To Republicans hoping for a chance to take over the Senate in November: not so fast.
A new New York Times/Kaiser Family Foundation poll released Wednesday says that the Senate races in four Southern states are closer than early predicted–a development that could put a Republican majority on hold.
According to the poll, Republican candidates in Kentucky, North Carolina, Louisiana, and Arkansas do not hold as wide of a lead as pollsters may expect: In Arkansas, incumbent Sen. Mark Pryor, a Democrat, currently holds a 10-point lead over his Republican challenger, Rep. Tom Cotton. Louisiana’s Democratic Sen. Mary Landrieu also currently holds a wide lead over the field of potential Republican candidates. In North Carolina, Democratic Sen. Kay Hagan holds a slight lead over the Republican front-runner, State Rep. Thom Tillis, and in Kentucky, Sen. Mitch McConnell is effectively tied with Democratic challenger Alison Lundergan Grimes.
The new poll numbers are particularly surprising considering that President Obama lost all four of those states in 2012, and as Hardball guest Howard Fineman noted Wednesday night, the most remarkable part of the turnaround all has to do with the one issue Republicans have been hammering the president on for years: Obamacare.








