teachercd
Well-known member
Well, 2020 was an a$$ kicking in the end.This isn't really what happened in 2022 if that's what you were referring to.
Conventional wisdom of the opposition party (to the President) almost always doing well in midterms were the basis for the punditry and predictions for a red tsunami in 2022. Because the opposition party almost always dominates midterm elections during the first term of a new President.
Polling did a pretty good job predicting the outcomes. They didn't get it exact, but Democrats controlling the Senate while Republicans win the house - both with slim majorities - was the 2nd most probable outcome. People seem to not understand that Democrats having a 4/10 chance of winning the Senate are still high odds, like they did in 2022.
Currently, polling suggests that Trump is a very slight favorite - somewhere between 50% - 70% depending on the model. The polling is accurate, the election is almost guaranteed to be close similar to 2020.