Democrats haven't given up on long-shot Montana Senate race
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Sen. Jon Tester (D-Mont.) speaks at a rally on Sept. 5 in Bozeman, Mont. Photo: William Campbell/Getty Images
Democrats are cautiously optimistic the Montana Senate race — the single most important contest on the map — is still within their reach next week, despite months of tough polling.
Why it matters: Democrats have incredibly long odds to keep a Senate majority — less than a 15% chance, if you ask some forecasters. But a victory by Sen. Jon Tester (D-Mont.) would immediately boost their chances.
- Democrats are hopeful that a wave of negative ads about the combat record of Montana GOP Senate nominee Tim Sheehy have started to resonate with voters.
- Tester has lagged in the polls for months, but a poll from Montana State University this week has the race in a dead heat. Internal Democratic polls have always had the race closer than the public data.
- Democratic insiders who spoke to Axios still think a Tester win would be an upset in deep-red Montana, and national party strategists have been sour on his chances for quite some time.
The big picture: Democrats in the final days are flooding the airwaves in Montana with negative ads about Sheehy's combat record, including a controversy about whether he was shot in Afghanistan.
- Tester and Democrats are airing ads arguing Sheehy lied about being shot in Afghanistan, and that he instead was wounded in an accident at a Montana national park, which the New York Times and Washington Post have reported.
- But the Sheehy camp has blasted the ads as a smear campaign, and a group of Navy SEALs who served with Sheehy have defended his character. A number of people who have raised questions about Sheehy's gunshot wound have been scrutinized for criticizing Republicans in the past.
- Democrats have spent around $3.5 million on at least five ads in the state focusing on the controversy in recent weeks. Sheehy and Republicans are up with ads of their own disputing the claims.
Between the lines: The Tester campaign has been flush with cash, which has helped it amass a staggering ground operation in the state.
- Tester's campaign has knocked on over 500,000 doors in a state with less than 800,000 registered voters. The campaign has also made over 1.5 million phone calls in the race.
What they're saying: A spokesperson for Sheehy was clear that the Republican was shot in the arm while in Afghanistan.
- "Tim never reported it because he didn't want to trigger an investigation of his team, be pulled from the battlefield, and see a fellow teammate be punished," the spokesperson said. "It was always about protecting a fellow team member of his unit he thought could have been responsible due to friendly fire ricochet in the heat of an engagement with the enemy."
- A spokesperson for Tester told Axios that "Tim Sheehy has been nothing but dishonest with Montanans — from his military record to where he was raised — and his damaging plans to privatize health care, transfer public lands, and rob Montana women of their freedom would hurt our state."
