Cook's analyses have always been the most reliable of any polling  service.
Here is his interpretation of the numbers for 2010.
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House Flips, Senate Doesn't
By Charlie Cook
© National Journal Group  Inc. 
October 16, 2010 
It's crunch time for pollsters........ what are pollsters and  strategists 
seeing in 2010? Unquestionably, Republicans are still headed for a  big 
year. My hunch is that GOP gains will be roughly comparable to 1994, when  the 
party picked up 52 House seats and eight Senate seats. Over the past two  
weeks, Democratic performance has improved in some places and deteriorated in  
others, making any sweeping generalizations difficult. 
Yet the races do seem to be tightening. Democrats who were trailing by more 
 than a few percentage points remain behind, but by smaller margins. 
Although  Republican strategists are hardly panicking, they are noticing the 
tightening.  As one Republican strategist put it, Democratic voters were so 
demoralized that  their intensity had only one way to go, and that was up. 
Democrats still have a  formidable challenge in getting their sympathizers to 
the 
polls, but their task  may not be as difficult as it appeared a few weeks 
ago, when Democratic voters  were even more despondent. 
One GOP pollster theorized that as Democrats shifted their messaging focus  
more to the personal weaknesses and shortcomings of GOP candidates, they  
energized more of their supporters, perhaps enough to save a few seats and 
cut  margins in others. The tightening seems to be happening in Senate races 
in  Arkansas, Illinois, Ohio, and Pennsylvania, but not in Colorado, 
Missouri, and  Washington state, underscoring the danger of drawing sweeping 
conclusions. In  Arkansas, Democratic incumbent Blanche Lincoln is still well 
behind, but she's  no longer being buried in a landslide. In Pennsylvania, 
different polls are  suggesting different margins, with some showing the 
contest 
between former  Republican Rep. Pat Toomey and Democratic Rep. Joe Sestak 
very, very close -- a  turnaround from polls that had been showing the race 
widening and hinting that  the contest might be over. In Ohio, former 
Republican Rep. Rob Portman is  holding a solid lead over Lt. Gov. Lee Fisher, 
but it 
may not be quite as wide  as it was. 
It's too soon to say whether the tightening is widespread and whether it  
extends into the House. One Republican strategist pointed to the Democratic 
open  seat in Pennsylvania's 7th Congressional District -- the district 
Sestak  currently represents -- that had looked like it would be a "walk in the 
park"  for Republicans. Now the race looks like it might be a contest. With 
so many  House seats at play, detecting patterns can be hard. Still, when 
patterns do  emerge, the evidence can be imposing and impressive. 
My reaction to recent polls is to think that the odds for a seven- or  
eight-seat Democratic loss in the Senate have increased, while the chances of  
losing nine, 10, or more seats have dropped some. The likelihood of runaway  
victories for Republicans is diminishing. Many of the GOP wins may be in the 
 single digits, perhaps the low single digits. 
At this juncture, I am still sticking with a 1994-level outlook: Eight 
Senate  and 52 House seats are the over and under, with a 50 percent chance 
that 
 Republican gains will be higher and a 50 percent chance that they will be 
lower.  House gains in the 60s, 70s, or even 80s seem unlikely, as do Senate 
gains of 11  or 12, which would require the GOP to capture or hold 100 
percent of the 18 or  so Senate seats that could change hands. Even so, 
Republicans stand poised to  make sizable gains that will flip the House and 
bring 
them close to winning the  Senate.

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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