Importantville: No one knows anything—Election Night watch parties—Trump to Ft. Wayne—All eyes on Brenton's numbers—Amazon HQ2 to NoVa?
What's happening—and what's next—at the intersection of politics and business in Indiana?
By Adam Wren and design by Kris Davidson
Days to Election Day: 1
#INSEN STATE OF PLAY: The last three public polls of Indiana’s Senate race have Sen. Joe Donnelly up over businessman Mike Braun, but within the margin of error. The Real Clear Politics average is +0.8 Donnelly. FiveThirtyEight gives Donnelly a seven in 10 chance of winning, with the vote breaking down this way: 50.4 percent (Donnelly), 47.1 percent (Braun), and 2.5 percent (Lucy Brenton).
A new Mike Downs Center for Indiana Politics poll of 1048 registered voters finds that Trumps' approval rating in Indiana is under water, at 44 percent approve and 46 percent disapprove.
According to Andrew Downs, associate professor of political science at Purdue University Fort Wayne, “all indications are that this race will come down to Brenton supporters who decide to cast a vote for Donnelly or Braun and undecided voters.”
Fairly large percentages of Brenton supporters and undecided respondents approve of the job President Donald Trump is doing and have positive opinions of him personally. Larger percentages of undecided respondents disapprove of the job the President is doing and larger percentages of Brenton supporters and undecided respondents have negative opinions of him personally.
President Donald Trump has made a number of trips to Indiana this election season. No doubt, the events have helped to rally the Republican and Democratic bases as well as Braun and Donnelly supporters. It is possible that the Brenton supporters and undecided voters who have a neutral view of the President or are not sure what their opinion is, could be convinced by the trips to support Braun. Given the responses from Brenton supporters and undecided voters, the trips may be more likely to have a negative effect by motivating respondents who do not support the President.
All of which explains why Donnelly’s campaign is trying to boost Brenton’s votes. They see her as a huge factor in the race.
THE BIG NUMBER: 2.1 million—number of RNC in Indiana voter contacts this cycle.
Good morning, and welcome to Importantville. All the punditry and reporting comes down to the only thing that actually matters: Election Day. No one really knows anything.
About Indianapolis landing Amazon’s HQ2…
SHOT: Amazon in advanced talks about putting HQ2 in Northern Virginia, those close to process say
CHASER: Indy Can Become A Tech Hub Without The New Amazon Headquarters.
HAPPENING TONIGHT: Donnelly appears at an Election Eve rally in South Bend with 2nd Congressional District Democrat candidate Mel Hall and South Bend Mayor and 2020 Democratic hopeful Pete Buttigieg at the Aloft Hotel.
WHERE’S VEEP? He’s headed to Kalispell, Mont. for a Montana GOP Get Out the Vote rally. Then he’ll head to Rapid City for a Get Out The Vote Rally for Kristi Noem for Governor.
WHERE'S THE PRESIDENT? He’s in Cleveland for a Make America Great Again rally, and then heads to Ft. Wayne, where he will land around 5:15 p.m. From there, he’ll head to Allen County War Memorial Coliseum, where he’ll do another rally. His remarks are scheduled to begin at 6:05 p.m., and he’s expected to depart by 7:20 p.m. for Cape Girardeau, Mo.
Obama aims to run up the score for Donnelly in Lake County
The former president drew a crowd of more than 7,000 to the Genesis Convention Center in Gary yesterday.
Per friend of the newsletter James Briggs:
Sen. Joe Donnelly got right to the point. "I have a question for all of you," Donnelly shouted at the beginning of his brief remarks. "Are you going to vote in this election?"....Obama filled up the 7,000-seat Genesis Convention Center in downtown Gary and delivered a 41-minute explanation for why the correct answer to Donnelly's question should be yes.
Read more.
Outside the rally, Indiana Republicans did counter-programming with Pro-Trump union folks who planned to vote for Braun. They also had a Snapchat filter for the occasion.
RNC Spokesperson Michael Joyce responds to Obama's vist in Gary:
“Barack Obama’s failed policies have been thoroughly replaced by President Trump’s America First agenda that lowered unemployment, created more jobs, higher wages, and growth within U.S. Steel, especially right here in Gary. If Mexico Joe Donnelly wants to publicize his support of Obama’s economic failures, the outsourcing of Hoosier jobs to Mexico, and embrace the unhinged Democrat mob, then you can get ready to call Mike Braun Senator Braun on Tuesday.”
Trump drew far more than 8,000 to his Southport rally Friday.
EXTRA, EXTRA: Per Donnelly’s campaign manager, this is what Indiana’s midterm electorate looks like so far:
Election night “watch” and victory “celebration” parties
The media advisories for the two major party Election night events are telling. Can you spot the difference?
The “Indiana Democratic Party Election Night Watch Party” will be in the Regency Ballroom at the Hyatt Regency Indianapolis.
Meanwhile, Indiana Republicans will host a “victory celebration” in the White River Ballroom of the JW Marriott.
Star declines to endorse a Senate candidate
In what was perhaps the state’s most hotly contested U.S. Senate race, The Indianapolis Star declined to endorse a candidate, instead writing choose-your-own endorsement articles for both major candidates. Per the star:
The IndyStar Editorial Board is not issuing a formal endorsement in this year's U.S. Senate race. Instead, the board is publishing two editorials. One makes the case for the re-election of Democrat Joe Donnelly. This one explains why Republican Mike Braun should be elected. Libertarian Lucy Brenton also is on the ballot.
Reaction to the decision was mixed.
Some, like Joe Donnelly’s Chief of Staff Joel Elliott and former Star sports columnist Bob Kravitz, seemed to think it was a cop out.
Others thought the decision struck the right note for our divided times.
Would it have made a difference had the Star made an endorsement? Here’s a refresher from 2016: Almost no newspaper endorsed Trump in the general election.
IMPORTANTVILLE READS
Me, Politico Magazine: How Indiana Basketball Explains American Politics
In an episode reported here for the first time, Republican Sen. Todd Young rebuffed efforts by national GOP operatives who repeatedly encouraged him to seek Knight’s endorsement in the 2016 campaign, according to a Republican with knowledge of the matter who requested anonymity. This came even as Young faced a tough race against Democrat Evan Bayh. That Young declined to embrace Knight is evidence that the coach might not always be a slam dunk—again, my apologies—for a candidate, even in the Hoosier state. (Young did receive and tout the endorsement of three-time Indy 500 winner Johnny Rutherford, a fellow Marine.)
Gabriel Pogrund, Washington Post: Indiana’s ‘accidental senator’ is a Democrat, but he’s not really talking about that
LAWRENCE, Ind. — He has campaigned on his support for a border wall, railed against the “radical left,” and quoted both Donald Trump and Ronald Reagan in his campaign ads.
Joe Donnelly, trying to keep his Senate seat here in Indiana, may be a Democrat — but that’s not a word that comes up a lot as he campaigns.
“You have to run on a party, because you have to be on the ballot, in effect. But the night the election’s over, that’s over,” he said in an interview outside an early voting center last week, before deploying a line he likes to repeat. “I don’t serve as a Democrat senator or a Republican senator. I serve everybody in our state.”
Language like this has become a defining trait of Donnelly’s in this reelection campaign as he runs against Mike Braun, a businessman who has aligned himself with the president. Donnelly is one of five Senate Democrats running in a state that Trump won by double digits in 2016 — a 19-point victory here. Donnelly is trying to re-create the coalition of blue-collar workers and moderate Republicans in the “doughnut” counties surrounding Indianapolis that fueled his victory in 2012 and Trump’s four years later.
IMPORTANTVILLE MISCELLANY
Bloomberg unveiled a cools map showing “What the 2018 Campaign Looks Like in Your Hometown.” Jobs dominated healthcare in Indiana, a sign that could play well for Braun over Donnelly.
IN Focus remembered Tully yesterday.
That’s all for today. Thanks for reading. What will you do with the psychic RAM you’ll gain back after Election Day? Did someone forward this email to you? You can subscribe here.