James Carville is pulling the alarm on New Hampshire's Senate race, warning that Democratic operatives are dangerously overlooking a contest that could determine control of the chamber.
"New Hampshire is keeping me up at night," Carville said bluntly, drawing on decades of experience reading electoral maps.

The strategist laid out the mathematics as he perceives the complex situation: Democrat Chris Pappas is currently leading Republican John Sununu by just one point—45-44. "That is a tied race," Carville emphasized in an email to supporters. "And while the whole country is staring at Georgia and North Carolina, New Hampshire is sitting there in a dead heat with nobody riding to the rescue."
Carville's central concern is straightforward but devastating for Dems. "If Chris Pappas loses New Hampshire, Democrats need to flip FIVE seats instead of four to take back the Senate. That math doesn't work. Full stop."
Rather than asking supporters to choose between New Hampshire and other key races, Carville reframed the hierarchy entirely: "New Hampshire is the map. You hold this seat, and Democrats have a real path to the majority. You lose it, and it doesn't matter what happens in North Carolina, Texas, Maine, or anywhere else."
Carville credited Pappas as the only viable candidate, noting he has "won the toughest district in New Hampshire four damn times." But he stressed that without adequate support and funding, "he cannot—cannot—do this alone when every check is being written and every eyeball is looking somewhere else."


