

“It is weird to even be talking about New Jersey on the Senate side. “New Jersey wasn’t really massively on anyone’s radar screens at the start,” said Doug Heye, a former communications director for the Republican National Committee. Still, they are more upbeat about a race in which a victory no longer seems implausible. He is also running in a state where pivotal House races are energizing Democratic voters and where President Trump remains deeply unpopular. Menendez is a formidable foe: No Republican has won a Senate race in New Jersey since 1972. Trump, the party’s already-slim margin for error in their goal to retake the Senate would be dealt a severe blow should Mr.

With Democrats forced to defend incumbent senators in 10 states won by Mr. “So we believe that New Jersey is a blue state and we’re going to turn out for Menendez - and we are - but we have to make sure that at least at the national organization, that as much resources and troops are in these places as we can get because this is very serious.” Baraka, whose get-out-the-vote efforts will be essential for Mr. “I believe that folks are generally focused on high-profile and exciting races, and sometimes we take stuff for granted,” said Mr.
