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		More candidates, more money and a big 
		bet: How Democrats won the House 
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		 [November 08, 2018] 
		By Peter Eisler, Tim Reid and Letitia Stein 
 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - “Expand the 
		battlefield.”
 
 The Democrats’ mantra for seizing control of the U.S. House of 
		Representatives took shape within weeks of President Donald Trump’s 
		stunning 2016 White House victory.
 
 Democratic strategists wanted to go beyond the traditional strategy of 
		flipping Republican seats in swing districts. Now, they would also 
		compete in more conservative areas, forcing Republicans to burn 
		resources defending seats they considered safe.
 
 It meant rolling the dice, gambling that a polarizing president would 
		drive independent and moderate Republican voters away from his party’s 
		candidates, gambling that Democrats would remain energized by antipathy 
		towards him, gambling that history and a political map that had 
		Republicans on the defensive would work in their favor.
 
 In the fight for the House, Democrats were “starting the 2018 election 
		cycle on offense,” Dan Sena, executive director of the Democratic 
		Congressional Campaign Committee, wrote in a memo assessing the party’s 
		chances days after Trump’s inauguration in January 2017.
 
 On Tuesday night, the Democrats’ bets paid off with a projected win of 
		at least 30 new seats, which would be seven more than the 23 needed to 
		secure their first House majority since 2011.
 
 “We owned the ground,” Democratic House leader Nancy Pelosi said as the 
		takeover became clear. She credited the win to the party’s “dynamic, 
		diverse and incredible candidates.”
 
 Reuters reporters visited more than a dozen battleground House districts 
		and interviewed candidates, campaign officials, strategists and voters 
		to learn how Democrats laid the groundwork to capture the chamber. They 
		also analyzed historical election trends and data from Reuters polling 
		partner Ipsos.
 
		
		 
		
 In his memo, Sena offered an initial list of 59 Republican-held seats 
		deemed flippable by the DCCC, the party organization that oversees House 
		races. Democrats needed to take just over a third of them, an ambitious 
		goal, but not unprecedented. Republicans would be defending dozens of 
		districts where Trump either lost or won narrowly.
 
 To fight on a much larger battlefield, Democrats needed “candidates with 
		diverse profiles that fit unique, Republican-leaning districts,” DCCC 
		Chairman Ben Ray Luján, a U.S. House member from New Mexico, wrote in a 
		June 2017 memo to staff. “Look outside of the traditional mold to keep 
		recruiting local leaders, veterans, business owners, women, job 
		creators, and health professionals.”
 
 By early this year, Democrats had broadened their target list to more 
		than 100 battleground races where they felt they had competitive 
		candidates.
 
 Top targets were the 41 open Republican seats, including dozens vacated 
		by incumbents who retired rather than seek reelection in districts where 
		Trump is not popular. Many of those districts were won by Democratic 
		presidential candidate Hillary Clinton or carried narrowly by Trump in 
		2016.
 
 Besides the open seats, Democrats focused on 21 Republican incumbents in 
		districts that also were closely contested in 2016. Republican-held 
		districts with large minority populations were another priority, as were 
		white, working-class districts that backed Barack Obama for president 
		before swinging to Trump in 2016.
 
 History suggested Democrats had a good shot for a “wave” election in the 
		House – a power-shifting win with a turnover of dozens of seats. Those 
		reversals typically occur when the president’s approval sits below 45 
		percent and the share of voters who believe the country is going in the 
		right direction is below 40 percent.
 
 For much of this year, Trump’s approval in Reuters/Ipsos opinion polls 
		has hovered around 40 percent, and “right direction” sentiment has been 
		around 35 percent. Exit polls showed similar sentiment among voters on 
		Tuesday.
 
 The Democrats invested $2.5 million early in the campaign cycle to 
		expand fundraising databases and hire digital strategists to boost 
		online donations, according to figures released by the party.
 
		
		 
		
 By Election Day, the DCCC had raised at least $270 million - upwards of 
		20 percent more than its total in the 2015-16 election cycle. That 
		allowed the party to make six-figure investments in 85 districts, 
		including many once seen as safely Republican.
 
 The committee also trained nearly 3,000 campaign workers and dispatched 
		field organizers earlier than usual, including 20 in Republican-held 
		districts before Democrats even had candidates in them. It also forged 
		new partnerships with outside organizations to help recruit candidates 
		and energize key voting groups.
 
 Once Democrats had identified the districts they wanted to contest and 
		the candidates they wanted to win them, party leaders sought to apply 
		one of the big lessons of 2016 - don’t let Trump dominate the 
		conversation. They urged candidates to focus on healthcare and economic 
		security, issues that consistently registered high voter interest in 
		polls.
 
 “We urged our candidates to focus on the issues that are most important 
		to voters,” DCCC Press Secretary Tyler Law told Reuters. “We just let 
		Trump be Trump.”
 
 A FLIP IN THE SUBURBS
 
 Until Tuesday, voters in New Jersey’s 11th congressional district hadn’t 
		sent a Democrat to the U.S. House of Representatives in nearly 40 years 
		– but the seat was ripe for flipping.
 
 Perched at the western edge of the New York City suburbs, the district 
		has the kind of wealthy, well-educated, moderate Republicans who aren’t 
		especially keen on Trump. In 2016, its voters backed him for president 
		by less than 1 percent, a fraction of the margin they usually give 
		Republicans in White House races.
 
 And when 23-year Republican incumbent U.S. Representative Rodney 
		Frelinghuysen announced in January that he would not seek re-election, 
		the district slid into a coveted category for a Democratic Party eager 
		to seize the U.S. House majority: an open seat.
 
 The party nominated Mikie Sherrill, a centrist, first-time candidate 
		with a resume party officials saw as a perfect fit for the district.
 
 She was likely to attract college-educated women, a group shown in 
		opinion polls as especially unhappy with Trump. And her background - 
		former Navy helicopter pilot, former federal prosecutor, coach of her 
		children’s sports teams - seemed sure to appeal to independent and 
		moderate Republican voters.
 
 On election night, Sherrill romped to victory over state assemblyman Jay 
		Webber.
 
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			U.S. House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi is introduced on stage by 
			Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC) Chairman Ben Ray 
			Lujan as they react to the results of the U.S. midterm elections at 
			a Democratic election night rally in Washington, U.S. November 6, 
			2018. REUTERS/Al Drago 
            
			 
            Sherrill, 46, campaigned mostly on kitchen table issues, such as 
			health care, economic security and improving transportation 
			infrastructure. She positioned herself as someone who would “fight 
			back against Donald Trump” but made little mention of him on her 
			campaign website or social media accounts.
 Still, many who backed Sherrill had Trump on their minds.
 
 Rick Haan and Martin Smith are the sort of lifelong Republican 
			voters who had kept the district in the party’s hands since 1985 – 
			successful, well-educated professionals who favor candidates in the 
			small-government, fiscally conservative mold of former President 
			Ronald Reagan.
 
 Both are repelled by Trump’s bombastic rhetoric and nationalist 
			politics and want a Democratic Congress to stand in opposition.
 
 “I won’t vote for anyone who isn’t against him,” said Haan, a 
			64-year-old business consultant.
 
 "There’s only one issue,” said Martin, a retired lawyer, “and that’s 
			getting back to a civil society.”
 
 REVERSING THE“TRUMP SURGE”
 
 Abby Finkenauer, daughter of a union worker and sister of a soybean 
			farmer, was precisely the sort of candidate Democrats needed to flip 
			Iowa’s 1st congressional district, a mostly white, culturally 
			conservative, working-class swath of eastern Iowa.
 
 Finkenauer, 29, ousted two-term Republican Representative Rod Blum, 
			a wealthy businessman she painted as out of touch with working-class 
			voters.
 
 In 2016, Trump won the district because typically Democratic union 
			members liked his economic populism and promises of job creation. To 
			win them back, Finkenauer stressed her union roots: one ad featured 
			her talking about how her father, a retired welder-pipefitter, would 
			wring sweat from his belt after a day’s work.
 
 In hundreds of appearances, many in union halls, Finkenauer promised 
			to protect families’ health care and oppose any efforts to cut 
			Social Security and Medicare healthcare programs for senior 
			citizens.
 
 “I decided to do this because it is so dang personal,” Finkenauer 
			said, noting her family’s working-class roots at a gathering of 
			union workers over burgers and hot dogs in Anamosa, population 
			5,500.
 
 Nearly 40 percent of the district’s voters are independents, and 
			it’s dominated by farmers and union workers employed at the John 
			Deere factories in Dubuque and Waterloo and the Quaker Oats and 
			General Mills plants in Cedar Rapids.
 
            
			 
            
 Like many Democrats who won Republican seats, Finkenauer outraised 
			Blum, mostly with donations of $20 or less. She routinely criticized 
			the Trump-backed tax-reform bill, which passed last year with Blum’s 
			support, as favoring the wealthy over workers, a sentiment many 
			voters echoed in interviews.
 
 Blum's campaign did not respond to requests for comment. In a recent 
			debate, he dismissed Finkenauer's tax-cut criticism: “Our economy is 
			absolutely booming, if you haven't noticed, and it’s due in large 
			part to those tax cuts."
 
 But Finkenauer’s message resonated with union voters such as Robbie 
			Frommelt, 28, a Cedar Rapids ironworker. He voted for Obama, then 
			Trump, but has grown disillusioned with Republicans.
 
 “I think the Democrats are more on the side of the workers," 
			Frommelt said in an interview days before the election, noting that 
			many of his co-workers have told him they feel likewise. “A lot of 
			the guys are going to switch back.”
 
 STICKING TO THE SCRIPT
 
 In South Florida’s Latino-dominated 26th congressional district, 
			Democrat Debbie Mucarsel-Powell, an immigrant from Ecuador, followed 
			Democratic leaders’ script of focusing mostly on "kitchen table" 
			issues – and not Trump.
 
 Campaigning in a district where half of constituents were born 
			outside the United States, Mucarsel-Powell highlighted health care, 
			pocketbook issues and the environment, a top concern in a district 
			that stretches from the Florida Everglades to iconic Key West.
 
 While the university administrator consistently painted her 
			Republican opponent Carlos Curbelo as a strong supporter of Trump, 
			she didn’t make Trump’s controversial immigration policies the chief 
			focus of her campaign. In a district that backed Clinton by 16 
			points in the 2016 presidential race, Curbelo had worked hard to 
			separate himself from Trump’s hardline stance on immigration.
 
 So Mucarsel-Powell emphasized the issues where Curbelo was more 
			closely aligned with the president. Time and again, she highlighted 
			his vote to repeal the Obama health care law and his support for the 
			Trump-backed tax bill, which she characterized as a giveaway to the 
			rich that would have little benefit for the district’s working class 
			voters.
 
             
            
 “All you need to do is look at his voting record to see who he truly 
			is,” said Mucarsel-Powell said of Curbelo. “Time and time again, he 
			caved into his party,” she said, “and some of the most extreme 
			members of his party.”
 
 On Tuesday voters gave Mucarsel-Powell a narrow victory.
 
 Curbelo knew he faced a challenge.
 
 “The truth is this is a swing district,” Curbelo said about a week 
			before the election, “and I am always ready for any outcome.”
 
 (Reporting By Peter Eisler and Tim Reid,; Additional reporting by 
			Sharon Bernstein in Las Vegas; Editing by Jason Szep and Ross 
			Colvin)
 
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