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The Playbook Podcast

Nov. 9, 2022: How Biden and Trump squelched the red wave

The Playbook Podcast

POLITICO

News, Daily News, Politics, Government

3.9699 Ratings

🗓️ 9 November 2022

⏱️ 7 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Let’s start with Joe Biden.  A midterm is a referendum on the president. By all historic measures, voters should have handed Biden’s party a massive rebuke. Inflation is at historic levels, crime is up, Biden’s approval is underwater, Democrats have one-party control. The party of recent presidents in similar circumstances lost between 40 and 63 House seats. And yet here’s where things stand this morning: — In the House, Republicans are expected to gain control the chamber, but well short of both historical averages and pre-election predictions. Addressing supporters early this morning — hours after Republicans thought they would have victory in hand — Kevin McCarthy could only promise, “When you wake up tomorrow, we will be in the majority.” (Like his prior prediction that Republicans would gain 60 seats, that, too, has failed to pan out.) — In the Senate, the outcome hinges on Nevada, where incumbent Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto fell behind her GOP challenger Adam Laxalt this morning, and Georgia, where Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock is ahead by a hair but the race is likely headed for a runoff on Dec. 6. Republicans need to win both races to take control of the Senate. (Wisconsin and Arizona haven’t been called, but the incumbents — Republican Ron Johnson and Democrat Mark Kelly, respectively — are ahead in both states.) Many of the (plausible) outcomes predicted by top GOP officials didn’t materialize. There was no massive shift of the Hispanic vote toward the GOP. There was no surge of hidden Trump voters. There was no widespread takeover of deep blue House territory. There was no expansion of the Senate map into New Hampshire, Colorado and Washington, where incumbent Democrats cruised to reelection. The governor of New York won easily. There was no red wave.  Subscribe to the POLITICO Playbook newsletter Raghu Manavalan is the Host and Senior Editor of POLITICO's Playbook Daily Briefing.Jenny Ament is the Executive Producer of POLITICO Audio.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hey, good morning, Playbookers.

0:03.0

I'm Rogum Winovalin.

0:04.0

It's Wednesday.

0:05.0

No red wave, certainly no red tsunami.

0:07.0

So, where do we go from here?

0:09.0

It's your Politico Playbook daily briefing.

0:15.0

In case you're just catching up, a recap of the biggest races.

0:19.0

John Federman defeated Mehmed Oz in Pennsylvania. Mark Kelly

0:22.2

currently leads Blake Masters in Arizona. Raphael Warnock leads Herschel Walker in Georgia,

0:27.7

though that race looks likely to be headed to a runoff on December 6th. And Adam Laxalt

0:32.7

currently leads Catherine Cortez-Mastow in Nevada. A midterm is a referendum on the president. By all historic

0:39.1

measures, voters should have handed Biden's party a massive rebuke. Inflation is at historic levels,

0:44.4

crime is up, Biden's approval is underwater, and Democrats have one party controlled. The party of

0:49.1

recent presidents, and similar circumstances, have lost between 40 and 63 house seats.

0:54.7

And yet here's where things stand this morning.

0:57.1

Republicans are estimated to gain a small advantage, enough to control the chamber, but

1:00.8

well short of both historical averages and pre-election predictions.

1:04.7

In the Senate, the outcome hinges on Nevada, where incumbent Senator Catherine Cortez

1:08.4

Mastow fell behind her GOP challenger, Adam Waxalt,

1:11.2

this morning, in Georgia, where Democratic Senator Rafael Warnock is slightly ahead, but

1:16.1

the race is likely headed for a runoff on December 6th.

1:18.9

Republicans need to win both races to take control of the Senate.

...

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