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Evening Wrap

Your daily analysis of trending topics in state government. The snark is nonpartisan.

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Breaking the bank

As anyone who has ever been poor can attest, everything is harder when you don’t have money. This is true in obvious ways — it’s difficult to embrace the fun parts of being human when you can’t pay rent or food — but the effects of poverty go far deeper than that. Below a certain income threshold, people begin to have trouble affording necessities like stable housing, healthy food and medical care, which increases their risk of unemployment, health problems and substance abuse.

A steady drumbeat of drama

Enough of the midterm races have been called to give us a pretty clear picture of the political landscape. We know who controls the U.S. Senate (Democrats) and the House (Republicans). We know how election deniers fared in statewide races (poorly). We even got a preview of the next election, thanks to the far-too-early launch of Donald Trump’s 2024 presidential campaign. After so many months of anticipation, this should feel satisfying, but mostly, it feels like business as usual. Campaigning is constant in American politics, even — maybe especially — when the election is over.

Low energy, high stakes

Donald Trump confirmed on Tuesday night that he will once again run for president, ending weeks of mild speculation from a weary nation where pretty much everyone already knew he would once again run for president. “In order to make America great and glorious again, I am tonight announcing my candidacy for president of the United States,” he said in a speech from his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida.

Under the cover of night

A handful of congressional races have finalized since the last time we spoke, leaving Republicans poised to take control of the House of Representatives. And Democrats will retain control of the Senate after notching key victories in Arizona and Nevada that left the party with exactly half of the chamber’s seats. A final seat remains in play in Georgia, where college students are pushing for expanded voting opportunities ahead of a Dec. 6 runoff election.

The path forward

The closer you look at results from Nov. 8, the more you realize Democrats can’t claim victory – especially where Republicans added to their numbers. Take Wisconsin, where legislative Democrats held off a Republican supermajority in the state Assembly, its lower chamber. While Democratic Gov. Tony Evers won reelection, his ability to withstand veto overrides is precariously thin, the Wisconsin Examiner reports.

All the Time

I had loosely planned (hoped) to call this the TGIF edition, as in “Thank God It’s Finalized,” which I obviously cannot do because nothing is finalized. (It was a bad title, so it’s fine, though I stand behind the sentiment.) Here’s what we know today: Republicans will probably end up with a majority in the U.S. House of Representatives — as of Friday afternoon, they’d clinched 211 of the 218 seats needed for control — but there are still too many outstanding races to say for sure.

Incremental progress

On the whole, the picture hasn’t changed a ton since yesterday. A lot of races remain too close to call, so we’re still waiting to find out which party will control Congress, though I’d bet my afternoon snack that the Democrats lose at least one chamber (probably the House, where Republicans had flipped nine seats as of Thursday afternoon). It could take days or weeks for those results to crystallize.

Welcome to the postseason

By the metrics, Democrats should have fared poorly on Election Day. Prices are up, their leader is unpopular, and their messaging was, as usual, a mess. None of this boded well ahead of the midterms, which are almost always a disaster for whichever party holds the White House. It’s no wonder that Republicans expected a bloodbath. But the so-called “red wave” never made it to shore.

The midterm final exam

Let’s just get the awkward part out of the way: I don’t have any election results for you. Most states will still be voting when this lands in your inbox; once the polls close, officials will tally today’s votes along with a mountain of early and mail-in ballots that, in most places, can’t be processed prior to Election Day. By this evening we may have a sense of who’s faring well, but official results will likely take days.

It's the final countdown

Let’s start with what we know so far. More than 42 million people have already cast their ballots, significantly more than the 39.1 million who voted early in the 2018 midterms. That doesn’t necessarily mean that overall turnout will be larger — early voting has been on the upswing for years, despite Republicans’ continued attempts to undermine it — but it could portend record participation in states like Georgia, where more residents voted early this year than in any other midterm election.

Four days and counting

Let’s start with a hopeful reality check: Amid all the election denial and conspiracy theories and voter intimidation and threats of violence, our election system is — and has always been — secure and trustworthy. It was true in 2016, it was true in 2020, and it’s true now, even if Republicans would prefer that you believe otherwise. If you’re skeptical, try examining the extremely detailed security procedures that govern every step of every election across the country.

The path to chaos

Midterm elections typically draw fewer voters than their presidential counterparts. Around 60% of registered voters cast ballots for president, but only 40% participate in off-year contests. There are a lot of reasons for this, but in general, midterm elections are the bridesmaid, never the bride. That could change this year. More than 32 million ballots had been cast in early voting as of Thursday afternoon, which is on pace to match record-breaking turnout in the 2018 midterms. But there are a lot of factors at play, which has made it difficult to forecast turnout with any certainty.