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SSP Daily Digest: 12/10

by: Crisitunity

Thu Dec 10, 2009 at 4:12 PM EST


CT-Sen: Joe Biden is stopping by Connecticut yet again to fill up Chris Dodd's coffers with a fundraising event tomorrow. This comes against a backdrop of increasing questions from the press of whether or not Dodd will be retiring (or getting pushed out the door by the party)... suggesting the beginning of the same self-fulfilling downward spiral that dragged down Jim Bunning, who'd similarly worn down his welcome on the other side of the aisle.

FL-Sen: Marco Rubio is making a strange ploy here, when the substance of his previous campaign has all been more-conservative-than-thou. He now says he would have accepted stimulus funds, had he been governor. Maybe he's already thinking ahead to how he'll have to moderate things, once he's in the general?

IL-Sen: With the Illinois primary fast-approaching, believe it or not, Alexi Giannoulias is hitting his cash stash to already go on the air with a second TV spot, again focusing on his jobs-saving efforts. On the GOP side, it looks like Rep. Mark Kirk's frequent flip-flopping is starting to catch the attention of the legacy media; the Sun-Times and AP are taking notice of his new McCain-ish attempts to harp on earmarks despite his own earmark-friendly past.

NV-Sen: Lt. Gov. Brian Krolicki, recently cleared on corruption charges, had previously said that he wouldn't seek to challenge Harry Reid in the Senate race. Now sources are saying Krolicki is, in fact, "interested." It's unclear whether Krolicki sustained an unfixable amount of damage as a result of the charges, though, or what sort of space he could seek to carve out in the already overcrowded GOP primary field.

SD-Sen: You might recall a while back we noted that Matt McGovern, a clean energy activist, was considering a run to follow in his grandfather George's footsteps in the Senate. Today he declined a run, leaving the Democrats without any candidate to go up against John Thune next year.

TX-Sen: South Carolina's Jim DeMint, increasingly the go-to guy for right-wing kingmaking, issued his fourth endorsement in a Senate primary, although this is the primary that may or may not ever happen. He gave his imprimatur to Railroad Commissioner Michael Williams, who's been a darling of the rightosphere but who's polled in the single-digits in the few polls of the special election field.

MN-Gov: Here's a fundraising boost to state House speaker Margaret Anderson Kelliher, who has lots of behind-the-scenes support in her DFL gubernatorial bid but a big name rec deficit against names like former Sen. Mark Dayton and Minneapolis mayor R.T. Rybak. She secured an EMILY's List endorsement, giving her a nationwide base to tap into.

SC-Gov: Mark Sanford may have dodged his final bullet, allowing him to serve out his last year in ignominious peace. A 7-member state House Judiciary subcommittee voted 6-1 against impeachment and instead unanimously for censure. The matter still goes before the full Judiciary committee, but they seem unlikely to reverse course.

Governors: PPP has one of their frequent good observations: of the nation's governors who have the worst approval ratings, most of them are ineligible or not planning to run for re-election in 2010 (Baldacci, Doyle, Perdue, Rendell, Schwarzenegger). The three who are running for re-election next year are all likely casualties in their own primaries (Brewer, Gibbons, and Paterson).

FL-12: Outgoing Rep. Adam Putnam, who's leaving his job to run for Florida's Ag Commissioner, has given his endorsement to former state Rep. Dennis Ross to replace him. It's something of a formality, with no other major GOPers in the race, but should help keep anyone else from last-minute gate-crasing.

IL-10: Lots of endorsements in the 10th. On the GOP side, state Rep. Beth Coulson got the endorsement of moderate ex-Gov. Jim Edgar, the state's only recent ex-Gov who's still on the right side of the law. For the Dems, Dan Seals got the endorsement of the powerful New Trier Township Democrats, while state Rep. Julie Hamos was endorsed by Citizen Action.

IL-14: Recent dropout Mark Vargas finally confirmed that he'll be pulling his name off the ballot, leaving only the two biggest names. This comes as a relief to the camp of state Sen. Randy Hultgren, who were worried that name of Vargas (who endorsed Ethan Hastert) would stay on the ballot to split the anti-Hastert vote.

LA-03: Wondering why no one prominent is leaping at the chance to fill the open seat left behind by Charlie Melancon? They know what we redistricting nerds at SSP already know... that seat is likely to vaporize in 2012, leaving any victory a short-lived booby prize. No elected officials of either party have thrown their hat in yet; attorney Ravi Sangisetty and oil field manager Kristian Magar are the only Dem and GOPer, respectively, who've gotten in.

MN-07: Long-time Rep. Collin Peterson says he won't decide until February on whether to run for re-election (although he has filed his paperwork to run). That may have a few hearts skipping a beat at the DCCC, where a Peterson retirement would leave another GOP-leaning rural seat to defend -- but Peterson says a late decision on sticking around is always standard operating procedure for him.

NY-19: An initially generic Roll Call profile of Nan Hayworth, the moderate, wealthy ophthalmologist who's the last GOPer left to go up against Rep. John Hall after more conservative and polarizing Assemblyman Greg Ball dropped out, has some interesting dirt buried deep in the article. They say that county-level party officials aren't necessarily behind her, that there are three other (unnamed) persons interested in running, and there's still a movement afoot in the district to get Ball back in the race.

PA-06: Manan Trivedi, the underdog gaining steam in the Dem primary in the 6th, got an endorsement from a key moderate in the Pennsylvania delegation: the 10th district's Chris Carney. Doug Pike got his own Congressional endorsement too, although from a little further afield: from Massachusetts's Niki Tsongas. There are also rumors of a third potential Dem entrant to complicate matters: Lower Merion Township Commissioner Brian Gordon (not to be confused with his commission-mate Scott Zelov, who's now considering a run on the GOP side).

TN-08: State Rep. Jimmy Naifeh confirmed that he won't run in a Democratic primary against state Sen. Roy Herron to take over retiring Rep. John Tanner's seat. Naifeh, the House speaker for 18 years, is a legendary figure in Tennessee politics and would have posed a big challenge to Herron. Meanwhile, in a sign of their optimism, the NRCC bumped their farmer/gospel singer candidate, Stephen Fincher, up a slot in their three-tiered "Young Guns" program, from "On the Radar" up to "Contender."

VA-02, VA-05: The two top contenders in the GOP primary in the 2nd have already had one big proxy fight, backing different candidates in the Dec. 5 primary for an open, dark-red state Senate seat in Virginia Beach. Auto dealer Scott Rigell apparently won the skirmish, backing Jeff McWaters, who defeated Virginia Beach city councilor Rosemary Wilson, who was backed by businessman Ben Loyola. Loyola is running to the right of Rigell (who contributed to Barack Obama last year). Meanwhile, in the 2nd and the 5th, the GOP is faced with the same decision that often bedevils them: pick a nominee by primary election, party canvass, or party convention? With state Sen. Rob Hurt a strong general election contender in the 5th but generating suspicions among the base (for voting for Mark Warner's tax hike), and with activist-dominated conventions often yielding unelectable candidates (see Gilmore, Jim), the decision can affect the GOP's general election chances in each one.

WA-01: Spunky Microserf rides to the rescue, against an entrenched, well-liked suburban Representative... on behalf of the GOP? That's what's up in the 1st, where never-before-elected Microsoft veteran James Watkins will go up against Democratic Rep. Jay Inslee, who's had little trouble holding down the Dem-leaning district.

NY-Comptroller: The New York Post (so keep the salt shaker handy) is reporting that ex-Gov. Eliot Spitzer is still interested in a return to politics, and is looking seriously at the Comptroller's race. It seemed up in the air as to whether he'd run in the Democratic primary against appointed incumbent Tom DiNapoli (also under reported primary threat from William Thompson) or as an independent.

GA-St. Sen.: A famous family name is looking to get back into Georgia politics. Jimmy Carter's grandson, 34-year-old attorney Jason Carter, is looking to run in the upcoming special election in the 42nd Senate district, a reliably Democratic area in western DeKalb County where current Senator David Adelman is resigning to become Ambassador to Singapore. Interestingly, Carter may run into trouble with the district's large Jewish population, where his grandfather's name has lost some of its luster because of his pronouncements on the Israel/Palestine saga.

Mayors: In what seems like an astonishingly fast recount, state Sen. Kasim Reed was confirmed as victor in the Atlanta mayoral race. He defeated city councilor Mary Norwood by 714 votes, losing a grand total of one vote from the original count. Norwood has now conceded.

House: Here's a concept from the 70s we don't hear much about anymore: the "misery index." But Republican pollster POS dusted off the idea, looking at 13 "change" midterm elections where the average Election Day misery index (unemployment plus inflation) was 10.1, and in which the average loss among the White House party was 26 seats. They point out that today's misery index is 10.02 (although, assuming unemployment declines over the next year, so too will the misery index).

Redistricting: Moves are afoot in two different states to make the redistricting process fairer. In Illinois, a statewide petition drive is underway to take redistricting out of hands of the legislature and give it to an independent commission. And in Florida, as we've discussed before, two initiatives are on their way to the ballot that would require districts to be compact and not take partisanship into account. The GOP-held legislature is challenging them, however, in the state Supreme Court; part of their argument is that this runs afoul of the U.S. Supreme Court's recent decision on "crossover" districts in Bartlett v. Strickland.

Crisitunity :: SSP Daily Digest: 12/10
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Can we please get Dodd to drop out???


Please drop the "please".
We really do not have time for pleasantries here.
Anybody, who thinks Dodd should be our candidate in 2010, badly needs an IQ test.

[ Parent ]
Please explain to us
How Dodd would be a stronger candidate than Blumenthal or the myriad of ther alternatives we could have in Connecticut.  Please, because I am legitimately curious as to how he is electorally our best chance to hold that seat.

[ Parent ]
Oh I wouldn't dare argue he'd be a stronger candidate at this point
but you'll never convince me that any of the alternatives would be better senators, and I'm prepared to fight like a demon for the man who's led the charge on everything from family and medical leave o FISA to healthcare reform to credit card regulations to (contrary to popular myth) reigning in AIG.  And besides, I'm not convinced that Dodd is as vulnerable as polls are suggesting.  Connecticut's a blue state that won't elect these clowns running agaist him, and the "scandals" afflicting Dodd have no substance.  Given a year, improvement in the economy, tieing his name to big things like credit card reform and healthcare, help from Obama, his opponent's inevitable self destruction (and you can't look at these goons and not see that coming), Dodd will pull this off, and I don't doubt any of that for a moment.

http://www.bluearkansasblog.com

[ Parent ]
I've said this before
But his poll numbers simply haven't approved over the past year even after passing credit card reform (which was supposed to give him a boost), so I don't buy for a second the "he has a year to improve" meme as he's such a known figure and has a low ceiling to improve.  And all of your analysis has a lot of "ifs."  IF the economy/political environment improves, IF Rob Simmons or Linda McMahon implodes, IF HCR passes in a way that's palatable to CT residents, IF CT voters forget about his scandals (you say they lack no substance, but there's a reason why the majority of voters in the state don't trust him) Dodd will win.  You assume these things will happen like a political Pollyanna, but there's no guarantee they will.

I don't care if the incumbent is Jesus Christ, no politician is "owed" support when they have delivered so many self-inflicted wounds.  He may have been a good legislator on some issues, but that won't mean dick if he's out of office in 2011 with a Republican in place.  It's also unfair to argue that the other alternatives in Connecticut won't be as good on the issues as Dodd.  Your defense reeks of the mentality that Republicans had in 2006/2008 when they continually supported bad incumbents.  We all know how that ended.


[ Parent ]
I see we're going to get nowhere with each other.
So you go ahead and do what you think is right.  I'll still be behind Dodd.

http://www.bluearkansasblog.com

[ Parent ]
If Biden's sticking with Dodd
doesn't that suggest the Bunning analogy is incorrect?

http://www.bluearkansasblog.com

[ Parent ]
Maybe, but it does point to Corzine. . .


[ Parent ]
and shows what we've always known about Democratcs
We dont play politics nearly as hard as the Republicans do.  There are plenty of negatives and positives to go around for either side about playing politics this hard but the GOP aren't afraid to toss a weak incumbent on their ass like Bunning while the Democrats will stand by Dodd until that fateful November day where he loses like Corzine loss.

I went to a speaking engagement where Donna Brazile said we listen entirely too much to polls and need to break free of that.  Wrong, polls are our opportunity to see what the American populace is thinking, which varies widely depending on the wording.  But the polls out on Dodd give us one giant message, Dodd has totally screwed up his credibility with the Connecticut people and needs to be ousted.  Bluementhal, Murphy, and Himes would all make FANTASTIC Senators and vote just as liberally as Dodd would.  


[ Parent ]
Yep, Dems always stick with their incumbents
Just like they stuck with Rob Torricelli.
Atleast we have the decency to drop our incumbents legally.  

[ Parent ]
Oh come on
The NJ Supreme Court unanimously upheld Lautenberg being allowed to replace Torricelli.  You still had a chance to win that seat in the election and lost by a big margin.  Stop crying over the fact that you didn't get it handed to you without winning a real election.

[ Parent ]
Let's be fair
According to a plain reading of New Jersey law, that replacement should have been ruled illegal, as I remember.

"I'm not a member of any organized political party, I'm a Democrat!"
--  Will Rogers  


[ Parent ]
It's hard to argue with a unanimous decision
The court didn't base its decision on the statute alone.  

[ Parent ]
So you know better than ALL seven justices of the NJ court?
And I believe both parties have members on the court.  You must have one heck of a legal degree.

[ Parent ]
As Pan mentioned
Just reading NJ Law, it should have been illegal unless he resigned I believe.  

[ Parent ]
So all seven justices got it wrong?


[ Parent ]
I have no legal degree
It just looked like that law had plain-language deadlines in easy-to-read numbers. I'm not saying the unanimous court was wrong, but I am saying that it's very easy to grasp why people just reading the law in plain language thought the decision contradicted the law.

"I'm not a member of any organized political party, I'm a Democrat!"
--  Will Rogers  


[ Parent ]
Chris Carney = PA-10, not PA-11
n/t

Male, 23, DC-At Large

The NY-19 article is kind of slanted.
As someone pointed out on the CQ post itself, the article has one source for the gossip about Hayworth...namely, the Rockland County GOP chairman, who was himself a Ball supporter.  Instead of "they," then, perhaps, you might attribute the dirt to its (one) source.

Virginia State Senate
The fight for Ken Stolle's seat was nasty. There was a lot of negative campaigning on both sides. I almost voted for Wilson in the Republican primary because I thought McWaters was the more odious of the two (he was one of the founders of an anti-gay, misogynist church that split off from a local Episcopalian church, and some of the stuff that Amerigroup has done to its employees is pretty disgusting), but I didn't really feel motivated to vote for a Republican.

What a sad commentary!
ex-Gov. Jim Edgar, the state's only recent ex-Gov who's still on the right side of the law


"I'm not a member of any organized political party, I'm a Democrat!"
--  Will Rogers  


Yep, that's Illinois.
Along with Louisiana, probably the most corrupt state outside of the Northeast.

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 ]
Florida is surprising
For a state that is consistently has large numbers or bizarre and weird stories we really don't have all that many corruption stories.  Although between the mid 1970's and 1990's almost every Mayor of Miami was convicted or some sort of serious crime, namely accepting bribes.

[ Parent ]
Mark Foley, Tom Feeney, Vern Buchanan
You wanna revisit that ;-).  Although, to be fair, most of my understanding of Florida politics comes from the book Strip Tease.

[ Parent ]
You think the Northeast is worse?
n/t

"I'm not a member of any organized political party, I'm a Democrat!"
--  Will Rogers  


[ Parent ]
I don't buy it for a second
The southeastern states are far more corrupt than the northeast from my experience.  Even the really great southern politicians who looked out for the poor (Huey Long, etc.) were very corrupt.

[ Parent ]
I thought Tammeny Hall was cleaned up
over 100 years ago.

[ Parent ]
I think it's more widespread there
In the Northeast, you kind of have a "corruption belt" running from Philly up to Boston (maybe it starts at DC, especially given the antics of Marion Barry...), whereas the Chicago area (including NW Indiana) is more of an island of corruption. I don't know, if there's some broader Midwest tradition of corruption, please enlighten me.

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 ]
It's more of an urban thing
than anything else.  Think about it, the large concentrations of people in such small areas creates a very large demand for government and municipal services (hence why cities have historically been Democratic).  That type of demand means that those who control said services have the most power, which gives rise to machine politics.  It's a big reason why the Irish were able to gain power in the cities so effectively - they understood this concept better than any other groups at the time.  Thus, major cities like Chicago have problems, and states with heavily urban populations like New Jersey also have problems.

[ Parent ]
Eh
I suppose, but the corruption extends to Connecticut (which doesn't really have any big cities) and Rhode Island as well. While Providence is certainly considered a city, it's not quite on the scale of other large Northeast cities like Boston or DC. Then again, that explanation would appear to account for why Northern New England is nowhere near as bad as Southern New England.

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 ]
Well I think it's more based off of big cities
Detroit has some corruption, but Detroit and Chicago are by far the biggest cities in the Midwest.

Also, WI, MN, and IA are "good government" states and have long histories of being politically active and aware, so corruption and machine politics just wouldn't really ever fly.

Id guess it is a big city aspect only, particularly in states like IL and MI where the big city population can cancel out the rest of the state's vote in statewide elections.


[ Parent ]
MN used to have problems
Minneapolis was pretty corrupt until Hubert H. Humphrey cleaned it up.

[ Parent ]
Alaska and North Dakota were ranked as the most corrupt states
Illinois was ranked 18th  

Weird
I'd always assumed some of the larger states had the most widespread corruption.  Doesn't North Dakota have an unusually high number of state owned companies like banks, mills, etc?  That could account for some of their corruption.

[ Parent ]
It also has to do with how competitive local politics are
and how much the local press is on them.  In Alaska, for example, not a single newspaper has a bureau in Juneau.  Same goes for Delaware, which is also typically rated as corrupt.  The Dakotas seem to be like Alaska in which good-old-boy politics still rules, which allows corruption to fester.

[ Parent ]
Bunning Dodd comparison
Bunning seems to be getting his licks in on Bernanke while the best Dodd can offer is ta da new regulations.   Even so I think it likely that Dodd will be the Democrat nominee.  

I look forward to more coverage of the US Senate race in Connecticut, especially the Republican primary.

I favor Peter Schiff.  Will just another Republican win that primary or will a man who understands that government spending needs to be reigned in and the perverse incentives created by government abolished?

http://www.google.com/search?q...


If this Peter Schiff dude
criticized the big government spending by the previous administration, then he might have some credibility.

And by the way, "Democrat nominee" does not make sense. "Democratic" nominee does.

My blog
Twitter
Scribd
28, New Democrat, Female, TX-03 (hometown CA-26)


[ Parent ]
Just do what I do
And refer to them as the Republic Party.

[ Parent ]
I intend to.
I just wanted to make sure that the error was accidental and not deliberate. If it continues, then I will return the favor with removing "an" and maybe the "l".

My blog
Twitter
Scribd
28, New Democrat, Female, TX-03 (hometown CA-26)


[ Parent ]
I haven't found (or looked for) the current style guide for using the
terms Democrat and Democratic.

Presume I am willingly ignorant rather than malintentioned.

BTW, Peter Schiff criticized excessive government spending prior to election day 2008.

http://www.google.com/search?q...


[ Parent ]
Okay. Thanks. (n/t)


My blog
Twitter
Scribd
28, New Democrat, Female, TX-03 (hometown CA-26)


[ Parent ]
Democrat is a noun
Democratic is an adjective.

As in:

"The Democrats control Congress and are led by the Democratic Leadership."

Got it?  

"I'm not a member of any organized political party, I'm a Democrat!"
--  Will Rogers  


[ Parent ]
No worries
It's a sore subject amongst many Democrats though because many elected Republicans use "Democrat" as the adjective because they don't think the party is democratic in nature.  It's an intended slight and an annoying one at that.

[ Parent ]
Finally I get it explained to me
Ive only ever gotten that it was a slight at us but Ive never gotten the whole thing.

[ Parent ]
My favorite example
There were two Bush campaign appearances in 2004 in I think Ohio. One in a swingy area and the other in a Republican stronghold. The transcript of the two speeches were identical except for how he referred to Democrats. You can guess which was which. Of course he feigned ignorance (not a difficult task for him of course!) when asked later saying he mispoke.  

[ Parent ]
Misery index/Winning GOP formula?
Haven't been on in awhile but I find the misery index mining disturbing in the sense that it could be an tactically winning GOP formula.  As a left-leaning independent who earns many frequent flyer miles travelling to the south I see a lot more "tea-bagger" anger than most of my NYC liberal friends.  IF and its a big IF the GOP gets its act together and campaigns in areas that are no part of the Wall Street economy I think they could make big gains come next year.  Do we have a breakdown of the districts they are talking about?  

I don't think there is any doubt
They will make gains in the south. The rest of the country not so much.

[ Parent ]
Im not sure about that
I really am not sure that the Main Street economy is rising at all. If this recovery is Reaganesque - east coast/west coast but rust belt depressed the pugs could wind up with major across-the-board gains just by default.

[ Parent ]
Not yet
But there is a long time until November and there are already postive signs. I'm optimistic.

[ Parent ]
Jason Carter sounds pretty impressive
Jason Carter, whose pro bono work has included a legal challenge to the Republican-backed law requiring voters to supply photo ID.

(From this source)

Carter also serves on the board of the DeKalb Women's Resource Center, Georgia Afterschool Investment Council and Georgia Appleseed.

Carter also co-founded the Red Clay Democrats, an Atlanta-based group of young professionals, and Democrats Work, a national organization that engages Democrats in community service projects.

Come to think of it, I remember one of the Carter clan endorsing Howard Dean.  I think it was a grandson.  I wonder if it was Jason?

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


Who are his parents?
n/t

"I'm not a member of any organized political party, I'm a Democrat!"
--  Will Rogers  


[ Parent ]
Looks like his dad is Jack Carter.
The guy who ran against John Ensign in Nevada in 2006.

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

[ Parent ]
Yeah, Jack is Jason's farther
http://news.aol.com/article/ja...

See the last sentence.

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


[ Parent ]

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