There was a congressional special election in Pennsylvania a few months ago that Republicans expected to win. After all, the race was in the state’s 18th district, which Donald Trump had carried the year before by 20 points.
What’s more, going into the March election, the GOP and its allies believed their recently passed tax cuts would give the party an added boost, and the month before voters went to the polls, Republicans blanketed local airwaves with ads touting the GOP tax plan.
But as Pennsylvania’s special election drew closer, Republicans abruptly switched gears — because they discovered the commercials about tax breaks weren’t working. The Democrat ended up narrowly winning the race.
This was not an isolated incident. There’s plenty to chew on in the new NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll, but this stood out for me:
[Would you] be more likely or less likely to vote for a candidate who supports Donald Trump’s tax reform bill?
More likely: 36%Less likely: 42%
CNBC’s John Harwood added that in the most competitive House districts, that six-point margin becomes as 12-point margin against the Republican tax package.
This explains a lot.









