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In the crucial Senate battleground of Montana, though, a recent survey of the state from Mason Dixon polling showed Democratic Sen. Jon Tester down by 3 percentage points, 45 percent to 48 percent, to Republican Rep. Denny Rehberg. Obama trails Romney in the same state poll by 9 percentage points, and the poll shows Montanans are divided on more partisan lines than 2006, when Tester won his seat. As a result, Tester has worked hard to put distance between himself and Obama. In one TV ad airing during the summer, Tester bragged that he "took on the Obama administration" and noted his votes against the auto and Wall Street bailouts, which Obama supported, and his support for the Keystone XL oil pipeline, which Obama has opposed. If either Obama or Romney has coattails, it's most likely to show up in the race for the Senate. Republicans need to net four seats to take control of the chamber. The GOP has the potential to pick up four seats in states that Obama and Romney are fiercely contesting: Virginia, Ohio, Florida and Wisconsin. Republicans must also hold onto a Senate seat in Nevada, another presidential swing state. Some potential for coattails shows up in polling. In Virginia, Kaine's numbers have tracked closely with Obama's polling in the state. Last week, a poll released by The Washington Post had Obama up over Romney in Virginia by about 8 percentage points and Kaine over Allen by a similar margin. Another Virginia poll, from Fox News, had Obama up 7 points and Kaine up just 4 points. In Wisconsin, two recent polls, one from Quinnipiac University and The New York Times and the other from NBC News, The Wall Street Journal and Marist University, showed Obama with leads of 6 and 5 percentage points, respectively. Those polls also showed Baldwin improving her position against Thompson. Retiring GOP Sen. Jon Kyl of Arizona said he expected the presidential contest to factor into a handful of races. But, as Kyl noted, several key Senate battlegrounds are less likely to feel the impact of the presidential race. Romney is expected to romp in North Dakota and Montana, but both states' Senate races are close. On the other side, Obama should sweep Massachusetts, even as Warren and Brown go to the wire in a tight race. In House races, the connection to the top of the ticket is inescapable -- Republican vice presidential candidate Paul Ryan is a Wisconsin congressman. For weeks, Democrats have seized on Ryan's budget plan in an effort to tie Republican candidates to changes to Medicare that could prove unpopular, especially with seniors. For example, in a close upstate New York contest, vulnerable Democratic Rep. Kathy Hochul has sought to tie Ryan's budget to her opponent, Republican Chris Collins, to the GOP-backed budget. Collins has been forced to publicly withhold support for the Ryan plan. Republicans, in turn, have tied Democrats to Obama and specifically the president's health care law, unpopular with many voters. The National Republican Congressional Committee recently released eight ads in key districts focused on the health care issue.
[Associated
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