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Senate map favors the GOP. But Steve Daines won’t predict a ‘red wave.’

Montana Sen. Steve Daines learned a big lesson from his predecessor as chair of the Senate Republicans’ campaign arm: Don’t overpromise. Don’t utter the phrase “red wave.” 

Before the 2022 midterm elections, with the Senate tied 50-50, GOP Sen. Rick Scott of Florida confidently predicted his party would win control of the chamber – handily. 

“I think we can get 53, 54, 55,” Senator Scott told a roomful of Republicans in North Carolina less than a month before Election Day. “The energy is on our side. People are fed up with the Biden agenda.”

Why We Wrote This

At a Monitor Breakfast with reporters, the chair of the National Republican Senatorial Committee kept expectations in check, while laying out how his party might neutralize the issue of abortion and capitalize on campus protests.

Not only did Democrats keep the Senate that November; they gained a seat, and still enjoy a 51-49 majority. 

On Thursday, at a Monitor Breakfast with reporters, Chair Daines was relentlessly on message. When asked for his prediction on how many Senate seats the Republicans will have come January, Mr. Daines was blunt: “Fifty-one.”

“Why 51?” a reporter followed up. 

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