U.S. elections are in a month: Here's the outlook from the campaign trail

Abortion narrowed the race. Republicans turn to 'three Cs' to aim for victory

Image | USA-CONGRESS/

Caption: Americans will elect one-third of the U.S. Senate, all the U.S. House of Representatives, and thousands of state and local officials on Nov. 8. (Jon Cherry/Reuters)

An unusual thing happened back in June, when all signs portended unmitigated doom for the Democrats in this year's U.S. midterm elections.
They were demoralized. Down in the polls. Destined for the kind of thundering defeat so often suffered(external link) by the party in power.
Then that strange thing happened: One phone call, after another, started flooding the office switchboard for Pennsylvania state senator Lindsey Williams(external link).
"Hundreds," she recalled in an interview just outside downtown Pittsburgh, where her district is. "It was just this deluge."
She said that moment nearly smashed the record for calls she'd received in her four-year career, eclipsed only by requests for help accessing pandemic-related benefits.
The issue? Abortion.

Image | Lindsey Williams

Caption: Lindsey Williams is a Pennsylvania state politician in a close race. She says the campaign changed when the Supreme Court eliminated the guaranteed constitutional right to an abortion. (Alexander Panetta/CBC News)

The Supreme Court had overturned Roe v. Wade. Even if Pennsylvania is not among the states with restrictions(external link) snapping into place, the issue resonates there, too, as Republicans have anti-abortion candidates(external link) and a bill(external link) that could weaken(external link) abortion rights through an amendment to the state constitution.
Williams said there'd been a palpable drop in enthusiasm from 2018, when she narrowly won her first race in a swing district.
Events were smaller, crowds were thinner, voters weren't spontaneously approaching her in public to talk politics as often; but that's changed lately, Williams said.
Her observation is borne out by survey data: polls(external link) are finding Democrats more enthusiastic(external link) about voting than a few months ago when the numbers for them were catastrophic(external link).
Another party official in Pennsylvania offered an anecdote.
He called door-knocking the most important campaign task yet a hard one to find volunteers to do. Suddenly, in June, he said, dozens of people in his community started offering their help.
"It was looking challenging [for us]," said Mike Giazzoni, the Democratic chair in Shaler Township, in the Pittsburgh area.
"The Dobbs [abortion] decision definitely put a lot of fuel back in the tank.… It will definitely still be challenging, though."

Image | Vendor in Harrisburg

Caption: A souvenir stand at a Republican rally at the state legislature in Harrisburg, Penn., last month. (Alexander Panetta/CBC News)

Republican closing message: The three 'Cs'

Republicans remain heavily favoured to win at least some additional power in the Nov. 8 elections at the federal, state and local level.
And they aren't standing idle.
They're working to steer the campaign back to their preferred topics, which could be summarized as the three Cs: crime, the cost of living, and culture wars.
Speakers at a Republican rally on the steps of the state legislature listed a string of examples where they feel they, not Democrats, are onside with the public.

Image | Mastriano Panetta

Caption: Doug Mastriano, Republican candidate for Pennsylvania governor, seen here speaking at a sparsely attended rally last month at the state legislature. He's been struggling in the polls. (Alexander Panetta/CBC News)

Gubernatorial candidate Doug Mastriano blamed pandemic restrictions for crushing businesses, disrupting supply chains, and driving inflation(external link).
He cited higher energy prices(external link) and blamed them on climate policies(external link). Skyrocketing murder rates(external link), which he blamed on soft-on-crime policies(external link).
He lamented the quickness with which his opponents criticized the police(external link) while saying relatively little about anti-police rioting that caused hundreds of millions in damage(external link) to U.S. cities.
Numerous speakers at the rally denounced transgender(external link) athletes in women's sports.
"They call us extreme and radical. Are you kidding me?" Mastriano said.
"Democrats don't want to talk about so many things. They do have a rotten, stinking laundry list."

Image | USA-CAPITOL/SECURITY-OATH KEEPERS

Caption: This will be the first national election since the attack on the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. Republicans are still favoured to gain power, but some of their most fervent election-denying candidates are struggling. (Stephanie Keith/Reuters)

Mastriano brushed off the idea that he's the radical in the race, a national reputation he earned through efforts to help Donald Trump steal the 2020 presidential election(external link).
That example from Pennsylvania is playing out nationwide.
Democrats are counting on an abortion backlash, while also talking up the jobs recovery(external link) and their recent legislative wins on drug pricing, energy funding(external link), infrastructure(external link), gun safety and advanced manufacturing(external link).
Republicans are responding with the aforementioned issues and it could very well work: Poll(external link) after poll(external link) after poll(external link) lists inflation and the cost of living as the top voter priority.

The background on U.S. midterms

On Nov. 8, Americans will vote for the entire U.S. House of Representatives, for one-third of the U.S. Senate(external link), in dozens of states(external link) and in thousands of local races.
It will allow a temperature-taking after a series of epochal events: the attack on the U.S. Capitol, pandemic-related economic turmoil and the war in Europe.
Even the state races have national implications: We all witnessed in 2020 the power that state officials have in certifying a federal election and pro-Trump election deniers(external link) could gain control of election administration.
Earlier this year, polls showed Republicans virtually guaranteed to win the House, and favoured to win the Senate.
Now it's all tighter.
The Republicans have gone from certain to win the House to simply being strong favourites; from being favourites to win the Senate to having most(external link) forecasters(external link) (but not all(external link)) projecting they'll lose; in the states, winnable gubernatorial races in Michigan(external link) and Pennsylvania(external link) are slipping away.
WATCH | Democrats started winning more after the abortion decision:

Media Video | The National : Democrats have won several state races this year since the Supreme Court abortion decision

Caption: Voters in conservative Kansas resoundingly affirmed support for access to abortion, a major victory for pro-choice groups. This comes as U.S. President Joe Biden signed an executive order to protect travel for abortion.

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The tussle to control the campaign story manifested itself in dramatic fashion last week.
Republicans clearly want to avoid discussing abortion. They sidestep questions(external link) about what they plan to do in this post-Roe world. And that's because the anti-abortion policies popular with their base are unpopular(external link) with the general public.
Yet, last week, abortion catapulted back to the fore in Georgia.
Republican celebrity Senate candidate Herschel Walker came under attack, even from his own family(external link), amid reports he, supposedly an abortion opponent, paid for his girlfriend to have one.
Then the favourite Republican theme roared back: gas prices inched up again(external link). The OPEC cartel cut oil production, and fuel prices rose, and Republicans blamed(external link) anti-oil policies(external link) for the pain at the pumps.

TV ads: crime, crime, crime

And there's crime.
The politics of the issue has shifted in the last two years with gun killings(external link) rising. And while Democrats might have been eager to talk about criminal justice reform in 2020, they're now being pummeled with ads about it.
Wisconsin offers one of several examples: the Democrats' Senate candidate there, Mandela Barnes, is being bombarded with ads(external link) about him wanting to end cash bail.
His polling lead has evaporated(external link). And he's just launched a statewide tour(external link) aimed at turning the focus back to abortion.
It's the same in Pennsylvania, although the ads there have been less successful(external link) against Dr. Oz's Democratic opponent in the Senate race: John Fetterman is being hit with constant(external link) soft-on-crime ads(external link), while Fetterman's own ads(external link) are calling that attack unfair(external link).

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One self-described former Democrat described crime as her top priority in an interview on the margins of a Republican campaign rally
Casey Felin, a nurse from Philadelphia, said she switched parties during the pandemic over what she viewed as excessive and counter-productive lockdown policies.
But she said what most animates her now is the skyrocketing rate of murder(external link) and other crime(external link) in her city which she blames on its progressive policies(external link).

Image | Casey Felin

Caption: Casey Felin says she was a Democrat until a couple of years ago. It changed during the pandemic. Now the Philadelphia nurse says crime in her city is the No. 1 issue for her and she's a staunch Republican and regular commenter about politics on social media. (Alexander Panetta/CBC News)

She said she works in a prison and hears criminals speak with impunity about getting out quickly, with few consequences for their acts.
"People shoot in Philadelphia like they're stepping on somebody's foot. They don't care. They're not afraid of consequences. We need to bring back consequences," Felin said in Harrisburg, Penn., having traveled there for the Mastriano rally.
"First [issue for me is] safety. Because you can have 100 plans – you might wanna do this, that, and the other thing, then a bullet lodges in you. And you're done. So. So safety is Number One."
At that rally, Mastriano called his wife to the stage in a tangible demonstration of how Republicans are trying to pivot away from the abortion topic.
Rebecca Mastriano insisted her husband's campaign cares about women's rights – then she listed a string of issues like the right to live in a safe community, where crime is prosecuted; the right to access baby formula(external link); and the right to women's sports(external link).
WATCH | Democrats are playing defence on crime issues:

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Democrat in tight race: We have solutions

Democrats have tried inoculating themselves against the crime attacks.
They've proposed law-enforcement funding bills(external link) in the Congress to defend against the constant (if questionable(external link)) charge they plan to defund the police.
Democrats also suggest their rivals have few solutions to the issues they're talking about: the Republicans' national platform(external link) is light on details.
A Democrat running for the U.S. Congress in a Pittsburgh-area swing district ridiculed the notion that the other party, the one constantly blocking gun control, is serious about gun crime.
"It's crazy," said Chris Deluzio(external link), a lawyer, military veteran and university official involved in a tight U.S. House race.
"I don't think you can be a serious candidate or person talking about safety if you aren't talking about gun safety."

Image | Chris Deluzio

Caption: Chris Deluzio, running for Congress in a Pennsylvania swing district, says his Democrats have gotten things done. Republicans, he said, offer extremism and empty slogans. (Alexander Panetta/CBC News)

He conceded that abortion changed the midterms. But he also attributed the closer race to other factors: Democrats getting popular bills passed in Washington, and Republicans nominating more extreme candidates, including Mastriano.
"[He] participated in the January 6th insurrection(external link)," Deluzio told CBC News outside a Saturday morning food drive organized by his party.
"We're seeing people who are election deniers who continue to doubt that Joe Biden won our presidential election…. So that extremism is turning off lots of independents, lots of Republicans."

Image | USA-ELECTION/ARIZONA

Caption: Some of the hard-right election deniers are lagging in the polls. Not Kari Lake. The Republican could become the next governor of Arizona. (Rebecca Noble/Reuters)

Then there are the issues we can't predict, the so-called October surprises. Thursday afternoon offered a classic case study in how quickly they can occur.
Within an hour of each other, reports surfaced that Hunter Biden(external link), the president's son, risks facing criminal charges; moments later, the president made marijuana a headline issue.
Joe Biden promised to issue pardons(external link) for pot possession and relax enforcement(external link), which could affect people in states without legal recreational use — and it just so happens that five such states(external link) have close-fought Senate races.
More surprises are inevitable. There's still a month to go.
Clarifications:
  • This article has been updated to clarify that a bill introduced in Pennsylvania could weaken abortion rights through an amendment to the state constitution, which would add a clause saying there is no guaranteed right to abortion. November 9, 2022 11:07 PM