THE NARROW PATH — Iowa, Florida, and Ohio are gone. Minnesota is fool’s gold for Republicans. Texas remains out of reach for Democrats. These are some of the early signs from the midterm election results, which provide some clues about the outline of the presidential battleground map in 2024. One of the biggest questions about the next presidential race — whether election deniers and conspiracy theorists would be in charge of counting and certifying votes in key swing states — has been settled: They won’t. Election-denying candidates who ran for top offices in states such as Arizona, Michigan, Nevada and Pennsylvania failed in their bids. A few other things have become clear as well. Iowa, Florida and Ohio — each of them carried by former President Barack Obama as recently as 2012 — weren’t really considered core battleground states in 2020. Now, after Republican blowouts in those states this fall, they should be removed from the 2024 discussion altogether. If there were any remaining doubts about their drift to the right, they were dispelled by this year’s election results, which featured a GOP sweep in Iowa (where Republicans now hold all four House seats, both Senate seats, a state government trifecta and nearly all statewide elected offices); a red wave across Florida (where GOP Gov. Ron DeSantis won by nearly 20 percentage points) and Ohio (where Republican J.D. Vance won an open Senate seat and Gov. Mike DeWine won reelection by 26 points). While Democratic prospects might not be as grim in Texas, the recent results don’t give much hope either that 2024 will be the year that rapid demographic change finally leads to a Democratic breakthrough: Republicans won their 14th consecutive sweep of statewide offices , led by GOP Gov. Greg Abbott’s top-of-the-ticket romp. At the same time, strong Democratic midterm performances in New Hampshire and Minnesota — a state which offered former President Donald Trump a rare offensive opportunity in 2020 — suggest they might not be worth contesting in 2024. Minnesota, which some Republicans regarded as a Trump sleeper state in 2020, turned out to be a mirage. This year, there was even more evidence of that: Democrats won every state constitutional office for the third straight election cycle. In 2024, it will be 52 years since a Republican presidential nominee last carried Minnesota. New Hampshire, which hasn’t voted for a Republican presidential nominee since 2000, also appears to be moving in the wrong direction — at least for a Republican Party led by Trump. In his first bid for president in 2016, he lost the state by less than one-half of a percentage point. Four years later, that margin was eight points. This year, Trumpist candidates lost both House races by healthy margins and the Senate election by double-digits. All of this took place as GOP Gov. Chris Sununu, a Trump nemesis, routed his Democratic foe to win reelection. For Democrats, perhaps the most important midterm revelation of all was that the party is well-positioned to defend its “Blue Wall,” the term applied to a northern tier of 18 states, stretching from coast to coast, that appeared to provide a structural advantage for a Democratic nominee — at least prior to 2016, when Trump blew it up. Michigan and Pennsylvania, big industrial states that serve as key building blocks in that wall, delivered sweeping victories for Democrats this year, two years after they rejected Trump’s bid for a second term. The populous suburbs outside Detroit and Philadelphia once again produced big Democratic margins — margins that buried Trump-endorsed, election denying GOP nominees for governor. Erosion in traditionally Republican western Michigan was another point of concern for the GOP. Since the two big industrial states have moved in tandem in every presidential election since 1988, it’s an ominous sign for Trump’s third bid for the White House. Election results in North Carolina and Virginia were less conclusive. North Carolina, which now has 16 electoral votes, is too big and too competitive for Democrats to write off in a presidential race. Democrat Roy Cooper won the governorship in 2020, but it’s now voted Republican in three consecutive presidential contests, and in two open Senate races in the past two years. In Virginia, Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s 2021 victory and the ouster of a Democratic House incumbent will spark some Republican interest in the state, on the off chance that it isn’t as blue as it’s looked over the past decade. One of the sharpest election analysts, Ron Brownstein , concluded that one of the lessons from the midterms is that the two parties have further consolidated their holds over states that already lean in their direction. Recent election results, he wrote , “point toward a 2024 presidential contest that will likely be decided by a tiny sliver of voters in a rapidly shrinking list of swing states.” That small universe of states includes a handful of battlegrounds where photo-finish outcomes were commonplace in this year’s midterm contests — Arizona, Georgia, Nevada and Wisconsin . All were home to bitterly contested statewide races or mixed results that suggest the states remain as competitive and evenly divided as ever. It shouldn’t come as a surprise: in the 2020 presidential election, the four states were decided by a total of just 77,000 votes between them. Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Reach out with news, tips and ideas at nightly@politico.com . Or contact tonight’s author at cmahtesian@politico.com or on Twitter at @PoliticoCharlie . A programming note: Nightly will be off for Thanksgiving this Thursday and Friday but back to our normal schedule on Monday, Nov. 28.
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