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SSP Daily Digest: 2/1

by: Crisitunity

Mon Feb 01, 2010 at 4:59 PM EST


CA-Sen (pdf): The Public Policy Institute of California takes a look at the California Senate race, and find it a fairly close-looking race if ex-Rep. Tom Campbell survives the primary against wealthy Carly Fiorina and teabagger-powered Chuck DeVore. Unfortunately, it looks like he's poised to that, leading Fiorina and DeVore 27-16-8. Barbara Boxer leads Campbell 45-41 in the general, while she leads Fiorina by a more comfortable 48-40 and DeVore 47-39. (By comparison, Boxer leads Campbell by 10 in the most recent sample by the widely-respected Field Poll, who found Campbell leading Fiorina 35-25-6.) Another bit of bad news for Fiorina: apparently people at her former company doesn't think that much of her. Boxer has received the maximum $10K from Hewlett-Packard's PAC, while Fiorina has gotten nothing.

IL-Sen: I don't know if anyone was banking on Jacob Meister and the 1% of voters he was pulling in, but the wealthy attorney running a quixotic bid folded his hand and threw his backing behind Alexi Giannoulias with only a day to go before the primary. He cited David Hoffman's negative ads and that Hoffman is "more conservative" than he lets on. PPP's Tom Jensen also has some thoughts on the Republican primary, wondering why Patrick Hughes fizzled while other tea party-fueled insurgent candidates (Rand Paul) have caught a spark; basically, it has to do with money, and not just one's own money (with Hughes has lots of) but institutional money (from folks like the Club for Growth) instead.

KY-Sen: Speaking of Rand Paul, he got a top-drawer endorsement today, from Sarah Palin, as the common cause between teabaggers and Paulists now seems fully stitched-together. (Of course, whether that endorsement translates into dollars is another question, especially with today's revelation that SarahPAC spent more money buying copies of "Going Rogue" to push it up the best-seller lists than on contributions to actual candidates.)

NV-Sen: While he hasn't taken any official steps, Lt. Gov. Brian Krolicki is souding more and more like a Republican candidate for the Senate, publicly saying "I can beat Senator Reid." (And, the implication probably is, that the second-tier odds and ends currently cluttering the race can't, once the gloves come off.) With Krolicki being courted by the John Cornyn at the NRSC, that's just arousing the wrath of the anti-establishment set, though, and even some local bigwigs, like ex-Gov. (and current RNC committee member) Bob List, who's telling Cornyn to back off.

NY-Sen, NY-Sen-B (pdf): No particular surprises in Marist's new poll of the Senate landscape in New York, finding that a hypothetical George Pataki challenge, rather than Harold Ford Jr., is the biggest threat to Kirsten Gillibrand. She wins the primary against Ford and Jonathan Tasini 44-27-4. Gillibrand loses to Pataki 49-43, while easily beating the only announced Republican, Port Authority commissioner Bruce Blakeman, 52-30. Ford also loses the general to Pataki, 52-35, while getting past Blakeman 39-35. They even test out the other Senate race, the one no one has been thinking about but that talk show host Larry Kudlow has made some noises about joining. Charles Schumer mops the floor with Kudlow, 67-25.

WA-Sen: I don't know if this is going to strike much fear in the heart of Patty Murray, who has flattened three prominent Republican U.S. Representatives over the course of her career, but a poll from Moore Insight (a Republican polling firm in Oregon) clearly designed to lure 2004 and 2008 gubernatorial loser Dino Rossi into the race finds Rossi leading, 45-43. Rossi says "I never say never," but also says he has "no plans to run for any office at this point."

CA-Gov: That same PPIC poll has gubernatorial numbers as well, finding that Jerry Brown shouldn't take his race for granted either. Former eBay CEO Meg Whitman has moved into commanding position in the GOP primary, between her outrageous spending and the disappearance of Tom Campbell from the race; she leads Insurance Comm. Steve Poizner 41-11 (an improvement from 32-8 in December). Brown leads Whitman by five, 41-36 (he led by 6 in December), while he leads Poizner 44-29. Calitics has some advice on how Brown should engage the race if and when he emerges from his Fortress of Solitude, and also some details on how Poizner isn't going down without a fight, calling for federal investigation into Whitman's efforts to push him out of the race.

MD-Gov: Ex-Gov. Bob Ehrlich seems to be moving closer to a rematch with the man who defeated him in 2006, Democrat Martin O'Malley. He's been lining up fundraisers and a statewide "listening tour," although he says he wants to hear what people actually say on said tour before making a decision one way or the other on the race. Another indicator that Ehrlich is likely to run: the only Republican in the race right now, Larry Hogan, a close Ehrlich friend who said he's get out of the way for Ehrlich and was in the race as something of a placeholder, has ended his campaign, saying that he's convinced Ehrlich is getting in.

MI-Gov: Lt. Gov. John Cherry's withdrawal from the gubernatorial race is certainly different from what we saw Connecticut and Colorado: instead of leading to an instant upgrade, we're just seeing a lot of confusion, with none of the options seeming that much better. The newest EPIC-MRA poll of the race finds pizza magnate Denise Ilitch in the best position in the scrambled Dem primary, leading state House speaker Andy Dillon and Lansing mayor Virg Bernero 23-8-5, with a majority undecided. AG Mike Cox leads the Republican field, beating Rep. Peter Hoekstra and Oakland Co. Sheriff Mike Bouchard 32-25-16. Specific head-to-head numbers aren't reported, but Ilitch reportedly trails Cox by 18 and Hoekstra by 7, with Dillon and Bernero faring even worse. (UPDATE: Thanks to RCP, those toplines are: Cox 48, Ilitch 30; Cox 47, Dillon 30; Cox 50, Bernero 28; Hoekstra 42, Ilitch 35; Hoekstra 40, Dillon 32; Hoekstra 45, Bernero 27.)

PA-Gov: With rich guy Tom Knox suddenly out of the governor's race, another Philadelphian is looking to fill his void in a Democratic primary dominated by western Pennsylvania figures. State Sen. Anthony Williams has been sounding out the race; he'd be the only African-American in the field.

AR-03: We've already dissected the possible fields in Arkansas' 1st and 2nd districts, but now that it looks like the 3rd will be vacant too, let's see who might step up. One top name is John Arthur Hammerschmidt, the son of the guy who held the seat for more than 20 years (and who notably beat a young Bill Clinton many years ago). A possible return engagement by ex-Rep. and ex-DEA head Asa Hutchinson is also mentioned. Other names for the GOP include former US Attorney Bob Balfe, state Rep. Jonathan Barnett, former state Sen. Dave Bisbee, state Sen. Cecile Bledsoe, former state Sen. John Brown, state Rep. Rick Green, city councilor Kurt Maddox, former state Rep. Doug Matoyo, former state Rep. Daryl Pace, current Senate candidate Buddy Rogers, retired general Bernard Skoch, and Rogers mayor Steve Womack. Fayetteville city attorney David Whitaker seems to be the lone Democrat interested in this dark-red district.

CA-12: Nothing sets off a stampede like an open U.S. House seat in California, where term limits keep people cycling in and out of the state legislature. With Rep. Jackie Speier sounding likely to run for state AG, state sen. Leland Yee, state Assemblyman Jerry Hill, and Assemblywoman Fiona Ma also have said they're revving up for a run in the Democratic primary in this safely-blue seat.

LA-02: Rep. Joe Cao seems to have gotten sucked into the downward spiral of direct mail marketing. He raised a pretty good $248K during the last quarter, but somehow managed to spend $283K, meaning he burned $35K and is sitting on only $316K CoH anymore.

MN-03: Bad news in the 3rd: state Sen. Terri Bonoff, who probably should have been our candidate there in 2008, isn't going to run there in 2010, instead going for another term in the state Senate. Maureen Hackett and Jim Meffert are facing off for the Democratic nod, but neither of them has Bonoff's stature in the swingy suburban district.

NY-15: The Memphis newspaper has an interesting profile of one of the candidates seeking to knock off increasingly-sketchy Rep. Charlie Rangel in the Democratic primary, Harlem community banker Vincent Morgan. What's the Memphis angle on all this? Morgan is really a Ford; he's the estranged son of currently imprisoned former state Sen. John Ford, and the cousin of former TN-09 Rep. and current possible NY-Sen candidate Harold Ford Jr. Morgan isn't close with the family, and prefers to downplay the link.

PA-08: The minor GOP candidates in the 8th seem to be bailing out, in the wake of the entry of a relative heavyweight, in the form of ex-Rep. Mike Fitzpatrick, back to reclaim his seat. Attorney and Iraq vet Dean Malik, who seemed to be as close to a frontrunner as the GOP had pre-Fitzpatrick, dropped out last week and endorsed Fitzpatrick. The self-proclaimed teabagger in the race, Rob Mitchell, also pulled out and threw his support to Fitzpatrick.

TN-04: Rep. Lincoln Davis had previously made it clear that he was running again, but it's official today: he filed his paperwork for another run. That's gotta be a relief for the DCCC, already trying to plug two holes in TN-06 and TN-08.

TX-23: Former Bexar Co. Commissioner Lyle Larson, who torpedoed the GOP's preferred candidate (Quico Canseco) in the 2008 primary and then went on to get swamped by Rep. Ciro Rodriguez in the general, won't be running again this year. Instead, he's getting into an open seat race for a Texas state House seat instead, giving Canseco a clearer shot this time.

WV-01: A last-minute primary challenge to Rep. Alan Mollohan sneaked in, and it's a rather serious one, from long-time state Sen. Mike Oliverio. Oliverio is giving up his Senate seat this year, maybe in hopes that Mollohan would retire; when Mollohan filed for re-election anyway, he may have figured he had nothing to lose by running anyway (although with Mollohan's ethical cloud having been recently lifted, I'm not sure what Oliverio's angle would be anymore). Also worth noting: state Sen. Clark Barnes, considering a leading GOP challenger, didn't even file to run, apparently thinking better of it after the party started touting former state Rep. (and more importantly, potential self-financer) David McKinley instead. (You can check out all the Kentucky and West Virginia filings action in benawu's new diary.)

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Crisitunity :: SSP Daily Digest: 2/1
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Kentucky is not a libertarian state.
I welcome Kentucky's new Democratic senator in January.

That is, if whoever is the nominee (I'm hoping its Conway), pulls off a good campaign that characterizes who Rand Paul for who he is.

On that, I'm not completely sure if the dem nominee can do it.

20, Male, Democrat, CA-44 (home) CA-12 (college)


I would say
welcome Senator Paul. We have a shot in Kentucky; however it is not a great one. I live in Southern Indiana, and I get Louisville media and I spend a lot of time in Louisville, and I have to say that there is not a chance that they will elected a democrat. Even if Paul is the nominee we get smoked in November. The best hope we have is Conaway, if the LG wins the primary then we are completely screwed.  

Proud member of the Indiana Democratic Party from IN-9.  

[ Parent ]
For
some reason Kentucky voters don't like sending Democrats to Washington, but they have no problem sending them to the state capital.

19, Male, Independent, CA-12

[ Parent ]
It has to do
like Arkansas, Oklahoma, and West Virginia, with the leaders in Washington vs. the leaders in Frankfort.

Kentuckyians don't look positively to the liberal woman from San Francisco and the liberal black man from Chicago.

Although Obama did do better than Kerry in Kentucky.  


[ Parent ]
Not everywhere
Believe it or not there where some counties that went higher for McCain than they did for Bush.  

Proud member of the Indiana Democratic Party from IN-9.  

[ Parent ]
oh I know
that was true of all but five counties in Arkansas and most of the counties in Oklahoma, Louisiana and Tennessee

In Kentucky, I know the counties down in Applachia moved decisively from Bush to McCain, but Obama did better than Kerry in Louisville area, Lexington, and Owensboro, Kentucky's Evansville suburbs. I think he even improved in the Covington area too.  


[ Parent ]
There were some counties in KY
that went for Walter Mondale, Michael Dukakis and John McCain.

[ Parent ]
Harlan County
60% for Carter in 1980, 51% for Mondale, 58% for Dukakis.

McCain won it 72%-26%.  


[ Parent ]
Could you provide numbers for Clinton Gore and Kerry
in Harlan county. Just for my own ammusement.

Proud member of the Indiana Democratic Party from IN-9.  

[ Parent ]
Harlan county 1992-2004 election results
2004 in Harlan Kentucky (usually about 10k votes)
Bush 60%
Kerry 39%

2000
Gore 50.9
Bush 47.3

1996
Clinton 58%
Dole 33%

1992
Clinton 55.7%
Bush Sr. 32.5
Perot 11.4%  


[ Parent ]
Thanks
That is amazing!

Proud member of the Indiana Democratic Party from IN-9.  

[ Parent ]
Pike County in Eastern Kentucky
has about 25k votes
It went for Carter, Carter, Dukakis, Clinton, Clinton, Gore, Kerry and McCain.

Floyd where Kerry got 62% of the vote is the next county over. Obama lost barely to McCain.  


[ Parent ]
Pike seems to be
a case of Democrats not showing up. McCain only got 44 more votes than Bush, but Obama got over 4500 votes LESS than Kerry.

Perhaps Democrats who just stayed home cause Obama was on the ballot and not a white southern dem.

Floyd County is a little more frightening, McCain was the first Republican to win there...well...ever. Even McGovern carried Floyd by double digits.  


[ Parent ]
Well Beshear
was mainly result of the corrupt loon before him, but you are right though. Usually the dems they elect for Governor are the good old boy types. They also have Chandler and Yarmouth in Congress. They also have a HUGE majority in the State House, and they are coming close in the St. Senate. Yet they don't want a democratic Senator.

Proud member of the Indiana Democratic Party from IN-9.  

[ Parent ]
It's fun
trying to make sense out of the irrational voting patterns of the American people.


[ Parent ]
My
dad is pro life, pro guns, anti gay, against stem cell research, and has doubts about global warming, and he ALWAYS votes democrat, and that includes Presidential elections as well. He has NEVER missed an election. I really don't know why he is not a republican.

Proud member of the Indiana Democratic Party from IN-9.  

[ Parent ]
He
supports single payer, but I really don't think he has that strong of economic views besides that. The only way you could call him liberal is with his views on HCR, besides that he just likes to talk about social issues. He is from a different time, and is from a catholic household, and you can't reason with him.  

Proud member of the Indiana Democratic Party from IN-9.  

[ Parent ]
there have been lots of close elections
McConnell seems to almost always get a tough fight for reelection as of course does Bunning. And of course, both Senators before McConnell and Bunning were Democrats.  

[ Parent ]
Question about Rand Paul..
Is he a truther? That is, someone on record as believing the 9/11 attacks were a conspiracy by the government? I've heard allegations to that effect, but I wasn't sure whether he was actually on record as saying that.  

[ Parent ]
Back last year
I thought that a Conway vs Paul matchup would result in a Democratic pickup.  But now, there's no chance.  Kentucky is the first of the Repub open seats that moved away from us when the national environment moved away.  We've got better chances at pickups in New Hampshire, Ohio, and especially in Missouri.  If we somehow pick up Kentucky, it will be because the national environment swung back in our direction before November to the point where we will probably gain Senate seats.  

There's just no other explanation.  The Repubs are fielding crappy candidates in Ohio and Missouri, there's no way we wouldn't pick those up first.

23, Male, Democrat, OH-13


The crappy candidate in Ohio
is raising money like its going out of style. Rob Portman also doesn't have connections to truthers or birthers. If Rand wins the KY primary, I think he has a harder road winning KY than Portman does winning in OH.  

[ Parent ]
true
But Portman has many connections to the dreaded four letter word.  Bush.

And he also has big connections to two other words that might as well be the f-bomb in Ohio.  Free trade.

Those two factors alone, along with Ohio's even PVI means that he ain't running away with it, no matter how much money he raises.

 

23, Male, Democrat, OH-13


[ Parent ]
Based
on the track record of tying Bush to McDonnell, Christie, and Brown, I think the whole "He's (fill in blank) to Bush" argument has lost its luster with the voters. I think we should focus more on attacking Portman for his support for free trade and less on Bush.

19, Male, Independent, CA-12

[ Parent ]
Another PPP poll vote is up:
http://publicpolicypolling.blo...

The choices are Maryland, NE-02, New Mexico, OH-12, OK-02 (seriously?), Texas, VA-05, and Washington. The top two finishers (except if there are two CDs in the top two, in which case they'll do the top CD and top state) get polled.

My support goes to (unsurprisingly) VA-05.


I have to vote my home-state
New Mexico all the way.

I really think this polling-by-democracy thing that PPP does isn't horrible, but at the same time they know they're getting played by Paulists quite often (Connecticut and Kentucky) but they don't seem to care all that much. sigh for a state that's supposed to be a swing state, NM hasn't been getting much love...

Politics and Other Random Topics

24, Male, Democrat, NM-01, Chairman of the Atheist Caucus, and Majority Leader of the "Going to Hell" caucus!


[ Parent ]
Well
at least you are on the ballot. What are we Hoosiers, chopped liver or something?    

Proud member of the Indiana Democratic Party from IN-9.  

[ Parent ]
Bad news
for Blanche.

If I had to name one reason Lincoln is in so much trouble it's that voters are no longer differentiating her from national Democrats.

That's her biggest problem but the base problem certainly doesn't help either. Her approval among people who voted for Obama is only 54%. She still gets 70% of the vote against Boozman with those folks but that 16% gap between her support and her approval is a lot of voters who aren't too enthusiastic about her.

So I'm sure the health insurance industry is need of another lobbyist...

19, Male, Independent, CA-12


[ Parent ]
She was doomed no matter what, so
if no other Democrat could win, no matter what Blanche did, she wasn't winning.  

[ Parent ]
GA-04: DeKalb County Commissioner Lee May out
http://www.ajc.com/news/dekalb...

I'm not sure if he is dropping out or declined to run.  I've seen stories before that said he had decided to run but this one makes it sound like he was not already in the race.  Regardless, it would seem this helps Vernon Jones slightly as May was an ally of his.  

Follow the elections in Georgia at the 2010 Georgia Race Tracker.



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