Could Republicans really lose a Senate race in Nebraska?

Nebraska Senate candidate Dan Osborn shakes hands with voters at an event.

Independent Senate candidate Dan Osborn chats with attendees after speaking during his campaign stop at the Handlebend coffeshop in O’Neill, Nebraska, on October 14, 2024. | <span style=”font-family: -apple-system, BlinkMacSystemFont, “Segoe UI”, Roboto, Oxygen-Sans, Ubuntu, Cantarell, “Helvetica Neue”, sans-serif;”>Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc/Getty Images</span>

Nebraska’s statewide seats have been solidly Republican for years: The party has won a majority in the last five Senate races, the last seven governor’s races, and the last 14 presidential elections.

This cycle, however, independent Senate candidate Dan Osborn — a Navy veteran and former union chief — appears to be making the race much more competitive than it normally is. According to a New York Times/Siena poll released in late October, incumbent Republican Sen. Deb Fischer was up by just 2 percentage points, winning 48 percent support to Osborn’s 46 percent. That’s surprisingly close for a Senate race in the state: In 2018 and 2020, Fischer and former Sen. Ben Sasse (R) won their elections by well over 10 points. 

Osborn has successfully upended what should have been an easy race for Fischer by framing himself as an outsider, as well as a candidate who’s not beholden to — and doesn’t fit in with — either party. 

A mechanic who previously led a union strike against the Kellogg’s cereal company in 2021, Osborn has pitched himself as a true independent, embracing some stances that align with Republicans like building the border wall, while also backing some Democratic ones like opposing national abortion bans. He’s also been quick to criticize members of both parties, while tying himself to national figures beloved in Nebraska, like Trump.

“An important part of his success is that he has successfully portrayed himself as kind of like an anti-partisan,” says Kevin Smith, a political scientist at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. 

Osborn has said if he wins, he doesn’t intend to caucus with either party. That outcome would mark a significant loss for Republicans, who’ve counted on Nebraska as a safe seat while they eye the retaking of the Senate majority. Although the GOP could well secure that majority regardless of what happens in Nebraska, an Osborn victory would mean it’s a narrower one, making it more difficult for the party to accomplish its policy goals and confirm judicial nominees.  

A narrowly divided Senate could be good for a Sen. Osborn, however: As recent terms have made evident, such circumstances give independents — including the likes of Sens. Joe Manchin (I-WV) and Kyrsten Sinema (I-AZ) — outsize power in shaping legislation. 

How the Nebraska Senate race got so close 

Fischer is a two-term Republican and cattle rancher who currently sits on the Senate Armed Services and Commerce Committees. She’s a relatively standard conservative Republican who has less of a national profile than some of the other lawmakers up this cycle, such as Sens. Ted Cruz (TX) and Josh Hawley (MO). 

Osborn has capitalized on this lack of profile to paint Fischer as a run-of-the-mill politician who is out of touch with her constituents. He argues that she’s gotten wealthier while serving in the Senate without having done much for her constituents. He claims, too, that she’s more responsive to corporations that have donated to her than she is to her fellow Nebraskans. 

In one of the main ads targeting Fischer, Osborn quips that she “has taken so much corporate cash, she should wear patches, like Nascar.” Interestingly, Fischer also previously promised to term limit herself and only serve two terms in the Senate. Her decision to run again appears to contradict that prior position for some voters. 

On the campaign trail, Osborn has also highlighted his history as a union member and his advocacy for better wages and working conditions. He previously gained a profile regionally when he spearheaded a months-long strike against Kellogg’s in Omaha amid worker concerns that the company was shortchanging new employees on issues including pensions and holiday pay

“I think the appeal of Osborn is character and backstory. You know essentially that the key message is, I’m a working stiff, just like you guys,” Smith told Vox. 

Although Osborn has said he’d back a bipartisan immigration deal and some form of gun control, he’s also tied himself more closely to Trump in recent ads. In one, he criticizes Fischer for pulling her support of the former president after the Access Hollywood tape came out in 2016 and compares her to former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. In another, he says that he’s “where President Trump is” on a host of issues including “China, corruption, the border.”

His union resume and iconoclastic policy positions appear to be helping him build a broad, unusual coalition. His nonpartisan stance has been appealing to independents, while his critiques of Washington and his affinity for some of Trump’s policies appeal to Republicans who may be fed up with the existing system. Because there’s no Democrat running in the race and thanks to his union background, he’s also likely to pick up sizable Democratic support. 

“I think that Fischer’s campaign was not expecting this to be a competitive race, but they really weren’t paying very much attention to him earlier in the campaign cycle,” says Dona-Gene Barton, a political scientist at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. 

Fischer’s campaign has “acknowledged that the race is closer than expected,” the Associated Press reports. And she’s rejected Osborn’s characterization: She’s touted her conservative record as well as her endorsement from Trump, describing Osborn as “too far left.”

Because of Republicans’ dominance in the state, experts note that while an Osborn victory is plausible, Fischer likely retains an advantage. “Based on the polling data, [an Osborn win is] very much within the realm of possibility,” says Smith. “If I was a betting person, I’d still give Fischer an edge based on party registrations.”

The size of the Senate majority is at stake

The Senate map is looking fairly dire for Democrats. The party currently holds a narrow majority and faces competitive races in as many as nine states including Montana and Ohio. 

An Osborn win would help offset potential losses that Democrats could well see elsewhere, though it’s not yet evident exactly to what extent. While his success would deprive Republicans of a guaranteed seat, Osborn’s refusal to align with either party could see him working with both on different policies. 

Osborn could operate in the same vein as other independents like Manchin who vote predominantly in line with one of the parties but occasionally deviate on certain issues. He could also be a complete wildcard who parties attempt to cater to in order to win his vote.

In practice, Osborn would eventually have to caucus with one of the parties in order to play a larger role in the Senate. If he didn’t, he’d likely have a tough time getting key spots on committees. Senators are best able to effect change and craft policy using these panels, which shape legislation and hold hearings. 

“The reality is, if you want to be on a committee, then you need to be with a party,” says J. Miles Coleman, an associate editor of Sabato’s Crystal Ball. 

The Senate majority aside, a loss in a safely Republican state at this level would still deal a major blow to the GOP. 

“I think how Democrats are looking at it is that it would still net a loss for Republicans,” says Cook Political Report Senate expert Jessica Taylor. 

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The intervention left a slate of 22 one-star admiral nominees that includes no women, despite females making up roughly 21 percent of the active-duty Navy, and only two nonwhite officers, despite racial minorities accounting for approximately 38 percent of the force, reported the New York Times.

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Four current and former defense officials, speaking anonymously to discuss sensitive personnel matters, said Hegseth's actions are highly unusual and appear to breach Pentagon rules, which permit the defense secretary to remove officers from promotion lists only when new information raises specific questions about their fitness to serve — not on ideological grounds.

Internal records suggest some officers were targeted because their names appeared on a website devoted to identifying "woke" military personnel, with infractions as minor as having served as a diversity liaison officer two decades ago. One highly regarded officer — a nuclear-trained surface warfare officer and former aide to a four-star admiral — was pulled from the list shortly after her name surfaced on the site for that decades-old role.

Hegseth also pushed senior Navy officials to place Capt. William Francis Jr., a Navy SEAL who serves as Hegseth’s special assistant, on the one-star list, but his lack of command experience made him ineligible for promotion and he was not selected, according to current and former Navy officials.

Since taking office, Hegseth has fired or sidelined nearly three dozen senior officers. Sen. Jack Reed (D-RI), the top Democrat on the Armed Services Committee, noted in recent Senate testimony that nearly 60 percent of the senior officers Hegseth has dismissed are female or Black — a group that currently makes up fewer than 20 percent of all generals and admirals.

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The Texas Senate race has officially been set, between notoriously scandal-plagued state Attorney General Ken Paxton on the Republican side and Presbyterian minister and state legislator James Talarico on the Democratic side.

But already, Texas Republicans are sounding off a message of fear, NBC News reported, because of the impending money problems the race will cause for them.

"Paxton, with Trump’s endorsement, handily defeated four-term Sen. John Cornyn in the runoff. Democrats largely viewed Paxton as the weaker candidate because of his many controversies. But his fundraising struggles are also raising alarm bells among Republicans," said the report. "'Economically, it’s a disaster. Texas is extremely expensive,' said a GOP consultant working on Senate races, who was granted anonymity to speak candidly about party resources."

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"George Seay, one of Cornyn’s longtime friends and donors, declined to comment when NBC News asked him whether he would also donate to boost Paxton," noted the report. "But he said that Paxton as the nominee meant the state was now 'definitely in play' and a tougher climb for Republicans to win. 'Is Paxton going to raise a lot of money? Probably not,' Seay said, though he said that wasn’t necessarily a death knell."