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Two Elections Today: MA-Sen and KY SD-14

by: Crisitunity

Tue Dec 08, 2009 at 4:11 PM EST


It's Election Day in two specials. Most everyone here knows it's the primary election in the Massachusetts Senate race to replace Ted Kennedy. Well, maybe the people of the Bay State don't know, though... turnout is projected to be low, in the wake of a sleepy campaign with little fireworks between fairly-ideologically similar candidates. (The SoS projects 300K to 500K, out of 4,000,000 registered voters.) Polls close at 8 pm Eastern.

The main question in the Bay State is whether Rep. Michael Capuano, who's had some late momentum, can close the big gap against AG Martha Coakley, who's led every poll. The very last poll of the race is an odd little one -- a poll from Suffolk (pdf)of "bellwether" towns (only Falmouth, Fitchburg, and Lunenberg, yielding a sample size of only 367) -- but it effectively splits the difference between the two camps' internal polls that they released this weekend. It shows Coakley at 39 and Capuano at 25, with Stephen Pagliuca at 13 and Alan Khazei at 7. One good indication that most people expect Coakley to pull it out is that articles are already proliferating on the jostling to become Massachusetts' next Attorney General.

By the way, there's also a Republican primary. State Sen. Scott Brown is expected to win easily over perennial candidate Jack E. Robinson, and is then expected to be roadkill in the Jan. 19 general special election. Pollwatchers tonight will want to focus on Capuano's home turf -- Boston, Cambridge, and Somerville -- where he'll need to put up gigantic numbers in order to overcome Coakley's statewide support.

However, I have a feeling that the real excitement -- and where most of SSPers' attention will lay -- tonight is the special election in Kentucky's 14th Senate district. This was opened up when Democratic Gov. Steve Beshear appointed long-time Republican Senator Dan Kelly to a judgeship, as part of his strategy to depopulate the GOP side of the Senate by giving them cushy jobs. After having picked up two state Senate seats in previous special elections this year, Democrats are now within striking distance of control of the Senate. A win tonight will move them to a 19-18 deficit (with one independent who caucuses with the GOP).

Nobody rocks a state legislative special election preview like Josh Goodman, so it's worth visiting Governing's blog to check out the backstory. Democrats are feeling confident going into this one, too, with former state Rep. Jodie Haydon posting a big fundraising advantage over Republican state Rep. Jimmy Higdon. That may seem surprising, but this race is turning heavily on local issues. Beshear and legislative Dems have been pushing for expanded gambling at horse racing tracks, and the horse industry in Kentucky has responded by throwing their weight behind the Dems. Higdon and the GOP have been trying to nationalize the race instead, running scary ads linking Haydon to Nancy Pelosi and the national Democratic agenda. In a district this small, though, the localizing/nationalizing thing may not matter as much as just which candidate did better at retail politicking.

This district, located in central Kentucky (centered on Bardstown, the focus of the bourbon industry), has titanic Democratic registration advantages, but also has generally voted for Republicans both in national and state races in the last decade. (See the handy charts in Josh's article.) Keep an eye on Nelson County -- the most populous county in the district, and where Haydon is from -- and on Marion County, the most Democratic-friendly part of the district, but where GOPer Higdon is from. (UPDATE: By my quick calculation, this district works out to an R+14 PVI based on 04-08 presidential numbers, but that's only about 3 points more Republican-leaning than Kentucky as a whole, and remember this is an area where people vote very differently downticket.)

The eastern half of Kentucky has a freakishly-early closing time, so we'll be posting a results thread at 6 pm ET for these two races. In the meantime, please feel free to share your predictions in the comments!

Crisitunity :: Two Elections Today: MA-Sen and KY SD-14
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Predictions
Coakley 42%
Capuano 30%
Pagliuca 15%
Khazei 12%

Speaking of which mods
What happended to the election night quiz from November?

[ Parent ]
We're waiting for the results of NY-23 to be certified. (eom)


[ Parent ]
Brown v. Robinson
Brown's name should be generic enough to overcome people who vote for a guy named "Jack E. Robinson" just because of the name.

KY-Senate
I've asked this before, but no one commented.  If we did pick up the state senate in KY, and have the trifecta in the state, is it at all possible to carve out a 3-3 house delegation?

Well PVI wise I doubt it
Obama only one won district, KY-3.  KY-6 is controlled by Ben Chandler but only gave Obama 43 percent of the vote which is actually his second best showing.  If we wanted to eek out a third it'd probably have to be KY-2 The dem challenger in 08 got within 5.1 percent.  So if KY-3 has grown more than the rest of the state then perhaps we can do a spaghetti string into Louisville or something but even if we carve out a second one, when Ben Chandler is gone we will be lucky if we have more than one.

[ Parent ]
It's pretty much mathematically impossible to get 3 districts where Obama wins
To do that, the remaining three districts would have to average 66-34 McCain, and even then the three D districts would just be 50%+1 (I used the two-party vote for these calcs). So unless you want to draw some insane cobweb-like gerrymander (which would probably be legal since the courts only care if it's racial gerrymandering, but terrible PR), no.

[ Parent ]
Well
As has been mentioned before, you're not getting three Obama districts, but you could probably carve out a third district that a Dem could win because Dems not at the topic of the ticket tend to do better. Yarmuth probably doesn't need all of Louisville; you could probably draw a few neighborhoods there into the 2nd or the 4th and get that to the point where a Dem could win.

22, Democrat, AZ-01
Peace. Love. Gabby.


[ Parent ]
Thus, a more basic strategy question w/r/t redistricting
Do we maximize the number of districts that Ds can win

or

Do we maximize the number of districts that progressive Ds can win?


[ Parent ]
In Kentucky?
I'd say maximize the number of Dems.  You won't get a progressive elected outside of the Louisville district.  And Ben Chandler is actually a good democrat.  If you can draw a third district that might elect a democrat without damaging the Louisville based 3rd and Chandler's district I say go for it.

[ Parent ]
Yes, your answer is the same as mine w/r/t Kentucky
but we could end up with different answers in other states.

Just a bigger picture question to think about.


[ Parent ]
Ya
I prefer to maximize the number of progressives in states where we can safely produce a lot of them - namely the northeast and west coast (California).  In places like the southeast I prefer to maximize the number of democrats (regardless of their ideology).

[ Parent ]
I don't
In the Deep South, I would draw as many black majority/influence districts as possible, and concede everything else to the GOP.  If we win one of the other districts fine, but don't expect any decent voting from that Rep.

That is 2 in Louisiana, 1-2 in Mississippi, 2 in Alabama, 2 in South Carolina.  Georgia is a different story, I would draw at least 2 black majority in rural Georgia, and see if a third influence district can be created (but I doubt it).  In the Atlanta area, you want 3 black influence plus a fourth tossup.

White Democrats from the Deep South are basically useless for our agenda.  The few that are not (Spratt) will be in trouble.


[ Parent ]
Think about who would be drawing the disticts
I don't know enough about Kentucky politics to be certain, but I sorta doubt that whoever will be drawing the map will be that concerned with getting progressives in to office.

However, when you're talking about a state like, say Maryland, that is a factor that gives me pause about the get-as-many-Dems-in-at-any cost strategy.

22, Democrat, AZ-01
Peace. Love. Gabby.


[ Parent ]
Mess with Yarmuth's district and he'll lose
Remember that Louisville is only moderately Democratic. Obama won the district 56-43, but Kerry only barely won it 51-49. Diluting the district any would endanger Yarmuth, or cause him to move to the right.

I posted a map of Kentucky that produced a 4-2 delegation, but the two Democratic districts should be safe for the time being:

http://swingstateproject.com/d...


[ Parent ]
I agree
If we had a moderate Dem representing KY-03 I could see weakening that district.  But with a good progressive like Yarmuth it's really not reasible.  That district is already dangerous for a progressive in a bad democratic year.

[ Parent ]
Not feasible I meant to say


[ Parent ]
Well I'll be here
snow storm in Minneapolis...  4-7 inches so I'm not going anywhere.

Where do you go to school Andrew?
I think you mentioned you're at law school correct?  Is it the U or St. Thomas or for me to figure out?  I'm just curious as I've got lots of former classmates in the Twin Cities area (and will be returning to it for Christmas...I'm going to be a wuss with the cold).

[ Parent ]
Here goes nothing
Coakley 45
Capuano 29
Pagliuca 14
Khazei 12

Coakley +10
Can't be bothered with the also-rans.

[ Parent ]
Predictions
KY-14 - Haydon (D) 54, Higdon (R) 46
MA-Sen (D) - Coakley 44, Capuano 34, Khazei 12, Pagliuca 10
MA-Sen (R) - Brown 65, Robinson 35

34, WM, Democrat, FL-11

There's also a special election in Arkansas
SD-04 was previously represented by Republican Sharon Trusty, who resigned in August for family health reasons.

Polls close at 7:30 Central time; results will be here.


There's also a Los Angeles City Council special election
  In Council district 2 the incumbent Wendy Greuel was elected City Controller so the seat became vacant last July. There was a primary in September and today is the runoff between the top two contenders. The main bit of interest for non-Angelenos is that one of them is Assemblymember Paul Krekorian (D-AD-43) so if he wins there will have to be a special election for the Assembly seat. Krekorian's opponent is Christine Essel, who was a film industry executive and has the LA Times endorsement. Paul has the support of the local Democratic party organization (DP/SFV) and various neighborhood activists. He came in first place in the primary, but she has lots of money and also some independent expenditure campaigns on her side. Polls close at 8PM Pacific Time.

52, male, disgruntled Democrat, CA-28

Krekorian
Krekorian's also got the gays strongly in his corner--I got two GOTV emails from local gay groups. Which is odd, because I don't live in the district. But for a former film exec to not win the gays must mean she treated her assistants particularly badly (joke!)

I'd add that Essel also seems much more aligned with the big bucks development people (Krekorian derisively refers to them as "downtown" interests).

http://mayorsam.blogspot.com/2...

She also had big, big bucks--spending about $1.5 MILLION for a city council seat. Krekorian spent about $600k.

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


[ Parent ]
Krekorian wins seat 57% to 43%
    Essel had the bucks but Krekorian had the better campaign. He got a strong percentage of the mail-in ballots voted and there were more votes by mail than at the polls (57% voted by mail.) Total of votes was under 20,000, which is not much for a L.A. Council race.

   He will be sworn in to the Council soon so the Assembly special election will have to be scheduled. Look for more information on SSP under the heading "CA State Ass."...

52, male, disgruntled Democrat, CA-28


[ Parent ]
Prediction for Mass
Coakley - 43
Capuano - 31
Pagliuca - 15
Khazei - 11


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