majority. Republicans also have to take into account the redistricting in North Carolina, which will endanger two GOP-held seats, as well as retiring Rep. Will Hurd’s (R-Texas) district, which Democrats are favored to take.
The focus for Republicans will be on districts Trump won in 2016, but that are currently held by Democrats. The Cook Political Report rates Rep. Angie Craig’s (D-Minn.) district, which Trump won by 1.2 percentage points, as “lean Democratic.”
Meanwhile, Cook rates Reps. Mikie Sherrill (D-N.J.) and Ron Kind’s (D-Wis.) races as “likely Democratic.” Trump won Sherrill’s district by 1 point and Kind’s district by 4 points.
However, Republicans do have an advantage in a number of key districts. For example, Rep. Abigail Spanberger’s (D-Va.) race in Virginia’s 7th District, which was also won by Trump in 2016, is considered a “toss-up” by Cook’s report. The website also rates Rep. Lucy McBath’s (D-Ga.) seat in Georgia’s 6th District as a “toss-up.” That district was won by Trump in 2016 and was formerly held by former Rep. Karen Handel (R-Ga.), who is running again for the seat.
READ MORE:
Here’s where things stand 200 days before Election Day, by Julia Manchester and Max Greenwood
FROM THE TRAIL:
Biden’s campaign is planning a rollout for Michelle Obama’s endorsement, although there are questions about just how public a role the enormously popular former first lady will play in his campaign. Sources tell The Hill that the Biden campaign’s early plans include a focus on remote fundraising and voter registration efforts. The trick for Michelle Obama and the Biden campaign is finding the right balance for the pop culture icon, who could be a massive asset for the campaign but has never shown much enthusiasm for campaign politics. Amie Parnes and Jonathan Easley report.
Sen. Warren said she would agree to be Biden’s running mate if she’s offered the job, The Hill’s Rebecca Klar reports. Asked by MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow on Wednesday night what she would say if the former vice president offered her the No. 2 slot on the Democratic ticket, Warren answered bluntly: “Yes.”
The Democratic National Convention (DNC) host committee is laying off and reassigning employees in the latest sign of trouble for the party ahead of the scheduled convention in August, The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reports. Former DNC chairman Terry McAuliffe told the paper it’s very “unlikely” there will be a convention in Milwaukee this year, and he urged the party to get “creative” in considering a workaround.
PERSPECTIVES:
Zachary Wamp and Meredith McGehee: How Congress must aid states to ensure safe and secure elections
David Brady and Brett Parker: The Trump Bump’s likely demise
David Siders: Why Democratic unity is a problem for Trump
FROM CONGRESS & THE STATES:
Rep. Justin Amash (I-Mich.), who left the Republican Party and registered as an Independent last year, has reignited speculation that he’ll run for president on a third party ticket in the fall. That speculation has led to excitement among Libertarians, who view him as their best shot at breaking through on the national stage in 2020. Amash has described himself as a libertarian in the past. There has never been a sitting member of Congress from the Libertarian Party. Jonathan Easley takes a look at what an Amash candidacy could mean for the presidential race, particularly in the battleground state of Michigan.
Mail-in voting doesn’t lend an advantage to either major political party. That’s according to a new study from Stanford University’s Democracy and Polarization Lab, which looks at election results in three states that phased in vote-by-mail programs county by county. More from The Hill’s Zack Budryk: “Comparing county-level election results and public party registration data for California and Utah voters ranging from 1996 to 2018, researchers found ‘a truly negligible effect’ on partisan turnout rates with the addition of a vote-by-mail option, with turnout slightly up across the entire voting-age population.”
MONEY WATCH:
Democrats in some of the most competitive Senate races out-raised their Republican opponents in the first quarter of 2019, recent filings with the Federal Election Commission (FEC) show. Here’s a quick rundown:
Arizona
-Mark Kelly (D):
-Receipts: $11,008,599.35
-Disbursements: $4,910,934.63
-Cash on hand: $19,706,843.19
-Martha McSally (R):
-Receipts: $6,372,756.09
-Disbursements: $3,780,574.23
-Cash on hand: $10,252,063.35
Colorado
-John Hickenlooper (D)
-Receipts: $4,077,784.93
-Disbursements: $2,413,321.07
-Cash on hand: $4,880,041.96
-Sen. Cory Gardner (R):
-Receipts: $2,469,739.20
-Disbursements: $656,715.07
-Cash on hand: $9,565,416.45
Maine
-Sara Gideon (D):
-Receipts: $7,100,800.94
-Disbursements: $5,229,219.02
-Cash on hand: $4,649,432.36
-Susan Collins (R):
-Receipts: $2,405,597.36
-Disbursements: $3,989,003.52
-Cash on hand: $5,611,935.58
North Carolina
-Cal Cunningham (D):
-Receipts: $2,983,423.54
-Disbursements: $1,451,578.91
-Cash on hand: $3,000,479.06
-Thom Tillis (R):
-Receipts: $1,376,774.26
-Disbursements: $298,583.77
-Cash on hand: $6,483,413.82
POLL WATCH:
Gallup: Trump’s job approval rating dips by 6 points.
PUBLIC POLICY POLLING – NORTH CAROLINA PRESIDENTIAL
Biden: 48 percent
Trump: 47 percent
PUBLIC POLICY POLLING – NORTH CAROLINA SENATE
Cunningham: 47 percent
Tillis: 40 percent
MARK YOUR CALENDARS:
(Keep in mind these dates could change because of the outbreak)
April 17:
Wyoming
April 28:
Ohio
May 2:
Kansas Democratic primary
May 12:
Nebraska primaries
May 19:
Oregon primaries
May 22:
Hawaii Democratic primary
June 2:
Connecticut primaries
Delaware primaries
District of Columbia primaries
Indiana primaries
Maryland primaries
Montana primaries
New Mexico primaries
Pennsylvania primaries
Rhode Island primaries
South Dakota primaries
June 9:
Georgia primaries
West Virginia primaries
June 20:
Louisiana primaries
June 23:
Kentucky primaries
New York primaries
July 7:
New Jersey primaries
August 17-20:
Democratic National Convention
August 24-27:
Republican National Convention
We’ll be back tomorrow with more campaign news of the day!