By Jim Ellis — Tuesday, August 20, 2024
Senate
Arizona: Closer Polling Results — The Arizona open Senate research data has been both consistent and inconsistent. The consistency lies in all pollsters finding Rep. Ruben Gallego (D-Phoenix) leading former news anchor and 2022 gubernatorial nominee Kari Lake (R), but the margin spread has been inconsistent. The latest release, from WPA Intelligence (for the Club for Growth; Aug. 11-13; 600 likely Arizona voters) sees the Gallego edge only at 48-46 percent.Another four polls released in August, from four different pollsters, see the Gallego lead at 11, 9, 8, and 6 percentage points. A different study, from Peak Insights, surveying for the National Republican Senatorial Committee, projects the two candidates as tied. While the trends clearly favor Rep. Gallego, this is still a race that deserves political attention.
Montana: Tester Rebounds — After falling behind in polling since the end of June, the latest RMG Research poll, conducted for the Napolitan News Service, finds Sen. Jon Tester (D) pulling back into the lead. According to the RMG results, (Aug. 6-14; 540 registered Montana voters), Sen. Tester posts a 49-44 percent advantage over Republican nominee Tim Sheehy, a retired Navy SEAL and CEO for a Montana based aerospace company.
The poll has a basic flaw in that the sampling period is long (8 days), which leads to a higher error factor. It did provide several interesting data bits, however. As other polls have shown, former President Donald Trump enjoys a wide lead over Vice President Kamala Harris – 53-35 percent, according to the RMG Research results. The results also see 16 percent of Trump voters peeling off to support Sen. Tester. Conversely, 17 percent of Tester’s voters say they would prefer Republicans gaining control of the Senate. Asked how they would vote if they knew the Montana race would determine the next Senate majority, 55 percent said they would vote for the Republican candidate as compared to 37 percent who vowed to support the Democratic nominee.
House
AZ-1: A Desert Dead Heat — On the heels of former state representative and physician Amish Shah’s (D) surprising win in the crowded July 30 Democratic primary, Impact Research, polling for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (Aug. 1-4; 500 likely AZ-1 general election voters; 100 over-sample of Hispanics; live interview and text) conducted a district-wide survey. The findings suggest the race is a tie, with both Rep. David Schweikert (R-Fountain Hills) and Dr. Shah tied with 48 percent of the vote.
The poll is not particularly eye-opening since less than a percentage point decided Rep. Schweikert’s 2022 re-election outcome.
MI-8: Junge Ticks Ahead in Late Pre-Primary Survey — Soon after both state Sen. Kristen McDonald Rivet (D-Bay City) and two-time former congressional nominee Paul Junge (R) scored landslide primary wins on Aug. 6, the Rivet campaign released the results of their Global Strategy Group survey. The poll (July 29-Aug. 1; 500 likely MI-8 general election voters; live interview and text), though taken just before the general election officially began here on Aug. 7, finds Junge posting a one-point lead over Sen. Rivet, 45-44 percent. Though some recent polls have given Junge a slight edge, the campaign strategies and voter history favor a Democratic victory in November.
Governor
New Hampshire: Craig & Ayotte Lead Primary Race — As we approach the late Sept. 10 primary election, St. Anselm’s College released the results of their latest statewide survey. In each gubernatorial primary, the data results suggest that former Manchester Mayor Joyce Craig and ex-Sen. Kelly Ayotte lead the respective Democratic and Republican open races.
The St. Anselm’s poll (Aug. 13-14; 1,327 registered New Hampshire voters; 670 likely Democratic primary voters; 657 likely Republican primary voters; online) find former Mayor Craig leading Executive Councilor Cinde Warmington, 38-27 percent. For the Republicans, Ayotte’s margin is much larger over former state Senate president and 2022 US Senate candidate Chuck Morse. The ballot test here yields Ayotte a 59-25 percent advantage. St. Anselm’s did not release general election results.