Will the 2014 midterms be another wave election for Congress? Don’t bet on it, according to a review of NBC/Wall Street Journal polling.
Until last year, the past three election cycles all produced significant shifts in the House. In 2006, Democrats netted 30 seats to win control of the House. Their streak continued in 2008, when they added 23 seats. Ahead of those elections, Democrats had a double-digit lead in NBC’s generic ballot test. In 2006, voters said they preferred Democrats by a 10-point margin, and in 2008 they were ahead of the GOP by 14 points.
But when Republicans have any lead in the generic ballot, they win big. In 2010, Republicans may have only led by two points over Democrats, but that didn’t matter — they swept up 63 total seats in that historic wave election.
It’s still over a year away before next year’s midterms, but the numbers aren’t on Democrats’ side yet for the 17 seats they need to win back the House. In 2013 so far, Democrats are up just three points, and Republicans are still heavily favored to retain control.
Democrats couldn’t have picked a worse time in 2010 for massive losses, either. Republicans won control of the partisan redistricting processes in many states, helping solidify once-vulnerable seats in key swing states like Pennsylvania and Ohio. With a now-condensed playing field, until the next reapportionment, massive shifts look even more unlikely.








