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Iowa Poll shows Mike Franken within striking distance of Sen. Chuck Grassley. Could he really win?

© Copyright 2022, Des Moines Register and Tribune Co.

Mike Franken has less than three weeks to do what no one has been able to accomplish in 64 years: defeat Chuck Grassley.

A new Des Moines Register/Mediacom Iowa Poll shows he’s within striking distance. Grassley leads by 3 percentage points among likely voters.

“We are right on the cusp, and he knows that,” Franken said of his opponent.

With early voting already underway, Franken is in a stronger position than Democrats could have hoped as he fights to defeat Iowa’s seven-term Republican incumbent.

But holding Grassley to his closest reelection fight in decades is a moral victory. It won’t help Democrats retain control of the U.S. Senate, which they currently hold by the slimmest of margins.

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To win, Franken will need to energize his base, continue converting independents and capitalize on his strong fundraising, political experts told the Des Moines Register.

Meanwhile, Republicans are working to undermine some of Franken’s perceived strengths, including his military record, while highlighting an allegation that he assaulted a former campaign staffer with an unwanted kiss. Law enforcement officials declared the allegation unfounded.

Election analysts are still betting on Grassley, citing the national political climate, his long incumbency and Iowa’s recent shift to the right. They expect him to hold onto his seat for an eighth term.

“Do I think that Chuck Grassley is in serious danger of losing? No, I don’t,” said Kyle Kondik, managing editor of Sabato’s Crystal Ball, a nonpartisan elections forecaster. “But I also think we’ve seen enough in this race to look at it as maybe being in a different category than … some of the other races in the ‘safe Republican’ column.”

In the wake of the recent Iowa Poll, Sabato’s Crystal Ball is among a handful of election forecasting groups to downgrade Grassley’s chances of winning from a “safe” or “solid” bet to a “likely” one.

It’s a small shift, but even the perception that the race is winnable is critical for Democrats up and down the ballot, some Iowa political operatives say.

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Mike Franken’s military record seen as an asset on the campaign trail

Franken’s baseball cap, with “NAVY” printed in bold letters, is a nearly constant part of his wardrobe, both on the campaign trail and in advertisements.

In his campaign, the retired three-star U.S. Navy admiral has frequently emphasized his military service.

Franken has held a variety of roles in Washington, including as the first military officer on U.S. Sen. Ted Kennedy’s staff, at the U.S. Department of Defense and as chief of legislative affairs for the Navy.

Matt Paul, an Iowa Democratic operative, said Franken’s military service bolsters his credentials with Iowans, including swing voters.

Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Mike Franken speaks during the inaugural County Line fundraiser, Saturday, Sept. 3, 2022, at Sutliff Farm & Cider House in Lisbon, Iowa.
Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Mike Franken speaks during the inaugural County Line fundraiser, Saturday, Sept. 3, 2022, at Sutliff Farm & Cider House in Lisbon, Iowa.

“The fact that he was a three-star admiral, I think, carries a lot of weight with a lot of Iowans who truly might be swing voters,” he said.

The Iowa Poll, which was conducted by Selzer & Co., shows likely voters are reacting favorably to that part of his biography. Fifty-two percent say Franken’s military career spent outside the state would be an asset to Iowa. That includes 84% of Democrats, 55% of independents and 25% of Republicans.

One of those Iowans is David Wolfkill, a 67-year-old poll respondent from Des Moines who has voted for Grassley in the past but plans to support Franken this year.

“I think part of it (is) his military background,” said Wolfkill, a political independent who works as a retail manager. “And he seems sincere about trying to fix things and get back to more of maybe the older style of governing and get away from some of all of this crazy stuff that’s been going on.”

The Iowa Poll, conducted Oct. 9-12, included 620 likely voters, with a margin of error of plus or minus 3.9 percentage points.

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Republicans question Franken’s record on sexual assault in the military

Republicans have questioned aspects of Franken’s military record, including accusing him of not taking instances of military sexual misconduct seriously.

A 2021 investigation by the Intercept, a left-leaning online publication, found 158 instances of sexual crimes involving U.S. military personnel in Africa between 2010 and 2020 — more than double the official Pentagon total of 73. Franken served as the deputy for military operations for U.S. Africa Command from 2015 to 2017.

Kollin Crompton, communications director for the Republican Party of Iowa, shared the article in a news release on Oct. 10.

"Mike Franken needs to tell Iowans what involvement he had in the underreporting of sexual misconduct under his watch," Crompton said in a statement.