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Daines, who is chairman of the National Republican Senatorial Committee, said that of the four toss-up states that will determine control of the Senate, he believes Montana is the most likely to choose a new senator over the incumbent, Democrat Jon Tester.

โ€œOf all of the states weโ€™re currently battling, itโ€™d be the most likely pick-up right now, if you graded on a curve,โ€ Daines said.

Republicans expect to gain the West Virginia Senate seat currently controlled by independent Joe Manchin III, who is retiring. But, theyโ€™ll need one more pick up to hold at least 51 seats in the 100-member chamber and secure the majority.

The Cook Political Report with Amy Walter categorizes Ohio, Michigan, Montana and Nevadaโ€™s races as toss-ups, while the other Senate races are rated as at least leaning toward Democrats or Republicans.

Electoral trends

Daines said that he expects the November elections will follow a trend from 2016 and 2020, in which the winner of the Senate race very closely tracks with which presidential candidate wins in their state.

โ€œThe only exception, of 69 races in 2016 and 2020, with Trump on the ballot, was Susan Collins โ€” where Joe Biden won Maine, but Susan Collins won the Senate race,โ€ Daines said, referring to former President Donald Trump, President Joe Biden and the current Republican senator from Maine. โ€œHistory shows in a presidential year, these races will all start to track by the time we get to the end of October, and then on Election Day, importantly, weโ€™ll be tracking pretty close with the presidential ballot.โ€

Daines, who was sitting for a panel interview with members of the Regional Reporters Association at the National Republican Senatorial Committee offices in Washington, D.C., said the party is applying the lessons learned from 2022 to this yearโ€™s campaigns.

Democrats targeted their messaging โ€œeffectivelyโ€ two years ago, while Republicans had โ€œcandidates that were able to win primary elections, but were not as appealing in a general,โ€ Daines said.

โ€œAnd thatโ€™s why one of the key strategies here at the NRSC was to be intentional in primaries,โ€ Daines said, adding he wanted fewer โ€œwounds and battle scarsโ€ for the GOP candidates who won their primaries as they went into the general election campaign.

Daines said that he doesnโ€™t expect reproductive rights and issues around democracy to be as central to how voters cast ballots this year as compared to 2022.

โ€œIn โ€˜22 the Democrats mentioned a lot on abortion and a lot on January 6 and the threat to democracy,โ€ Daines said. โ€œI think both of those issues are going to be less powerful in the โ€˜24 election.โ€

On abortion specifically, he said that GOP Senate candidates are โ€œmessaging well on this back in their respective states.โ€

Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee spokesperson Tommy Garcia said in a written statement that โ€œSenate campaigns are candidate vs candidate battles, and Senate Democrats will win because we have the better candidates in every single battleground.โ€

โ€œSteve Dainesโ€™ failure to vet his candidates has saddled Senate Republicans with deeply flawed recruits who are embroiled in a never-ending series of scandals: theyโ€™ve been caught lying about their biographies, face vulnerabilities stemming from their finances and are running on a platform of deeply unpopular policies,โ€ Garcia added.

Montana focus

Daines said he expects Montana voters will elect Republican candidate Tim Sheehy over Tester in November, citing data from former election years as well as how recent transplants to the state have registered to vote.

โ€œWeโ€™ve had a net migration of center-right voters to Montana since Jon Tester was last on the ballot,โ€ Daines said. โ€œHe won by 18,000 votes against Matt Rosendale back in 2018. Weโ€™ve had 100,000 new voters move to Montana since 2018. If you look at the voter rolls, by a 2-to-1 margin, theyโ€™re Republicans.โ€

Daines said he refers to these transplants as โ€œCOWsโ€ since they are leaving California, Oregon and Washington states to live in Montana โ€” the first letters of each state. He also says they arenโ€™t looking to bring the blue-leaning politics of their former states to their new home.

โ€œThese are refugees, not missionaries,โ€ Daines said. โ€œTheyโ€™re moving to Montana to join us, not to change us. And thatโ€™s how thatโ€™s shifting the political numbers in Montana; just mathematically, it becomes increasingly difficult for Jon Tester to win.โ€

Daines said that mid-July polling in the race mirrors what he experienced ahead of his last re-election.

โ€œThe polling data that we are seeing with Tim Sheehy matches exactly where I was polling with Steve Bullock by the same pollster four years ago,โ€ Daines said, referring to the former Democratic governor who ran for Senate in 2020. โ€œAnd we ended up winning by 10 points.โ€

When thatโ€™s combined with the millions of dollars that Democrats have spent on Testerโ€™s re-election campaign, Daines said the odds are good for Republicans.

โ€œ(Senate Majority Leader Chuck) Schumer and Tester have poured $45 million of negative ads on Tim Sheehy since last November,โ€ Daines said. โ€œWeโ€™ve never seen anything like it in any Senate race in the history of the United States that early, that much money spent. And the fact that Tim Sheehy is tied up right now on public polls is quite remarkable.โ€

DSCC Chairman Gary Peters, a Michigan Democrat, told States Newsroom on Tuesday that he expects Tester will win reelection.

โ€œHeโ€™s wrong. Heโ€™s not going to flip Montana. Jon Tester is a strong candidate. Heโ€™s authentic. Heโ€™s running against a seriously flawed candidate that the Republicans have put forward. Clearly they didnโ€™t do any vetting before they recruited him to run in Montana,โ€ Peters said. โ€œAnd people in Montana, want someone whoโ€™s authentic, has lived in the state and understands the challenges of people in Montana. And thatโ€™s Jon Tester.โ€

Nevada battleground

Daines also has hopes that the GOP can pick up Nevada, where Democratic Sen. Jacky Rosen is facing a challenge from Republican candidate Sam Brown.

During the 2022 Senate race, he noted that Democratic Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto defeated Republican candidate Adam Laxalt by about 8,000 votes.

โ€œIt was the tightest Senate race that cycle. Thatโ€™s four votes per precinct,โ€ Daines said. โ€œThatโ€™s not lost, certainly on both sides of the ledger.โ€

Had Laxalt been running during a presidential election year, when rural voters tend to turn out in higher numbers than during midterm election years, Daines said Laxalt would have won a seat in the Senate.

โ€œLooking at more recent polling numbers in Nevada, Rosenโ€™s ballot number is very low. Sheโ€™s in the low 40s. Thatโ€™s a big warning sign for an incumbent,โ€ Daines said. โ€œIt also shows thereโ€™s great upside for Sam Brown at the moment.โ€

Michigan race

In Michigan, which presents another chance for Republicans to gain and potentially grow a Senate majority, Daines said he isnโ€™t worried about negative ads from the Republican primary impacting their prospects during the general election.

โ€œYou always worry about โ€” whether youโ€™re on the Democratic or Republican side โ€” damaging primaries. And something that we have done at the NRSC in this particular election cycle, is to be intentional about getting behind candidates early in primaries,โ€ Daines said. โ€œAnd Michiganโ€™s an example of that.โ€

The NRSC and Trump both endorsed GOP candidate Mike Rogers early, he said.

โ€œAnd so far in this election cycle, thereโ€™s been $250 million less spent in Republican primaries versus last cycle,โ€ Daines said. โ€œDemocrats have spent $60 million more in their primaries versus last cycle. And in part thatโ€™s due to a strategy that we had to get behind candidates early and try to minimize primary battles.โ€

Daines wasnโ€™t too concerned about recent polling that shows Democrat Elissa Slotkin ahead of Rogers in a likely general election match up.

โ€œItโ€™s not a new phenomenon,โ€ Daines said. โ€œGenerally, we run behind.โ€

Maryland, Minnesota, New Jersey hopes

Daines has hope for GOP candidates in other states that traditionally send Democrats to the Senate.

In Maryland, he expects former Gov. Larry Hogan has a chance to defeat Prince Georgeโ€™s County Executive Angela Alsobrooks for the open seat.

When Republicans polled the chances for Hogan before he entered the race, they showed he had higher favorability than when he left office, Daines said.

And while Daines said he knows that Kamala Harris will likely win Maryland by โ€œ25 points or more,โ€ he still expects Hogan will have a strong campaign.

โ€œThatโ€™s not a new phenomenon for Larry Hogan. And so he will run in this maverick kind of lane,โ€ Daines said, noting that Hogan has distanced himself from Trump.

Daines sought to put a little bit of distance between the NRSC and the Aug. 13 Republican Senate primary in Minnesota when asked about the candidates, though he said he stood by a previous comment that Royce White canโ€™t win the GOP primary or the general election.

โ€œWeโ€™ll wait and see how the primary shakes out in Minnesota. Again, itโ€™s coming up here pretty soon, mid-August,โ€ Daines said. โ€œBut yeah, I think Joe Fraser is going to be a more electable candidate, certainly in the general.โ€

Whichever GOP candidate wins the primary will face Democratic Sen. Amy Klobuchar in the general election, fighting for a seat that is rated as โ€œsolid Democraticโ€ by The Cook Political Report.

New Jersey Democratic Sen. Bob Menendezโ€™s recent conviction has also led Daines to not entirely count the state out, though the odds are long.

Curtis Bashaw, he said, is a โ€œvery strong candidate.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s a race weโ€™re keeping an eye on,โ€ Daines said. โ€œObviously, whenever you have an open seat, itโ€™s an opportunity. And with Menendezโ€™s problems that doesnโ€™t help overall.โ€

Menendez isnโ€™t seeking re-election and will resign from the U.S. Senate in August. Democratic Rep. Andy Kim,
who was pictured cleaning up litter inside the U.S. Capitol following the Jan. 6 attack, was elected as the Democratic nominee.

The Cook Political Report rates the race as โ€œSolid Democrat.โ€

Daily Montanan is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Daily Montanan maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Darrell Ehrlick for questions: info@dailymontanan.com. Follow Daily Montanan on Facebook and X.

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