For all the reports of national Democrats drawing targets on enough Republican-held seats to recapture control of the House in 2014, the odds are strong that Republicans will hold on to their majority in the last mid-term election of the Obama administration.
The arithmetic favors the Republicans in the upcoming campaign, in which voters decide the fate of all 435 House members.
The current make-up of the House is 233 Republicans, 200 Democrats, and two vacancies. Upcoming special elections to fill the vacancies in Alabama and Massachusetts will almost give one seat to each party.
Democratic strategists frequently speak of "the magic 17" —the number of districts carried by President Barack Obama in 2012 in which voters also sent a Republican to the House. Victories in all 17 districts by Democratic candidates would mean a recapture of the Democratic majority in the House, with 218 seats to 217 for the Republicans.
In a memo marked "Please Do Not Share This List With the Press" but obtained by Roll Call last week, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee named the 17 Republican-held seats they are targeting. Among those on the list were such narrow 2012 winners as Republican Reps. Mike Coffman of Colorado, Lee Terry of Nebraska, and Mike Fitzpatrick of Pennsylvania.
But this strategy depends on Democrats winning everything they target and Republicans picking up nothing. That means, as House editor David Wasserman of the Cook Political Report said, "There's basically no margin of error for House Democrats."
On the other hand, Republicans will almost surely be targeting the nine districts that went for Mitt Romney for president but also sent a Democrat to the House.
ZitatFormer Secretary of State James Baker once said "overnight is an eternity in politics." Much can change between now and November of 2014. But at this time, the best prediction is the House remains Republican next year — just do the math.
I was also told Romney had a lock on the WH because Zero sucked so much. Just looking through the list of names the Rats are targeting, the only one I know well is Fitzpatrick in PA. He is a loser. He lost that seat before. If the others on that list are as weak at Fitzpatrick, the Rats could do some damage to the GOP.
Quote: Justme wrote in post #3And maybe all the principled unintentional Ozero backers who decided not to vote will stay home again
Maybe in the other states, but the problem here in PA is that Corbett is up for reelection in '14 and he is probably in the worst shape of any incumbent Gov. He has a GOP legislature and still he can't get anything done plus he is personally mired in the Penn State scandal. In Fitzpatricks swing district, he needs absolutely every GOP voter to show up. If the top of the ticket is a loser, turnout will be lower. That ain't good.