On Tuesday, millions of Americans will head to the polls to vote in the most costly midterm elections ever. Here’s what you need to know.
Late-in-the-game polling is predicting a strong night for the GOP on Tuesday, as the party appears poised to regain control of the Senate and make gains in the House of Representatives. But many races remain extremely tight, and candidates of both parties are on a last-minute campaign blitz as they aim to mobilize the vote and swing races in their direction.
To secure control of the upper chamber, Republicans need to pick up six seats—seven if Kansas’ wild-card independent wins and chooses to caucus with the Democrats as he’s hinted he might. Three states currently held by Democrats — Montana, West Virginia and South Dakota — are likely to be pickups for the GOP, leaving three or four more seats the party needs to win control.
The fate of the Senate will be decided by close races in these states: Alaska, Arkansas, Louisiana, Colorado, Georgia, Iowa, New Hampshire, Kentucky, Kansas and North Carolina.
In Kentucky, polls suggest incumbent Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell has pulled ahead of Alison Lundergan Grimes, the young Democrat championed by the Clintons. In a recent NBC/Marist survey, McConnell leads Grimes by nine points among likely voters, 50% to 41%. A win for McConnell, a 30-year Senate veteran, would position him to become Senate majority leader next year if his party does as well as expected.
Related: McConnell campaign event proves sleepy, underwhelming
In Arkansas, Republican Tom Cotton is leading Democrat incumbent Sen. Mark Pryor. The gap has been closing: An NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll late last month showed Cotton leading by just two points; a month earlier, he lead by five. Still, it’s an upward climb for the Democrat whose president is hugely unpopular—just 34% of Arkansas voters say they approve of the job Obama is doing. Cotton has hit Pryor hard, both over his vote for Obamacare and in general on the president’s unpopular agenda.
In Iowa, the Des Moines Register’s final poll of the election saw Republican Joni Ernst polling seven points ahead of Democrat Bruce Braley, even as Braley and other Democrats argue that the poll is inaccurate. “Neither side believes that,” Democrat Sen. Tom Harkin said at a rally for Braley. “I just don’t buy the poll because we haven’t had an open seat in 40 years.” Ernst’s folksy, Sarah Palin-esque demeanor has captured many voters in the Democratic-leaning state, while Braley has struggled to recover from a handful of gaffes, particularly his condescending remark that the state’s senior Sen. Chuck Grassley was just “a farmer from Iowa without a law degree.”
Related: Iowa Democrats: The polls are wrong
In Louisiana, incumbent Democrat Sen. Mary Landrieu has been running behind, but this race is likely to go to a run-off if none of the three candidates earn a majority on Tuesday. Landrieu has been dragged down by President Obama’s low popularity ratings in the state, and Landrieu has sought to ally herself to a more popular Democrat, Hillary Clinton.
In Georgia, Democrat Michelle Nunn is in a tight race with Republican David Perdue. This race may also end up in run-off if neither candidate earns 50% of the vote, since Libertarian Amanda Swafford is likely to pick up a small share for herself. Perdue, a millionaire businessman, has been criticized for his support of outsourcing jobs overseas, while Nunn, like other red-state Democrats, has been hit as a “rubber stamp” to Obama.








