Who s likely to come out on top in races for Governors Races The House of Representatives The Senate The White House

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2016 Election Outlook It ain t over til it s over Who s likely to come out on top in races for Governors Races The House of Representatives The Senate The White House

A few words about polling in this election Most polling is based on 3-4s or 4-4s data collected by polling companies over the years based on voters who have voted in three or four out of the last four elections In this election, there s a lack of data from newly critical groups: 0-4s and 1-4s. These are voters of all demographics and ages who are voting in their first or second presidential elections The poll is only as good as the sample: Polls which reveal lopsided leads in an otherwise close race indicates lopsided sampling Polling is a hint at outcomes, not a guarantee

How s the country feeling? President Obama Job Approval Approve 51.4 Disapprove 45.4 2016 Generic Congressional Vote (who do you dislike the least?) Democrats 46.5 Republicans 42.1 Direction of Country Right Direction 29.2 Wrong Track 64.7 Congressional Job Approval Approve 14.7 Disapprove 77.2

Who will run the States? No big shift seen Current gubernatorial breakdown Republicans 31 Democrats 18 Independent 1 (Alaska) What s the guesstimate 30 days out? Republicans 30 Democrats 16 Independent 1 Toss Ups 3 Indiana open race New Hampshire Dem incumbent North Carolina GOP incumbent

Control of Congress Up for Grabs? Public approval of Congress is still a sad 14-16% The public attitude is they re all idiots except my member Media noise about Trump taking down the Republican Party or Clinton dividing the Democrats is overstated Ditto negative noise about chamber leadership see Speaker Ryan s primary win Very little identifiable coattails effect positive or negative by either candidate, but it s beginning to be trackable in some states The numbers this cycle in both chambers work against Republicans Number of toss up races is pretty constant 19 days out

House remains GOP-controlled by how much? 435 voting members 114 th Congress House membership breakdown Republicans 247 Democrats 188 What s the guesstimate 19 days out? GOP majority shrinks marginally Republicans 232 Democrats 192 Toss Ups 11 - three D districts, eight R districts Source: realclearpolitics.com

A tight battle for control of the Senate 100 voting members 114 th Congress membership breakdown (The magic number to move a bill to the floor for debate/amendment/final vote is 60 votes) Republicans 54 Democrats 44 Independents 2 (both caucus with the Democrats) What s the guesstimate 19 days out? Senate could go 50-50 for the first time in 16 years* Republicans 46 Democrats 46 Toss Ups 8 *If the Senate breaks 50-50, then the party of the sitting Vice President, as president of the Senate, controls the chamber

A tight battle for control of the Senate, cont d. Toss up states only one Democrat seat in play IN: PA: NV: NC: NH: MO: Open Sen. Dan Coats (R) retiring Sen. Pat Toomey (R) Open Sen. Harry Reid (D) retiring Sen. Richard Burr (R) Sen. Kelly Ayotte (R) Sen. Roy Blunt (R) GOP seats leaning Democrat IL: WI: Sen. Mark Kirk (R) Sen. Ron Johnson (R) Note: No incumbent Democrat seats lean GOP, i.e. no Republican pickups expected; Florida s seat held by Sen. Marco Rubio (R) is rated as only leaning GOP Boldface Incumbents considered in trouble.

And now let s turn to the highly entertaining race for the White House

The run for the White House as seen by a neighbor to the North... This election is like watching your next door neighbor play with dynamite and fireworks after 16 beers in the hot sun -- A Canadian Tweet

How many see the Clinton-Trump race Each party has chosen a presumptive nominee whom America loathes. Each party is about to nominate the least liked candidate from his or her field as it stood a year ago. -- Fortune Magazine, May 2016

Who s running for president? Democrat Hillary Rodham Clinton former first lady, NY senator, Obama secretary of state Republican Donald John Trump, Sr. real estate developer/investor, television producer, author Libertarian Gary Johnson Former two-term governor of New Mexico Green Dr. Jill Stein Mother, organizer, physician, and environmental health advocate

Where s the support? Independents: Trump polls 45% to Clinton s 40% -- significant undecided at 15% Men: Trump attracts 50% of all men polled to Clinton s 41% Women: Clinton pulls in 54% of women polled, with Trump attracting about 36% Rural: Trump consistently polls about 74% support to Clinton s 9% Hispanics: The vote is generally splitting 70% Clinton, 30% Trump Blacks: Trump polls about 26% with all black voters, but Clinton leads with 70% Age: Among 18-30, Clinton leads Trump leads 68% to 20%. Among voters 45 and older, Trump sits at 50%, with Clinton at 45% White, high school grads: Trump polls 53%, Clinton 24%. Trump s key constituency is among whites who did not graduate from college White, college grads: Clinton leads Trump 55% to 44% Gays: When polled, 20% of gay voters support Donald Trump, 80% Clinton

This will make your head hurt

Do the voters get it?

Agbiz issues where do they each stand? Agribank 8.16 CLINTON Biofuels Supports stronger RFS to boost non-corn ethanol and advanced biofuels production, increase USDA loan guarantee programs, supports E15, E85 and biodiesel blends Trade Opposes TPP as finalized, wants U.S. jobs protection, enviro protections, would renegotiate NAFTA, review all bilateral trade treaties GM Food Labeling Supports biotech ingredients, wants labeling Estate Tax Lower the exemption to $3.5 million, reduce exemption for couples to $7 million; increase tax rate to 45% Rural development Increase Rural Business Investment Companies (RBIC) to provide more capital, strengthen USDA grant programs, expand New Markets Tax Credit to encourage investment TRUMP General support for biofuels, keep the RFS, move to higher ethanol blends Hates TPP, new negotiators to focus on trade deficits, renegotiate NAFTA, opposes multinational treaties, wants trade promotion authority Supports biotech, opposes mandatory GE food labeling Permanent repeal of death tax Appointed national ag advisory committee, including six sitting governors, along with other elected state officials

The keys to the castle On November 8, it s all about turnout even though this election is more who I m voting against rather than who I m voting for Too many public admissions of I m staying home biggest risk is among Millennials who aren t energized by either Trump or Clinton, or who opt to vote for a third party candidate Absentee ballots/early voting have begun With a strong 15% of voters undecided 19 days out, each candidate must rally his/her base, as well as target demographics, i.e. women, minorities, Millennials, Joe Six Pack, etc. Trump has a tough time breaking through his 40% hard base; Clinton has the same problem with her 42% hard base No strong indications of any substantial coattails effect for House/Senate candidates from either candidate. House and Senate races mounting their own get-out-the-vote efforts

Voter preferences 10/19 ELECTION 2016 (national polling average) CLINTON TRUMP SPREAD RCP Poll Average 50 44 Clinton +6 Four-way Race 47 40 Clinton +7 Favorability Rating 42.9 35 Unfavorability Rating 52.9 61.1 SOURCE: realclearpolitics.com

The way you win the White House 10/19 Current Electoral College Distribution (270 needed to win) Clinton/Kaine 260 Trump/Pence 170 Toss Ups 108 BUT

Florida (29) Ohio (18) North Carolina (15) New Hampshire (4) Nevada (6) Minnesota (10) Indiana (11) Iowa (6) Maine (2) Arizona (11) And the winner is unknown Toss-up electoral vote states 108

Those who really know The International Society for Astrological Research Clinton/Kaine = Venus Trump/Pence = Mars (In Roman mythology Mars and Venus were lovers) Aleksandar Imsiragic, Serbian astrologer: Trump wins Mythologically, he s Orion, a giant with golden hair born under a full moon eclipse Shelley Ackerman, astrologer: Clinton wins Her October 26 b day is in a time slot shared by Halloween the sun is traveling within the Via Combusta, the fiery way... That part of the zodiac is literally when the (stuff) hits the fan. On election day, the moon ends up right at Tim Kaine s sun Glenn Perry, astrologer: Trump is so Martian embodies the mood of the electorate too much

Trump positives to his base supporters He s a true outsider in DC He appeals to those who feel disenfranchised, who feel they have no voice; he has talked publicly about issues politicians normally avoid, e.g. illegal immigrants, jobs, the economy and social issues He approaches government as a business, one that makes a profit, pays its bills and increases it employment base He intends to put in charge of departments and agencies individuals who are equally outsiders and who have practical knowledge He wants to restore what he believes is the lost respect of the U.S. around the world

Trump negatives to his critics He s bombastic; unpredictable and erratic He s accused of being a serial misogynist He s a master of criticism he points fingers and blames, he calls names His policies are generalities and lack details His economic proposals, in many cases, generally aren t doable His surrogates are better versed than he is He lacks foreign policy experience, as does his running mate

Clinton positives to her base supporters She has 30 years of experience as an attorney, first lady of Arkansas, first lady of the U.S., two-term U.S. senator from New York, and secretary of state She would make history as the first woman elected president She s highly intelligent, tenacious and ambitious She understands how the DC system operates, has strong relationships in Congress and has general respect from DC insiders She s tough

Clinton s negatives to her critics She s the ultimate DC insider A Clinton presidency represents four more years of the Obama Administration She believes in heavy-handed regulatory oversight She s untrustworthy; her grasp of the truth is convenient She carries unresolved issues, e.g. Benghazi, personal email server, pay-to-play State Department access, the Clinton Foundation She s squandered the first-woman-president advantage; she doesn t generate excitement among the Obama base, i.e. minorities, women, Millennials, etc.

A little chuckle

THANK YOU!

Vote as if your ballot determines nothing whatsoever except the shape of your own character. Vote as if the public consequences of your action weigh nothing next to the private consequences. The country will go whither it will go, when all the votes are counted. What should matter the most to you is whither you will go, on and after this November s election day. -- Matthew J. Franck, PhD, Professor Emeritus, Political Science, Radford University, Radford, Virginia,