To hear Republicans tell it, the fight over Brett Kavanaugh’s Supreme Court confirmation was a political godsend. Not only did the party get a new partisan ally on the nation’s highest court, the fight itself left Democratic voters depressed and deflated, while leaving GOP voters feeling newly invigorated.
“Ironically, the behavior of, first, the Democrats on Senate Judiciary Committee, and then the overreach of the protestors at the Capitol have actually energized the Republican base, particularly in the red states where we’re trying to pick up seats out across America,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) said this past weekend. “So, I want to thank the other side for the tactics that have allowed us to kind of energize and get involved our own voters.”
The new narrative was set: the midterm elections may have looked good for Democrats, but the Kavanaugh fight changed everything.
The narrative, however, doesn’t appear to be true.
More Americans disapprove of Brett M. Kavanaugh’s confirmation to the Supreme Court than approve, and a narrow majority says congressional investigation of the new justice should not end with his elevation to the court, according to a new Washington Post-ABC News poll. […]
Asked how the Kavanaugh debate would affect their midterm vote, slightly more say it makes them more inclined to support Democrats for Congress than Republicans. Women say the episode draws them toward Democrats over Republicans by a 16-point margin, while men are more evenly split.
All told, the Washington Post-ABC News poll found a 51% majority disapprove of Kavanaugh’s confirmation, and a 53% majority support additional congressional scrutiny of the Republican justice.
As for the electoral consequences, the survey found, in the wake of the confirmation fight, 33% are more likely to vote Democratic, while 27% are more likely to vote Republican.
What’s more, this isn’t the only evidence from recent days challenging the GOP’s predictions about riding a Kavanaugh-related wave into Election Day.









