The sleeper race is turning into an unexpected 11th hour battleground with Sen. Ron Johnson within striking distance of his Democrat opponent, former Sen. Russ Feingold.
{mosads}Feingold is still ahead in polling, but his lead has shrunk from the double-digit average he held for most of the summer. The former senator is clinging to a 1-point lead in a Marquette Law School poll released Wednesday but trailing Johnson among independent voters.
“This race is a dead heat and the momentum is clearly with Ron Johnson. Wisconsinites are closer than ever to sending Senator Feingold back to California — for good,” said Brian Reisinger, a spokesman for Johnson’s campaign.
Republicans argue the race is even closer than what public polling — which has Feingold averaging a nearly 5-point lead — suggests. A GOP source said their polling shows the race tied.
Meanwhile, a source familiar with the Johnson campaign’s strategy added separately that their internal modeling shows the GOP senator gained a slight lead over the fall, with numbers continuing to move in Johnson’s favor heading into the final week.
An upset in Wisconsin would likely reverberate across the battle for the Senate, spelling trouble for Democrats’ efforts to regain the upper chamber.
Democrats long bet on the Badger State being in the win column as they plot their path to picking up the five seats — or four if they retain the White House — they need to win back the majority.
Sensing the potential for an upset, outside groups are pouring in money as the race nears the finish line.
The Senate Leadership Fund, a GOP outside group with ties to Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), dropped $2 million into the Senate battle, arguing polling shows that Republicans could squeak out a win.
“We think there is a solid opportunity to take a race that the Democrats took for granted and thought they had locked up in July,” said Ian Prior, a spokesman for the group.
The GOP-aligned Americans for Prosperity, the Let America Work PAC, America’s PAC, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the NRA Political Victory Fund are all dropping money in the final week of the election, according to a Republican watching the advertising market.
In total, the six GOP groups are on track to spend nearly $4.2 million in the home stretch of the Wisconsin race.
The senator — a former businessman elected in a wave year for Republicans — has worked overtime to paint Feingold as a Washington insider in a year that has favored outsiders. Feingold previously spent 18 years in the Senate.
His campaign also worked to humanize the straight-laced businessman, using TV ads to tout his work with a Milwaukee-based anti-poverty program and his effort to help a family bring their adopted daughter home from the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
A source familiar with Johnson’s strategy noted the two ads helped “bring home” Republicans who may have sat out on the 2016 election because of frustration with the presidential race.
His campaign is poised to spend more than $1.5 million in the final week of the race on TV and radio ads, according to a Republican watching the advertising market.
Johnson’s GOP colleagues have also poured into the state as race has tightened. Sens. Joni Ernst (Iowa), Lindsey Graham (S.C.) and David Perdue (Ga.) stumped for the Wisconsin senator over the past week.
Johnson campaigned with Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump for the first time on Tuesday night and is expected to kick off a bus tour Thursday with Speaker Paul Ryan (Wis.).
But Democrats remain confident they’ll emerge victorious on Tuesday night.
Lauren Passalacqua, a spokeswoman for the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, said Republicans are spending millions attacking Feingold “because they know they can’t run on Senator Johnson’s record — especially not when he’s stumping with Donald Trump.”
They counter talk of GOP momentum by noting that every public poll in the race save one shows the same result: Feingold winning the race.
Democrats concede that the Senate race has tightened but say the higher voter turnout typically seen in presidential election years gives them an inherent advantage.
“We expect this to be a close race straight through Election Day, and we will not take our foot off the gas,” Tom Russell, Feingold’s campaign manager, said in a note to supporters. “We’ve got a great [get-out-the-vote] effort underway, and with a push through Election Day, we’ll all get to celebrate a big win.”
Nearly 568,000 Wisconsinites have already voted, according to the state’s election commission, putting 2016 on pace for record turnout in the state.
NBC News estimates that 52 percent of early voters are Democrats, compared to 36 percent who are Republicans. The Marquette poll released Wednesday also had Feingold winning early voters 58 percent to 29 percent.
Russell added “whether you look at the analytics or the geographic breakdown, Democrats are voting and Republicans are suffering an enthusiasm gap for both Senator Johnson and Donald Trump.”
Even if they believe the state’s dynamics undercut Johnson’s chances, Democrats aren’t taking any chances in the home stretch.
Feingold stumped with Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.), Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton’s running mate, and Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) this week. Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.) — Sanders’s lone Senate endorser his Democratic presidential primary bid — will be in the state Thursday.
Feingold’s campaign is also expected to outspend Johnson in the final week. It is poised to drop more than $2.3 million on TV and radio ads, according to a Republican watching the advertising market.
The Senate Majority PAC, which has ties to Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.), is also injecting $2 million in the final week of the race. Feingold has faced nearly $9.5 million in negative spending from outside groups, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.