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In this edition: The battle for Mississippi, new polling on a four-way presidential race, and a new ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌ 
 
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October 24, 2023
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David Weigel

How does a Democrat win in Mississippi? Brandon Presley thinks he’s found the formula.

David Weigel

THE SCENE

ITTA BENA, Miss. – “I’m Brandon Presley,” said the Democrat running for governor of Mississippi. “Running against Tate Reeves.”

Plenty of people at the Mississippi Valley State University tailgate recognized Presley, a longtime public service commissioner with a famous name, right away. All of them perked up at the mention of Gov. Reeves — a Republican who’s never been popular with Black voters, and made even more enemies in his first term.

“Tater Tot? No, no, no,” said Takiyah Lymon after Presley posed for a photo with her family. “I’m here for healthcare. My mother had to go back to work to help me pay for my medication.”

Presley, a conservative Democrat who believes that life starts at conception, has run a campaign that’s partly about himself and largely about Reeves. He’s attacked the incumbent relentlessly over a welfare scandal that routed state funds to well-connected Republicans; over rural hospital closures, which he blames on the governor’s refusal to expand Medicaid; and over inflation, which he’d fight by ending the state grocery tax.

“I’m gonna tell you something — I read the red letters in the Bible,” Presley told the congregation at a Greenville church on Sunday, one of dozens of stops he’d made in the majority-Black Delta. “I read all of it, but the red letters jump out, ‘cause that’s what Jesus said himself. And he said: When you’ve done it unto the least of these, my brethren, you have done it unto me! We should have, in government, policies that reflect that philosophy.”

No Mississippi governor has lost re-election in 20 years, when Ronnie Musgrove became the last Democrat to hold the office, but a similar anti-abortion/pro-Medicaid message managed to win John Bel Edwards two terms as governor in neighboring Louisiana. No other Republican is sweating his or her re-election on Nov. 7, the first one since Reeve’s administration brought the case that ended Roe v. Wade. National Democrats have poured $3 million into Presley’s race, increasingly convinced that Reeves is uniquely vulnerable and their nominee is uniquely positioned to beat him. (Reeves ended September with $6 million left to spend, three times as much as Presley.)

“He has a lack of empathy, which leaders need,” said former Gov. Ronnie Musgrove, whose 2003 defeat kicked off the era of Republican rule. “He has trouble relating to people. He seems very distant, both in personality and in life experience.”

Reeves, who won his first term by just 5 points, has cast Presley as a puppet of coastal liberals who’d halt “Mississippi momentum” — the lowest unemployment rate in a century, higher test scores, and businesses relocating from blue states.

“What matters most is his job approval number, and it’s been over 50%, because his record on jobs and education has been phenomenal,” said Austin Barbour, a GOP strategist and son of former Gov. Haley Barbour. “It’s close because we don’t have blowouts in competitive races. Our demographics aren’t set up for that.”

David Weigel

DAVID’S VIEW

Mississippi’s demographics, and its rigid racial polarization, have kept national Democrats interested in the state, confident in a formula that’s never quite come together. Republicans win more than 80% of the white vote, Democrats win more than 90% of the Black vote; in theory, a Democrat who maximized black turnout while keeping his losses low in the rest of the state could eke it out.

Democrats I talked to had the same back-of-napkin math. Presley needed to run as strong with white voters as former Attorney Gen. Jim Hood did in 2019, when he lost to Reeves — then, get out Black voters like 2018/2020 U.S. Senate candidate Mike Espy, who won 90% of a Black electorate that turned out at a record 76%.

“We’re making the largest investment in Black voter turnout that’s ever been,” Presley said after a canvass launch in Starkville; Hood had won the county, home to Mississippi State University, by 14 points. Before entering the race, Presley talked with Espy about what worked, and obtained his list of 160,000 donors. That, and the late interest by the Democratic Governors Association, helped bring him to spending parity with Reeves.

Republicans worried about Reeves are mostly concerned with turnout — a match-up between a self-described “country” Democrat, whose base cannot stand the incumbent, and an incumbent who juiced turnout last time with a last-minute appearance from Donald Trump. (“I can’t believe this is a competitive race,” Trump said in Tupelo; a year later, he’d triple Reeves’s win margin.)

Presley has other advantages; a local “electoral college” system, which threw state elections to the legislature unless a candidate won both the majority of the vote and a majority of house districts, was repealed by voters in 2020. Reeves has defended his opposition to Medicaid expansion as opposition to “welfare,” telling WLOX last week that Democrats simply want to put “able-bodied adults” on “welfare rolls.” But it remains a political problem for him; his announcement of a new hospital reimbursement plan last month was viewed skeptically as a last-minute political fix.

“I thought we’d spend a lot of time educating people on what Medicaid expansion was and why it would benefit the state,” Presley said in an interview. “That’s not the case. Whether I’m in a rural Republican county, or I’m in a strongly Democratic stronghold, people understand that issue.”

THE VIEW FROM NEXT DOOR

Earlier this month, Republicans romped home in Louisiana, with Attorney Gen. Jeff Landry winning an out-right majority of the vote and preventing a runoff, despite a crowded field of GOP and Democratic competitors. One GOP tactic that worked — and one not seen in neighboring Mississippi — was constant outreach to Black voters, including ads that featured Black crime victims who believed that Landry would make the state safer, and radio spots with testimonials from the candidate’s old friends.

“We were very aggressive in asking for everyone’s vote,” said Landry strategist Brent Littlefield. “We really didn’t leave any stones unturned.”

NOTABLE

  • In the New York Times, Nick Corasaniti looks at how changes to old Jim Crow laws have encouraged Democrats here, and “could be paving a path for Black voters to build a stronger voice in the South.”
  • In the Cook Political Report, Jessica Taylor explains why Presley’s odds have improved, and that “the contest could head to a runoff three weeks later.” (Independent candidate Gwendolyn Gray has dropped out and endorsed Presley, but remains on the ballot.)
  • In Mississippi Today, Adam Ganucheau assesses why Reeves can’t rely on another boost from Trump: pollsters find a “more negative overall view of the former president than in previous years’ polling.”
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State of Play


Texas. Houston Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee expressed “regret” for her profanity-filled rant against a staffer, caught on tape and released just weeks before the city’s mayoral primary. First published by Current Revolt, a conservative Texas-based substack, the tape captured the congresswoman ranting at staffers who didn’t have the details of a memo; for her critics, it was a cue to remember other incidents when the 73-year old Democrat behaved rudely. Polling all year has found Jackson Lee heading to a runoff but losing to state Sen. John Whitmire, a more conservative Democrat endorsed by the Houston Chronicle.

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Ads
Tate Reeves/YouTube

Tate for Governor, “Make Your Stand.” For weeks, the Reeves campaign’s paid messaging has portrayed Presley as a catspaw for left-wing radicals. That’s illustrated here by a map of the lower 48 states, with California, New York, Massachusetts, and D.C. highlighted in blue, shooting dollars into Mississippi like ICBMs, all to stop Reeves from taking action against “Biden’s broken border” and the “transgender agenda.”

Brandon Presley Campaign, “Hear This.” Reeves has gone after Presley repeatedly for remarks he made in June, when asked about the governor signing a ban on gender surgery for minors: “I trust mamas, and I trust daddies to deal with the health care of their children first and foremost, period.” That was interpreted at the time as Presley opposing the law, and he’s running this ad to refute that: He’ll oppose “gender surgery for minors or boys playing girls’ sports” if he wins.

Never Back Down, “Nikki Haley’s Questionable Judgment on China is Dangerous.” The pro-DeSantis PAC started gunning for Haley this month, tacitly acknowledging that this isn’t a “two-man” race between the Florida governor and Trump. Its first anti-Haley buy hits her as a hypocrite on China, promising to get tough on the country after welcoming Chinese manufacturing companies to South Carolina and crediting it for being a “really great friend of ours” in negotiations with North Korea. (That context is clipped from the ad; the “great friend” video appears in isolation.)

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Polls

Since his independent campaign started, 15 days ago, Kennedy has run slightly stronger with Republican-leaning voters than Democratic-leaning voters. That continues here — by a 2-1 margin, Kennedy’s voters say they’d look at a Republican candidate if he wasn’t on the ballot. (The candidate’s largely vanished from Fox News since making the switch.) The left-wing backlash to Biden’s actions in Israel isn’t showing up in a poll yet; wayward Biden voters are more worried about his age, with some picking West if he appears on the ballot, and 28% voting for a No Labels candidate, if one ends up emerging.

Republicans are watching Virginia’s Nov. 7 election to see if the party’s argument on abortion — they want a 15-week limit, Democrats want no limits at all — can prevail, then be scaled up. This is the second public poll in a week to find the electorate leaning toward the Democrats’ position, partly because it doesn’t believe that the party would really wipe out restrictions. Democrats lead the generic ballot by 2 points with likely voters, and just 48% of Republican voters want the state’s laws to be “more strict” than the 26 week, 6 day limit on the books.

The post-COVID increase in illegal border-crossings — and the GOP’s relentless, coordinated messaging about this — keeps lowering the electorate’s support for immigration. Two years ago, before mayors in New York and Chicago were warning that the migrant influx had overwhelmed their resources, a majority of Americans disagreed that “too many” immigrants were arriving. That’s flipped — and this same sample of adults is split, 40/40, on the potential choice between Biden and Trump.

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2024
Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images

White House. Minnesota Rep. Dean Phillips is moving closer toward a presidential bid, looking at Friday, the final day to file for the New Hampshire primary, as his launch date. On Tuesday morning, Minneapolis radio host Jason DeRusha got an unofficial confirmation of the run – video of a bus wrapped with “Dean Phillips for President” decor, including a link to Dean24.com, a web domain reserved just 12 days earlier. The slogan: “Everybody’s invited!” (The website isn’t live yet.) White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre, who has to avoid direct electoral comments from the lectern, offered backhanded praise for Phillips: “We appreciate the congressman’s almost 100% support of this president as he’s moved forward with some key legislative priorities for the American people.”

In the GOP race, Michigan businessman Perry Johnson, who spent more than $14 million of his own money on a presidential campaign that never made it to a debate, ended his candidacy on Friday. He endorsed Donald Trump three days later. “I look forward in assisting in efforts to elect him,” Johnson said; on Friday, he’d said that he was maintaining a small staff presence in early states in case the race’s dynamics changed.

Chris Christie became the fifth GOP candidate to qualify for the Nov. 8 debate in Miami, announcing that he’d crossed the 70,000-donor threshold; Donald Trump, Ron DeSantis, Nikki Haley, and Vivek Ramaswamy had already met the requirements. (Trump has said he’ll skip this debate, as he skipped the first two, with no apparent downside to his campaign.)

Tim Scott’s campaign retrenched on Monday, announcing that he was “all-in on Iowa,” days after the pro-Scott TIM PAC scrapped its ad campaign in early states. But Scott’s first appearance after the pivot was in Chicago, at New Beginnings Church, for an hour-long speech that repeated his campaign’s themes: The left had failed minorities and he could “disrupt” its “narrative.”

DeSantis spent Tuesday campaigning in New Hampshire with Gov. Chris Sununu, who’s also joined Haley at events, as he’s scouted for a challenger who can beat Trump. “The race is actually wide open,” he said, when asked if there was a two-man contest between DeSantis and Trump. (In March, before DeSantis entered the race, Sununu told NBC News that the Florida governor would win the primary if it were held right then.)

Senate. Prince George’s County Executive Angela Alsobrooks grabbed two big endorsements on Monday: One from Gov. Wes Moore, and one from Montgomery County councilman Will Jawando as he dropped out of the race to replace Sen. Ben Cardin. Jawando, the first candidate to announce for the seat, explained in a statement that his progressive campaign wasn’t getting traction against Alsobrooks and self-funding Rep. David Trone: “I cannot remain in a race I do not believe I can win.”

House. One week after Arizona Rep. Debbie Lesko announced her retirement, two of the GOP’s defeated 2022 candidates were angling to replace her. Attorney general candidate Abe Hamedeh, who is still suing over his defeat to Democrat Kris Mayes, entered the race immediately and got the support of defeated gubernatorial nominee Kari Lake; Blake Masters, the party’s defeated U.S. Senate candidate, put a poll in the field. Neither Masters nor Hamedeh lives in Lesko’s district, which covers the conservative suburbs and small cities west of Phoenix.

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Next


  • four days until the presidential candidate filing deadline in New Hampshire
  • 14 days until elections in Kentucky, New Jersey, Mississippi, Ohio, and Virginia
  • 15 days until the third Republican presidential primary debate
  • 83 days until the Iowa caucuses
  • 123 days until the South Carolina Republican primary
  • 379 days until the 2024 presidential election
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