FiveThirtyEight
Clare Malone

What A Long, Strange, Senatorial Trip It's Been

It’s been a long midterm election season, so you’re forgiven if you forgot some of the Senate primary contests that set the tone for the general election. In an article earlier this week, I looked back at the past year and a half, which has been filled with Senate campaigns. Here’s the bit on some key primaries:

Spring 2018 brought primaries and some unexpected dynamics. Namely, many candidates tried to get a little outlandish in their campaigning. A little, dare we say it, Trumpian. Sometimes it backfired; sometimes it worked. West Virginia’s Republican contest to pick an opponent for Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin was particularly colorful — you might remember outsider candidate and former coal executive Don Blankenship, who stirred up a little trouble by referring to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell as “Cocaine Mitch.” While mainstream Republican Patrick Morrisey won the race, GOP mudslinging might have helped Manchin shore up his position in the race. …

In Arizona, former Sheriff Joe Arpaio ran in the Republican primary. This is the man who was pardoned by Trump after his criminal contempt conviction for ignoring a court order in a racial-profiling case. Also in contention were Kelli Ward, a hardline conservative former state senator, and U.S. Rep. Martha McSally. Both Arpaio and Ward brought flavors of the more outlandish side of the activist right, and the three-way race divided media attention. Democratic candidate Kyrsten Sinema, a U.S. House member, got a few months of non-internecine-squabbling attention in the press. …

Some former Trump skeptics softened their stances on the president. McSally in Arizona and Leah Vukmir of Wisconsin, each the Republican Party’s eventual nominee in their state and each somewhat reluctant Trump supporters, ended up aligning more closely with the president. The slightly unnatural fits perhaps led to less-than-stellar performances during the general-election period.

Meena Ganesan

My colleague Geoffrey Skelley says he’ll be paying close attention to the race happening in Kentucky’s 6th Congressional District. The race should be a close one. According to the Deluxe version of our House forecast, incumbent Republican Andy Barr has a 4 in 7 chance of keeping his seat in his contest against Amy McGrath, a Democrat. Polls in the Kentucky 6th close at 6 p.m.

Maggie Koerth

Photo by Franco Dal Molin

I’m posting cute animal pictures and facts throughout the day as a mental health service.

Holy crap, you guys, did you know that hedgehogs are resistant to venom? In fact, these cute and unassuming little wigglyboos enjoy eating venomous snakes. Seriously. You look at a hedgehog and you think, “Well, that’s a sweet helpless prey animal.” But no. Instead, they’re hanging out in social circles that include the honey badger. And, to go along with that Secret Tough Guy persona, hedgehogs are also illegal in many parts of the U.S. If your hedgehog lives in New York City, California, Arizona, Georgia, Hawaii, or Maine, it is b-b-b-b breakin’ the law.


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