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Georgia Primary Election Preview

by: Crisitunity

Tue Jul 20, 2010 at 11:10 AM EDT


  • GA-Gov (D): Ex-Gov. Roy Barnes has held commanding leads in every credible poll of this primary, so the question tonight isn't who finishes first, but rather, will Barnes capture the Democratic nomination without needing a runoff? Four out of the five pollsters who have released polls of this contest in July have pegged Barnes' support in the mid-to-high 50s, while the fifth, Public Policy Polling, had Barnes at 49%. Barnes has dominated the airwaves at the expense of his next closest competitor, state AG Thurbert Baker, but Baker recently picked up the support of Bill Clinton, the most recent Democrat to win Georgia at the Presidential level. Baker may have also earned some favor with base voters by refusing to challenge the constitutional validity of Congress' healthcare reform legislation passed earlier this year -- a move that earned him the full wrath of sitting Gov. Sonny Perdue and the GOP-dominated state legislature. Rounding out the field are House Minority Leader DuBose Porter and ex-SoS/Labor Commissioner/GA National Guard Adjutant-General David Poythress, both of whom have failed to gain much traction in the polls. (J)

  • GA-Gov (R): What a difference a few weeks makes. One month ago, Insurance Commissioner John Oxendine was a mortal lock to make the runoff (with just too many candidates for anyone to win outright), and looking likely to advance to the general election thanks to his financial advantages. A few ethical allegations and Sarah Palin endorsements later, former SoS Karen Handel has pulled into a dominant lead, with Oxendine struggling to even make the runoff. The most recent spate of polls has seen the Ox neck-and-neck with almost-as-sleazy former Rep. Nathan Deal for the 2nd runoff spot, and even, in one poll, sinking into 4th behind state Sen. Eric Johnson, who aired a last-minute TV ad blitz and might (a la Robert Bentley in Alabama) sneak into the runoff by virtue of not being any of the other candidates.

  • GA-04 (D): Incumbent Democratic Rep. Hank Johnson faces a serious primary challenge from ex-DeKalb County CEO Vernon Jones and DeKalb County Commissioner Connie Stokes. Jones, as you may recall, was last seen losing the 2008 Democratic Senate nomination to Jim Martin after admitting that he voted for George W. Bush not once but twice. (Furthermore, the man also carries around some pretty ugly baggage.) Jones has been aggressively hitting Johnson, who disclosed last December that he's been battling Hepatitis C for years, for supposedly being an absentee representative, and drawing attention to Johnson's curious comments that the island of Guam may someday "capsize". An internal poll for Johnson released in January had Johnson up by a 47-19 margin over Jones, with 5% for Stokes. And after a slow fundraising start to the year, Johnson has been raising and spending at a rate unmatched by Jones and Stokes. Johnson has also earned the endorsements of Barack Obama and former Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin. Still, in this summer of discontent, it's worth watching races like this one. (J)

  • GA-07 (R): The Republican derby to replace retiring long-time wingnut Rep. John Linder is overloaded with candidates and likely to head to a runoff, but state Rep. Clay Cox seems to be in the driver's seat, with former Christian Coalition head Ralph Reed and several prominent state Senators having taken passes or bailed out of the race. Cox's main opposition seems to be Linder's former CoS, Rob Woodall. Interestingly, all eight candidates in the field have sworn fealty to Linder's pet crackpot scheme, the so-called "Fair Tax" (a plan to replace the graduated income tax with a gigantic, and massively regressive, national sales tax).

  • GA-09 (R): They've already faced off two times in the last few months, so what's one more time between friends? Former state Rep. Tom Graves won the special election to fill the seat left empty by Nathan Deal's one-step-ahead-of-the-law resignation and is just settling in as a newly-minted U.S. Rep. However, now he has to face off once again against the man he defeated in the special primary and runoff: state Sen. Screamin' Lee Hawkins. It'll be an uphill fight for Hawkins, but Hawkins has a strong base in Hall County, and Graves may be further damaged by revelations about his attempts to dodge a lawsuit over an unpaid loan (which hadn't fully broken when the special runoff happened).

  • GA-12 (D/R): The duel in the GA-12 Democratic primary between Rep. John Barrow and Regina Thomas seemed to catch some netroots attention in 2008; it pitted one of House Dems' most conservative members (a particularly bad mismatch with his D+1 district) against an African-American former state Senator with a delightful array of hats. Her underfunded campaign barely captured a quarter of the vote, though, and the rematch this year seems to have inspired a netroots-wide 'meh.' Despite more of a head start this year, Thomas's campaign is even more underfunded this time, and Barrow has been spending like mad to mitigate his constituents' discontent with his 'no' vote on HCR. Barrow correctly understands that Thomas is his main opposition this year; with widely-self-touted Wayne Mosely sidelined last year by lawsuit-related financial woes, the NRCC doesn't seem to have a prize pick in this primary. Former Thunderbolt fire chief Carl Smith seems to come closest to being the GOP's establishment candidate here, while nuclear power plant safety inspector project manager Ray McKinney fancies himself the teabaggers' choice.

    Have any predictions for tonight? Please share with us in the comments.

    Polls close at 7 pm ET.

  • Crisitunity :: Georgia Primary Election Preview
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    GA-Gov predix...
    Karen Handel - 39%
    Nathan Deal - 19%
    John Oxendine - 17%
    Eric Johnson - 16%
    Jeff Chapman - 5%
    Ray McBerry - 3%
    Otis Putnam - 1%

    Roy Barnes - 51%
    Thurbert Baker - 25%
    David Poythress - 9%
    DuBose Porter - 6%
    Carl Camon - 5%
    Bill Bolton - 3%
    Randal Mangham - 1%

    For daily political commentary, visit me at http://polibeast.blogspot.com/ and http://twitter.com/polibeast


    Abridges Predictions
    U.S. Senate (D): Hadley does better than expected (got my vote!): 85-15 Thurmond.

    Gov (D): Barnes avoids a runoff.  He finishes no less than third in every county, winning Metro Atlanta in particular (other than maybe DeKalb County, where Baker lives).  Porter wins his home county of Laurens and maybe some surrounding counties and maybe gets some seconds and thirds in rural Georgia but doesn't get past 7%.  

    Gov (R): Handel wins the plurality with Oxendine, Deal, and Johnson fighting it out for second (recounts and lawsuits, anyone?).  Deal does well in his old district and the rest of rural Northern Georgia as well as Forsyth County.  Handel wins Fulton, Cobb, Cherokee Counties.  Oxendine wins Gwinnett and some surrounding counties; he and Handel split the South Metro.  Johnson does well in Southeastern Georgia (but me be hampered by Chapman winning his district).

    Attorney General (D): Teilhet wins, doing well in Metro Atlanta and Columbus.

    Attorney General (R): Runoff.  Olens does well due to being from heavily populated Cobb but social issues hurt him in many places.  Wood has South Georgia all to himself.  Smith does well in North Georgia.  I think they'll all be bunched up.

    Secretary of State (D): Runoff.  Buckner gets through, along with either Mills or Horlacher.  

    School Superintendent (D): Runoff between Farokhi and Westlake.

    Labor Commissioner (D): Coleman wins 60%-40% (and I'm in that 40%)

    Insurance Commissioner (R): Hudgens leads but gets forced into a runoff.

    GA-04 (D): Johnson gets the most votes and probably avoids a runoff.  He'll win either way.

    GA-12 (D): Barrow wins, but Thomas breaks at least 35%, maybe even 40%

    SD-03 (R): Carter wins a close one on his way to becoming the third Carter in the State Senate, 52-48

    SD-17 (D): Nichols wins fairly easily, at least 55-45.

    SD-31 (R): Heath gets at least 55%

    SD-32 (R): Judson Hill survives, 65-35

    SD-35 (D): The third battle between James and Johnson will be inconclusive and will have to be decided by a fourth in the runoff

    SD-37 (R): John Wiles gets primaried out of office, 48-52

    SD-40 (R): Millar and Sibold go to a runoff.

    SD-44 (D): Davenport and Glanton go into a runoff due to Dawn Randolph getting at least 15%

    SD-52 (R): Loudermilk wins, easily.

    HD-33 (D): Wilkerson unseats Wix, 53-47

    HD-80 (D): Murray wins.  The openly gay Gross lost the Stonewall Democrats' endorsement to the straight Murray.  That, I think, means something very important.

    HD-143 (D): Graham goes to a runoff with, say, Santamaria.

    HD-167 (R): Shaw's party switch (being the son of the retiring Democratic incumbent!) hampers him some, but he wins fairly easily

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


    Another:
    SD-39 (D): Fort defeats Balch, 60-40.

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

    [ Parent ]
    Loudermilk?
    that goes up there with Terbolizard, Mumpower, etc. in the Lulzy Politician Names Hall of Fame.

    21, dude, RI-01 (registered) IL-01 (college)
    please help Japan. click "donate funds" in upper right and then "Japan Earthquake and Pacific Tsunami." http://www.redcross.org/


    [ Parent ]
    I disaffectionately refer to him as "Sour Cream"
    Far right-wing bastard.  

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

    [ Parent ]
    Very good on Sen
    Got it right on the mark. Your pred: 85-15, actual result: 86-14

    [ Parent ]
    Voted about an hour ago.
    Very light turnout (although my county doesn't have many Democrats, so basically only one party was active).

    My votes:

    U.S. Senate: R.J. Hadley
    Governor: Roy Barnes
    Lt. Governor: Carol Porter
    Secretary of State: Mike Mills (no, not that Mike Mills)
    Attorney General: Rob Teilhet
    Labor Commissioner: Darryl Hicks
    Insurance Commissioner: Mary Squires (unopposed, but I still voted for her)
    Agriculture Commissioner: [Left it blank]
    State School Superintendent: Beth Farokhi
    Public Service Commissioner: Keith Moffett
    State Senate: [Left it blank]
    SPLOST [Special Purpose Local Option Sales Tax] Referendum: Yes

    My Congressional district, State House district, and all local offices are uncontested by Democrats this year.

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


    Beautiful day
    Too dang hot for my liking but so is Philly these days.

    Can't comment on turnout but it was fun to see as we droive by a couple of polling places people standing outside waving signs to get people to comne vote.  They seemed happy, and sometimes that's not the vibe I get in Philly.

    Of course they could have been in the early stages of some sort of dehydration dementia too :-)


    [ Parent ]
    Interesting
    Out of the 10, we agree on 6, maybe 7. There's one race that I'm holding off on until I'm in the voting booth. We agree on more than I would have thought though.

    [ Parent ]
    Scary, ain't it?
    I'm guessing Hadley, Carol Porter, Mills, Farokhi, Squires, and Moffett, and you're undecided about Barnes.  

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

    [ Parent ]
    Nope
    I'm undecided about Hadley/Thurmond.

    I think Thurmond is stronger because he's better known throughout the state and he's got a reputation as a centrist. He's hard to peg as a liberal, which is important. We saw what the GOP did to Martin in 2008.

    That is certainly not a knock against RJ though, I think he's a genuine good guy. He's a rarity in politics these days, and we certainly need more people like RJ in office. He's willing to speak to anyone, including the Tea Party, and have an open dialogue.

    I know RJ better, but I think Thurmond, at this moment, is stronger.

    I've changed my mind so many times on this race that I won't know until I actually cast my ballot.

    I'm choosing Westlake over Farokhi. Westlake has some prominent endorsements from educators around my area.

    And, I'm fully behind Barnes. Poythress, Porter, and Baker are all great candidates, and I think we'd do well with any of them. Barnes just sucked up all of the air when he jumped in. It's his race to lose.


    [ Parent ]
    Why
    RJ Hadley? Do you have a problem with Thurmond? I did not think Hadley was a serious candidate even.  

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

    [ Parent ]
    Hadley is talking about the issues.
    I made my decision last night.  I went to Thurmond and Hadley's websites.  Thurmond's "issues" section was infected with front-runneritis, lots of "This is a problem" but nothing about what he would do about it.  Hadley had far more depth and was satisfying in most of his responses.

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

    [ Parent ]
    RJ
    RJ has a bright future in Georgia politics if he wants it.

    His only problem is name ID, and for a statewide race, it's vital, especially against Isakson.


    [ Parent ]
    He's biting off WWWWWWAAAAAAAAYYYYYYYYY too much.
    Going from Chief of Staff of the Rockdale County Commission to running for the U.S. Senate is a bit much.

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

    [ Parent ]
    Credit
    Gotta give him credit though for stepping up when no one else would.

    I figured you'd dislike Thurmond since he's such a strong third way advocate. He's not just a "New Democrat" he's authored papers before about centrism.


    [ Parent ]
    A delightful array of hats!?!
    Why is this the first time I'm hearing about this? Hats are basically the female equivalent of mustaches, in that they're wonderfully old-fashioned and increasingly rare. I would've probably sent Regina Thomas money had I known she possessed a delightful array of hats. Goddamit, people, I come to SSP like every day to learn critically important political details like this and I'm just learning about it now? I feel let down.

    /tongue-in-cheek

    I'll leave the predictions to the folks who know and care about Georgia politics.

    Kansan by birth, Californian by choice, and Gay by the grace of God.


    GA-Gov (R): Deal attacking Handel in robocall
    http://blogs.ajc.com/political...

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

    Predictions
    Democratic Primary

    U.S. Senate - Thurmond
    Governor - Barnes
    Lt. Governor - Porter
    Attorney General - Hodges
    Secretary of State - Mills + Sinkfield run-off
    State School Superintendent - Westlake + Farokhi run-off
    Labor Commissioner - Hicks
    Insurance Commissioner - Squires (only candidate running)
    Agriculture Commissioner - Powell (only candidate running)

    U.S. Senate - Isakson (only candidate running)
    Governor - Oxendine/Handel/Johnson run-off (choose 2)
    Lt. Governor - Cagle (only candidate running)
    Attorney General - Wood + Olens run-off
    Secretary of State - MacGinnitie
    State School Superintendent - Barge
    Labor Commissioner - Everson
    Insurance Commissioner - Purcell + Harp run-off
    Agriculture Commissioner - Black

    Here's a link to the results:

    http://sos.georgia.gov/electio...


    Wow
    I butchered that post.  I forgot to include "Republican Primary" above Isakson.

    Oh well.


    [ Parent ]
    Democratic School Superintendent
    Why don't you think Joe Martin will make it into a run-off? I see a lot of folks supporting him and he was the Democratic nominee in 1998.

    [ Parent ]
    Well
    Farokhi and Westlake have traveled the state for over a year. Martin suddenly jumped in at the last minute.

    Has Martin been to Middle or South GA at all? I don't know anyone that even knows him outside of Atlanta.


    [ Parent ]
    Interesting
    I gather that you don't think much of Nathan Deal's recent rise in the polls, and you aren't solid on Karen Handel strength either.

    I think Handel is going to lead tonight and will be in the runoff.  The second place seems like a tossup.


    [ Parent ]
    Results delayed...
    ...until 8:45pm tonight.

    http://blogs.ajc.com/georgia_e...


    Update
    Looks like this story's been updated -- it's not clear whether all results will be post-poned until 8:45 or just Fulton County.

    [ Parent ]

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