Cook: Hagan-Tillis Race Could Be Nation's Closest | Eastern North Carolina Now

    Publisher's note: The author of this post is Barry Smith, who is an associate editor for the Carolina Journal, John Hood Publisher.

Newsletter publisher says both candidates have their weaknesses


Political analyst Charlie Cook speaking at Elon University on Wednesday, September 3, 2014. (Photo by Barry Smith)
    ELON – Nationally known political analyst Charlie Cook said at Elon University today that the North Carolina contest for U.S. Senate, in a year in which the political balance in the nation's capital is at stake, could be the closest race in the country.

    "I think this could easily be the closest in the country," Cook said of the race between Democratic incumbent Sen. Kay Hagan and her GOP challenger, state House Speaker Thom Tillis. Libertarian Sean Haugh is also on the Nov. 4 general election ballot.

    Cook, publisher of The Cook Political Report, spoke with reporters on the Elon campus before a public speaking engagement at the university later in the evening.

    "I think Hagan is an extremely vulnerable incumbent, where she won under some kind of an interesting set of circumstances that [then-incumbent GOP] Sen. [Elizabeth] Dole had not been coming back to the state much and was extremely weak," Cook said. He also noted that Hagan benefited in 2008 from Barack Obama's "world-class organization."

    "Now she's running without having President Obama at the top," Cook said.

    But Tillis also has his problems, he said.

    "I don't think the legislature did him any favors," Cook said. "I think the tail end of the session clearly cost him a fair amount of support." However, since the legislature has been out, Tillis has been able to regain some support, turning the contest into a "very, very close race," he said.

    "It's going to be a close call on the U.S. Senate overall," Cook said, noting that nationally there are seven seats currently held by Democrats that are "extremely close."

    Republicans need a net pickup of six Senate seats to win a majority.

    As for the U.S. Senate debates, Cook said that both candidates will be trying to prevent self-inflicted wounds.

    "There's no need to swing for the fences," Cook said. "If they make a mistake, it becomes extremely important."

    Cook said he didn't expect any surprises in the state's congressional delegation, with Republican David Rouzer expected to pick up the 7th Congressional District seat being vacated by Democratic Congressman Mike McIntyre. He said he also doesn't expect to see "American Idol" runner-up Clay Aiken unseat incumbent GOP Congresswoman Renee Ellmers in the 2nd District. Both districts demographically favor Republicans.

    In response to a question, Cook said that future elections, such as 2016 and 2018, could see the U.S. Senate switching between the two major parties, with neither party holding a large majority.

    Cook noted that the difference in turnout could be a factor in future elections, with the turnout being higher in presidential election years, such as 2016.

    "You could very easily see Republicans pick up a majority in this election based on the Democratic exposure and turnout and then lose it in 2016 based on the exposure and the turnout that year," Cook said. "Then, if you look at 2018, it actually flips back over."

    "We obviously don't know who's going to be heading up the two tickets in 2016 and we sure don't know who the incumbent president is going to be in '18 and how they're going to do," Cook said.
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Comments

( September 4th, 2014 @ 10:23 am )
 
I hope voters turn out in droves to surprise the pundents predicting little interest in a mid-term election.

My greatest wish is the both "liberal" and "conservative" leave our vocabulary (knowing they won't because we are stupid). If a person is "open-minded" is he a "liberal?" If a person is "conserving nothing" is he a "conservative?"

In the 60's the flame word was "radical." If you look at the basic meaning of "radical" it has to do with the Latin word for "root."
( September 4th, 2014 @ 8:32 am )
 
Hagan will lose the the moderate independents because she is so terribly liberal, and Thom Thillis will lose the Conservative base because he is an Establishment Republican, and the grassroots can't get fired up on these corporate welfare types.

It will be an interesting race to see who stays home the most, or the least.
( September 4th, 2014 @ 5:58 am )
 
This appears to be a fair assessment in my view as well.

The first televised Senate debate was on last night. Neither candidate (Hagan or Tillis) made any killer mistake of note. The format made for a clear and balanced event with each candidate having plenty of room for questions and real debate over who intends to do what and who has done what in the last few years.



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