
Another so-called professional analysis of the November elections. Filled with all sorts of facts and suppositions on what voters are going to do.
Worked out real well in 2016, didn’t it?
“Democrats have a large enough pool where they can win some of the suburban districts, not all of them, (and) win some of the rural districts, not all of them,” adds Askarinam. “They only need to build up to 23 seats. There are dozens of seats that are competitive.”
Increasingly in America, density is our political destiny, with suburbs playing the crucial role not just in who is elected president but also who controls Congress. In 2018, more than just about any other year, those two go hand in hand.
More of this mind-boggling stuff @ The Suburbs Are the Midterm Election Battleground - CityLab