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SSP Daily Digest: 4/16

by: Crisitunity

Thu Apr 16, 2009 at 2:17 PM EDT


NY-20 (pdf): There's light at the end of the tunnel in the NY-20 count, and as we get closer, Scott Murphy's numbers keep going up. This morning's BoE tally gives him a lead of 167, following the addition of more votes from Columbia, Dutchess, and Warren Counties (all of which Murphy won on Election Day).

Apparently all Saratoga County votes are accounted for, except for 700 challenged ballots, which, thanks to yesterday's court ruling, will be counted. (While Saratoga County in general is Jim Tedisco's turf, the Tedisco camp's heavy use of challenges of student votes suggests that these votes may include a lot of votes from artsy Skidmore College in Saratoga Springs, which one would expect to lean Democratic.)

CO-Sen: Finally, a GOPer commits to the Colorado senate race against appointee Michael Bennet. It's Aurora city councilor Ryan Frazier, who made his announcement while teabagging in Grand Junction. Frazier is 31 and African-American, so he brings an interesting backstory to the race, but it's unclear whether his strength among conservative activists can overcome his otherwise low profile in the GOP primary (assuming anyone else bothers to show up).

FL-Sen: Quinnipiac takes another look at the Florida senate race; not much has changed since last time, although one noteworthy finding is that Floridians would prefer to see Charlie Crist remain as governor rather than jump to senate, by a 42-26 margin. That doesn't stop him from crushing in the senate primary (Crist beats Marco Rubio and Vern Buchanan 54-8-8). Buchanan leads a Crist-free primary, while on the Dem side, Kendrick Meek narrowly leads Pam Iorio (16-15, with 8 for Ron Klein, 5 from Dan Gelber, and a whole lotta undecideds).

PA-Sen: John Peterson isn't a make-or-break endorsement, but the former GOP representative from rural PA-05 said that he won't support Arlen Specter's re-election bid in 2010. He stopped short of endorsing Pat Toomey (Peterson supported Specter in the 2004 primary), but said it was time for Specter to retire. In other completely unsurprising endorsement news, the Club for Growth (of which Pat Toomey was president until several days ago) today endorsed Toomey's bid. Laugh all you want, but Toomey will need all the financial help he can get; Specter hauled in $1.3 million in Q1 and is sitting on $6.7 million CoH.

TX-Sen: Our friends at Burnt Orange Report have a nice graph showing Bill White and John Sharp dominating the fundraising chase so far in the hypothetical Texas senate race. (The chart doesn't include GOP heavyweights Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst and AG Greg Abbott, who haven't taken formal steps for the race, but whose cash stashes are state-specific, putting them back to fundraising square one if they ran for senate.)

CT-Sen: If Chris Dodd is going to win again in 2010, it's going to be on the back of money, not popularity. Luckily, he still has lots of the former, as big-money donors aren't being scared off by his poll numbers: he raised $1 million in the first quarter, with $1.4 million CoH.

MN-Sen (pdf): Minnesotans would like the madness to stop, and would like to have a 2nd senator. PPP finds that 63% think that Norm Coleman should concede right now, and 59% (including 54% of independents) think Tim Pawlenty should sign Al Franken's certificate of election right now. (This should give Pawlenty some pause as to whether or not to create further delay in the name of partisan politics, as he's about the only person left who can drag this out.)

MO-Sen: Roy Blunt raised $542K in the first quarter, only about half of what Robin Carnahan raised. Our JeremiahTheMessiah came up with the best possible headline for this story:

Carnahan Smokes Blunt... In Fundraising

GA-Gov: As reported in the diaries yesterday by fitchfan28, Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle dropped out of the gubernatorial race, citing health concerns. Cagle was more-or-less front-runner, and his departure leaves SoS Karen Handel and Insurance Commissioner John Oxendine to slug it out for the GOP.

IL-10, PA-07: Two huge fundraising hauls (by House standards) from two candidates who may be looking to move up. Mark Kirk, who pulled in $696K in the first quarter, is supposed to decide soon whether or not to try for IL-Sen. (He has only $597K CoH, though, after burning through all his cash defending his seat in 2008. So he may just be raising hard in expectation of another top-tier challenge in 2010 in this blue district.)

Joe Sestak raised $550K in the first quarter, leaving him sitting on a mongo $3.3 million. Could this... plus his suddenly increased media presence, as he talks the defense budget and Don't Ask Don't Tell... be tea leaves that he may be the Dem who jumps into PA-Sen after all? (Sestak has previously declined, and he's always been mentioned as an afterthought in this race after Allyson Schwartz and Patrick Murphy. But neither of them have made any moves, leaving Joe Torsella the only Dem challenger so far.)

Numbers: California's Secretary of State office finally released its Supplement to the Statement of Vote, heaven for nerds. Now you can look up Presidential and Prop 8 votes not just by congressional district, but by state senate or assembly district or even Board of Equalization district.

Crisitunity :: SSP Daily Digest: 4/16
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PA-Sen: looks like it's gonna be a battle royale there.
Also, are Sestak's tea leaves out of the tea bag?

party: Democratic, ideology: moderate, district: CT-01

Kirk
He may as well run statewide.  He's only got his house seat until 2012 redistricting.  Assuming he wins in 2010.

Depressing...
My Congressional district, CA-38, voted for Prop 8 by 60%... Good to know I wasn't imagining all those Yes on 8 sign in my neighborhood.  

Thanks for the Prop 8 numbers
Im shocked that it almost passed in the very liberal CA-05.  

It passed in Hilda Solis' district
and only failed by less than 4,000 in George Miller's district.

Miller's district, REALLY?

It passed by a wider margin in Solis' district did than it in Rohrabacher's.

We really blew it on Prop 8.  

Liberty Avenue Politics - a place for politics in Southern Queens


[ Parent ]
Miller's District
My home district includes the cities of Vallejo and Richmond.  If you want to talk about low-income un-educated voters, this is its home.
I love my people, but anybody who's anybody gets out of the neighborhood as soon as they finish high school.  That part of the east bay is liberal on a lot of things (from marijuana to union support) but is filled with homophobes.  It is a world of difference between here and other bay area suburbs (all of which are more affluent than Richmond and Vallejo).

26, D, MO-05, Hispanic

[ Parent ]
Frazier
Isn't conservative by Colorado GOP standards, and most certainly will be the "moderate" choice in the GOP primary for that seat, against Weld DA Ken Buck and whomever else jumps in.

Frazier's resume also includes a stint in the Navy, which he relied on heavily in his Aurora Council race. Politically, he's anti-union (and was a public face for the "right to work for less" ballot measure, Amendment 47, in 2008), but is pro-choice and pro-civil union.


Thanks
I wasn't aware of that aspect, just assumed he was hardcore because he was out teabagging and because he recently won the straw poll of the local Douglas County GOP, which is the kind of place where the nutjob activists reign supreme. But I guess Douglas County, which is more of a nouveau riche exurb, has a rather different mindset from Colorado Spgs and Grand Junction, right?

[ Parent ]
What are Colorado Springs and Grand Junction like politically?


party: Democratic, ideology: moderate, district: CT-01

[ Parent ]
Colorado Springs
is home of the USAF Academy, NORAD, Focus on the Family, and a lot of other megachurch activity, so it's sort of a perfect storm of jingoism and theocracy. Grand Junction is a mining town, so it's right-wing in more of a blue-collar libertarian way.

[ Parent ]
Oy
CSprings, my hometown, is rapidly R. No Dem has gotten more than 42% in a Congressional race in 30 years. At the state level, the city has 2 Dem Reps (out of El Paso County's 8 total). Rep. Apuan is a Filipino-American anti-war activist who won a stunning surprise victory in a Ft. Carson-based district, and Mike Merrifield is a former music teacher who represents liberal Manitou Springs and Colorado College. We also have 1 D State Senator (out of 5 total), John Morse, who is poised to become the new Senate Majority Leader today.

They are social conservatives, economic conservatives...I-25, which runs north-south through the city, has been named the "Ronald Reagan Highway." Yeah, it's conservative.

Grand Junction is slightly more Republican, but also slightly more libertarian. Their electeds, for the most part, are VERY economically conservative and pretty socially conservative as well, but not as vocal. One Rep., Laura Bradford, supported civil unions during her race to knock off current SoS Buescher, though she has voted against them in the House. There are no elected D's in Mesa County. Zero. From the city level to the state level.

John Salazar, who represents them in Congress, is the only elected D that Mesa County has.  


[ Parent ]
Pretty fair description
Yeah Adam, that's a pretty fair description of the Springs.  But, from being down there in college for four years, we need to make a trend clear.  Downtown Colorado Springs--say south of Woodmen Avenue--is actually not all that batshit crazy.  All of the worst areas (tony areas like Briargate, Broadmoor, the Air Force Academy, Focus on the Family, New Life Church, and many more I'm probably repressing) are mostly north of downtown.  A few areas southwest of downtown are very rich but less fundie. The west end of the Springs metro area (Manitou Springs and Old Colorado City) is actually fairly blue, though a moderate republican would win even here and in the more liberal downtown areas (Marcy Morrison did, but, then, she was an actual pro-choice moderate businesswoman). Rural El Paso County gave Colorado Doug Bruce.  

So...the Springs itself is blueing and, might actually be an even city within a couple of cycles.  The area I'm really curious about is Ft. Carson and Security/Widefield to the south/southeast.  Either Apuan's win was a huge fluke, he's that good, or a sea-change is beginning because military families are pissed.  I'm not sure which...maybe all three.

30, male, Democratic, CO-01


[ Parent ]
Well
I grew up in Widefield (Mesa Ridge High School, c/o 2004) and went to Colorado College. Here's my reading on the areas.

Downtown Colorado Springs is more liberal, and would elect moderate Ds or moderate Rs I think. Jan Brewer is the current City Councilwoman for part of downtown, and Richard Skorman was until he stepped down last year (he was the last Dem on the Council). Skorman was unabashedly progressive, and Brewer is a very good Councilwoman. We also gave lots of support to Mary Lou Makepeace, our very liberal Republican mayor in the early part of the decade. I would vote for her for any other office were she to run (she currently directs the Gay and Lesbian Foundation).

Widefield/Security/Fort Carson is one of the least politically active areas of the state. Apuan's district had 30% the total votes as some in Littleton or the mountain communities. His win was because a) his outreach to Catholics and other religious groups, b) his work as an organizer for the Colorado Progressive Coalition, giving him increased turnout among the liberals, c) a big fundraising advantage, and d) an incompetent opponent in Kit Roupe. Roupe wasn't endorsed by any major paper IIRC, and didn't really bring anything to the table.

That being said, Apuan's seat will be a tough hold. Fountain votes for Dems, and Widefield/Security is evolving politically, but not quickly. Keith King is the State Senator down there, and he's batshit crazy.  


[ Parent ]
Okay
I too went to CC for my four years before hoofing it back north to my hometown of Denver, so I know what your talking about, even if I'm a bit disconnected since (Skorman's no longer on the Council? Damn, we loved Poor Richard's and we really appreciated that man).  I couldn't fathom Apuan's win, either, but I'm seeing you don't think it's a long-term presence, i.e, he'd lose without part d) an incompetent like Roupe?  I mean, I too have had the misfortune to meet Keith King, who along with Andy McElhany, was giving then State Senator Bill Thiebaut hell in a really disrespectful town forum.  

30, male, Democratic, CO-01

[ Parent ]
Good to meet a fellow Tiger on the blogs!
I think that Apuan couldn't have won his first term without an incompetent challenger on the ballot. He's done a great job with constituent services by all accounts, and I think he can possibly hold the seat, maybe for a full 4 terms. It's going to be tough though. He could probably defeat a more credible candidate next time around if the overall statewide landscape isn't anti-Dem.  

[ Parent ]
Jan Brewer?
I assume a different one from Arizona's current governor.

party: Democratic, ideology: moderate, district: CT-01

[ Parent ]
Jan Martin
Sorry, I was reading about AZ's budget cuts while typing.

[ Parent ]
I read Doug Bruce's wikipedia article
and he seems like a real character.

party: Democratic, ideology: moderate, district: CT-01

[ Parent ]
So he's anti-union an pro-civil-union, but
is he pro-Union?

party: Democratic, ideology: moderate, district: CT-01

[ Parent ]
Well
Sestak would bring a lot of money with him but he's my last choice of all the major Dem contenders mentioned. The rumors on capitol hill are that he way overworks his staff, bullies them and is just hard to work with. But it sure looks like he's gearing up for a run.

Also a bold prediction, Chris Dodd will win on election day by over 5 percent.  


I fear this could blow up on Sestak in a statewide race
I have heard that he is terrible to work with and that he is pretty much hated on Capital Hill.  Republicans would also likely bring up his discharge from the military as evidence that he is unstable.  

[ Parent ]
Yeah there is a lot of anti-Sestak stuff out there
And since the media simply reports what people say as opposed to investigating the veracity of those comments, Sestak could have some problems. And of course a slew of news stories from disgruntled employees is never a good thing.

And btw, Torsella isn't alone in the race, is he? Isn't Josh Shapiro running?


[ Parent ]
That Dodd prediction isn't bold
Of course he'll win by >5%.  I'd put the over under at Dodd 56% Simmons 44%.

[ Parent ]
Yeah
Dodd doesn't worry me that much because some of his current problems are likely to blow over by November 2010 and Connecticut is basically a Democratic state.  I'd be worried if a Dem Senator in a swingy or red state were posting such terrible numbers.

26, white male, TX-24, liberal-leaning independent

[ Parent ]
Sestak
Ive heard that on the blogs, as well. Im assuming hes pro-labor...so, IMO, hes a complete hypocrite to say hes pro-labor and work for their causes, in general, yet treat his own workers like crap. I dont care if they should feel 'privileged' to be a congressional staffer (well, for the non-corrupt ones, anyway. no one wants that on their resume or deal with all that stress and bad publicity)... a worker is a worker and should be treated with dignity and respect.

[ Parent ]
Same here
From what I've read his treatment of employees rivals that of Sekula-Gibbs short stint in Congress.  Maybe even Mahoney, though Mahoney's was borderline criminal.  

[ Parent ]
NC-Sen: Burr raises 703K in first quarter. 1.6 million on hand.
Not that it will do any good


[ Parent ]
Good or Bad?
For an incumbent in a fairly populous state, that doesn't sound too good to me.  Not Bunning bad though.  Is "OK" a fair assessment?

[ Parent ]
I'd say under par
Particularly when Chris Dodd can still raise a million amidst all his problems.

[ Parent ]
500K or less is bad, over 1 million is good. He's sitting in a gray area
I think it is good for Burr if Cooper doesn't run.  It isnt enough if Cooper does run.  

[ Parent ]
Sounds fair
Though I think he is beatable even without Cooper.

[ Parent ]
He is in a worse position polling wise than Dole was.
He is beatable by the right state legislator if we picked the right one.  (Assuming Cooper doesnt run)

[ Parent ]
Cooper Progressive?
Is Cooper a progressive or more of a blue dog?

[ Parent ]
From what I've read
He sounds somewhere in between.  Similar to Kay Hagen, which is a good fit for NC.

[ Parent ]
You'll all like this
http://newsblogs.chicagotribun...

That is $850 NOT $850,000!


PWNED.
So is that lousiest?

party: Democratic, ideology: moderate, district: CT-01

[ Parent ]
Roland Burris
This is off topic, but has Roland Burris filled out a financial disclosure form or do appointments like  Burris,Kaufman and Bennet not have to fill one out unless they were to run and win re-election? I find value in some of the reports, others may disagree.  

Please donate to amcharities.org to help build more after school centers in the Miami area.  

23, Democrat, IA-2


Egads! Look at those legal bills
Wouldn't be a heck of a shame if they find out Burris actually did nothing wrong?  Thanks for the info.  

Please donate to amcharities.org to help build more after school centers in the Miami area.  

23, Democrat, IA-2


[ Parent ]
Arcuri still hasn't learned his lesson
what a lax guy. 90% in campaign donations came from pacs? Is the guy unable to get money from regular people nad local democrats.

Call no man happy until he is dead-Aeschylus

I mean really, is no one else surprised?
I expected Arcuri to be a better politician but instead we've seen him almost get upset by an underfunded, little known business man in last year and now we raises a good amount but 90% of it comes from PACs. Not something that inspires confidence or makes him look like a people person.

Call no man happy until he is dead-Aeschylus

[ Parent ]
See, -this- is when -I- talk about primary challenges.
As an amateur horse-race analyst, I think this is when we should start talking about threatening him with a primary challenge in order to get him into gear.

And then make good on the threat if he doesn't.

party: Democratic, ideology: moderate, district: CT-01


[ Parent ]
Arcuri
I remember before he was even elected people were talking up Arcuri as a possible statewide office holder (being a young, handsome Italian from Upstate is very positive). Dont hear that so much anymore.

[ Parent ]
Interesting news out of WA-08
Suzan DelBene, the Darcy Burner eqse candidate who's running for us seems to be doing pretty well so far.

http://blogs.cqpolitics.com/ey...

According to CQ she's loaned herself a pretty large amount of money while raising quite a bit as well. She should be able to do as well as Burner in fundraising even if she gets it from more traditional sources.

Also noticed this article from a few weeks ago about her campaign team.

http://www.nwprogressive.org/w...

She's signed up Gregoire's campaign manager to do the same job for her, hired Burner and Tester
s media consultant and made other solid hires. She seems to be very serious about this. If Reichert keeps on voting against Obama's agenda and DelBene keeps on running a good campaign this could be a real race.  


I'm still feeling kind of 'meh' about her
I doubt she'd win in a neutral year. She brings the same resume gap to the table that Darcy did (and that, as far as I'm concerned, was the big factor in her losing), without any of the progressive spunk that'll help her raise out-of-state bucks. Her interview with The Stranger (Seattle's alt-paper) didn't fill me with much enthusiasm either.

[ Parent ]
A little off topic
But Senator Baucus and his wife announced a divorce.  Kinda odd for a couple that old and married that long to be divorcing.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/200...


KY-Sen: Chandler, Luallen endorse Conway
Not sure if this has been mentioned yet but Chandler and Luallen are both officially out of the 2010 KY Senate race and both backed Jack Conway.  This should really help Conway in his primary with Mongiardo.  Though it could weaken Governor Beshear if Mongiardo gets embarrassed too badly.

http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/s...


49% of New Yorkers support gay marriage
Whoa.  This is certainly a pleasant surprise.  Now if only the state legislature can follow Gov. Paterson's lead on thhis issue.  Sadly it will probably fall a good bit short in the NY State senate.

http://www.surveyusa.com/clien...

Do you think same-sex couples should? Or should not? be allowed to marry in New York?

Should 49%
Should Not 44%
Not Sure 7%



The crosstabs are both encouraging and depressing


[ Parent ]
Blacks opposed, no surprise
What I did find surprising was that 53% of Hispanics support it.  I figured their support would be much lower.

[ Parent ]
By region I also was surprised
Regional support for gay marriage:

NYC - 49/42
NYC Suburbs - 47/50
Upstate - 51/42 (?!?)

More support for gay marriage upstate than in NYC?


[ Parent ]
I figure less catholics
and less blacks who are very opposed to this issue on the whole.

Call no man happy until he is dead-Aeschylus

[ Parent ]
I don't think that "Catholic" is a very relevant
distinction in New York anymore. A plurality of white are nominally Catholic, and most white Christians are Catholic.

But in New York, a majority just don't take their religion very seriously anymore.  


[ Parent ]
I'm talking Long Island
more devout Italian catholics driving down the suburban numbers.

Call no man happy until he is dead-Aeschylus

[ Parent ]
Ehhh,
It's a pretty secular place. I can tell you that the burbs are pretty pro-choice, which is a pretty good leading indicator for marriage equality support.  

[ Parent ]
not neccessarily
marriage equality trails it significantly in public support.

Call no man happy until he is dead-Aeschylus

[ Parent ]
By leading indicator
I mean that where liberal views on abortion rights exist now, they likely will soon for marriage equality.  

[ Parent ]
Age
Long Island is typically an older demographic...I went to school out there, I'm not surprised by numbers against marriage equality. Older Long Islanders are not very tolerant people.  

Liberty Avenue Politics - a place for politics in Southern Queens

[ Parent ]
No on 8, for all its flaws, still managed to carry the white vote in CA,
and lose the hispanic and asian vote only narrowly.

It's interesting that white people in upstate NY appear to be more gay-friendly than black people in the City, but that is what those cross-tabs seem to suggest.

Washington state is about to embark upon a full domestic partnerships bill that will likely prompt a state referendum in opposition, which I expect will fail.  

I'd like to see polling done on Oregon and Wisconsin again, actually.  It could be possible to overturn those constitutional amendments within five years.  Colorado and Arizona within ten?

Make it seven and twelve years, and I think it's no longer crazy talk.

Some really fascinating social science can be done on all this.  I'd start first with TV, movie, and music consumption.  I'm gonna talk out of my ass and theorize that there's white TV and black TV in this country, and that mainly-english-speaking Hispanics and Asians both watch white TV.  And that a lot of normalization of gays went down on white TV, and that it affected all three demographics very strongly (whites, hispanics, and asians), but not the fourth.  And that the cultural material that blacks were consuming did not have any of the pro-gay messaging that the rest of us were consuming.

I'll grant there are other factors, but I think the role of Hollywood-produced content frequently goes unstated.

28, gay guy, Democrat, CA-08


[ Parent ]
TV "demographics"
There's "white TV", which is essentially mainstream TV, and there's probably some "Hispanic TV" (names like Telemundo come to mind), and there might be "black TV" (I remember noticing that a lot of UPN sitcoms--as in, not counting the early-morning obscure less-than-most-prominent children's cartoons like Voltron and Robocop and Sailor Moon and Pokémon in its first two weeks)--seemed to star black casts).  But there is definitely no "Asian TV".

party: Democratic, ideology: moderate, district: CT-01

[ Parent ]
There might be Asian radio in some places
I know there's a Chinese-speaking radio station in Philadelphia, for example.  But this might be because radio takes less investment to get on the air.

I think that wealthier Asians (wealthier Chinese people, at least) get satellite TV from the far east through various cable-TV-like services.

And now, these days, everyone can enjoy stuff online pretty damn easily.  There are sites streaming entire episodes of various sitcoms from China and Hong Kong, for example.

party: Democratic, ideology: moderate, district: CT-01


[ Parent ]
This is key to same-sex marriage in the Senate
All the Upstate Democrats support it, the ones opposed are from NYC.

In the case of Pedro Esparda...he defeated a pro-gay marriage Senator in the Democratic primary!  

Liberty Avenue Politics - a place for politics in Southern Queens


[ Parent ]
Vote Count
Any idea how far down we start on this vote to pass it?

26, Male, Democrat, TX-26

[ Parent ]
No one really knows
we're anywhere from 5-15 votes down I think.

A lot of Democrats are not on record because it never made it to the Senate floor last time.

For instance, my district just elected a Democrat, Joe Addabbo...defeated a very anti-gay Republican...Addabbo hasn't said where he stands. Just to let you know, this vote COULD hurt him in my district.

We know there are 3 Democrats completely opposed, there are at least 10 others who are "undecided"

Basically, this does not pass without a couple of Republican votes and every Republican State Senate has indicated opposition.  

Liberty Avenue Politics - a place for politics in Southern Queens


[ Parent ]
2010 Ballot measure?
Does it take only 50% on a ballot measure to pass a law in NY?  Becuase it seems to me that the voters in NY are ahead of the politicians on this issue.  Getting 50% to pass a ballot initiative legalizing it in 2010 seems very possible is support is 49% (with many undecides) and growing.  

[ Parent ]
yes
it does take 50% to pass a ballot measure. It won't be simple to pass though. The only thing is a ballot measure to legalize same-sex marriage will bring out a different audience, namely those who support it.

A ballot measure will be exceptionally close. Interestingly, this might be where Gillibrand comes in handy. Her on the ballot brings out Upstate Democrats, who are more supportive of marriage-equality than inner city Democrats.  

Liberty Avenue Politics - a place for politics in Southern Queens


[ Parent ]
Doesn't surprise me
I'd except a Prop 8 type thing would pass in at least 2 of the 5 boroughs (The Bronx and Staten Island) and be close in Brooklyn and Queens.

Minority, Hispanic, and Conservative Jewish communities are very anti-gay. Irish/Italian Catholic communities are ambivilant, but probably lean anti-gay marriage

The only real support comes from the notoriously liberal parts of the city in Manhattan, Inner Brooklyn, Astoria, Queens.

I'm surprised the suburbs are against, but then again I shouldn't be.  

Liberty Avenue Politics - a place for politics in Southern Queens


[ Parent ]

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