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SSP Daily Digest: 3/23 (Afternoon Edition)

by: Crisitunity

Tue Mar 23, 2010 at 3:07 PM EDT


NC-Sen: The newest Elon University poll of North Carolina finds that, as with most pollsters, that Richard Burr is strangely anonymous for a Senator: he has a favorable of 34/17. His best-known Democratic competitor, SoS Elaine Marshall, is at 18/8. The poll doesn't contain head-to-heads, and also, bear in mind that it only polls "residents," not even registered voters, which would explain the super-low awareness.

TX-Sen: 20 of Texas's Republican House members wrote a letter to Kay Bailey Hutchison, asking her to reconsider and stay on as Senator. (Recall that she planned to resign once she was done "fighting health care.") I wonder if the letter was signed by Joe Barton, who was pretty public about his desire to take over that seat back when a resignation seemed likelier.

UT-Sen: Tonight's the night we get our first hard impression of what degree of trouble Bob Bennett is in. Tonight are neighborhood caucuses, where delegates to the state convention are elected. A particularly ultra-conservative-skewing convention could pose some trouble to Bennett, although with so many GOP challengers, it seems likely no one will hit the 60% mark at the convention needed to avoid a primary.

CT-Gov: You might recognize these numbers from last week; we've been waiting for Quinnipiac to release general election numbers in the Governor's race but they just don't seem to be forthcoming, so here are their primary numbers. On the Dem side, Ned Lamont is leading at 28, followed by former Stamford mayor Dan Malloy at 18, Mary Glassman at 4, Rudy Marconi at 2, and Juan Figueroa at 1. (Susan Bysiewicz has a big edge over George Jepsen, 54-10, in the AG primary, despite concerns about her eligibility for the job.) On the GOP side, Tom Foley is dominating at 30, followed by Lt. Gov Michael Fedele collapsing down to 4, Danbury mayor Mark Boughton at 4, ex-Rep. Larry DeNardis at 2, and Oz Griebel and Jeff Wright at 2.

CA-Gov: Wondering how Meg Whitman pulled into a huge lead in the primary and a small lead in the general in California governor's race? She's spent a mind-boggling $27 million on her race so far this year (for a total of $46 million), compared with Steve Poizner's $3 million and Jerry Brown's $142K.

OR-Gov: Former Portland Trail Blazer Chris Dudley is the first candidate to hit the TV airwaves in the Oregon governor's race so far, touting his "outsider" credentials.

PA-Gov: AG Tom Corbett, who oh just coincidentally happens to be running for Governor this year, finally got a conviction in the Bonusgate investigation, against former state Rep. Mike Veon and several of his staffers. The timing is certainly helpful to Corbett, for whom the investigation has been dragging out and the possibility of mistrials (or no convictions before November) was starting to loom. Trials against several other former Democratic House leaders, including GOPer John Perzel and Dem Bill DeWeese, are still in the pipeline.

WY-Gov: The Democrats are about to land a gubernatorial candidate: attorney Paul Hickey, who plans an announcement later this week. If the name is familiar, he's the son of former Governor J.J. Hickey. Democratic State Sen. Mike Massie hasn't ruled out a run yet either, although he may run for one of the statewide offices.

IL-11: Here's one more district that hasn't been high on people's watch lists but will need to be monitored, at least if a new internal poll from Republican pollster POS is to be believed. They find their patron, Adam Kinzinger, leading freshman Rep. Debbie Halvorson 44-38.

MA-09: With primary challenges moving onto the radar against HCR "no" votes Jason Altmire and Mike Arcuri, another one may be taking shape: Needham Town Meeting member (and, well, college classmate of mine) Harmony Wu has pulled papers for the race and is gauging local sentiment for a primary run against Stephen Lynch.

NY-01: Whoever faces off against Tim Bishop for the Republicans is going to have to fight through an arduous primary to get there. Any hopes of an easy coronation for Randy Altschuler seem to have vaporized, as now Chris Cox (Republican party insider and Nixon grandson) is setting his own Wall Street-powered fundraising operation in motion. And a 3rd option, former SEC prosecutor George Demos, has had his own fundraising success.

NY-20: One more Republican, Queensbury town supervisor Dan Stec, bailed out of the field today, suggesting that the GOP is finally coalescing behind retired Col. Chris Gibson as a standard-bearer against freshman Dem Rep. Scott Murphy, in what's one of their slowest races to take shape.

OK-05: Finally, we have a Democrat on tap for the open seat race in Oklahoma's dark-red 5th, where there's already a half-dozen GOPers jousting. Tom Guild is secretary of the Oklahoma County Democratic Party, and was a poli sci professor at Univ. of Central Oklahoma for many years.

PA-11: Things got easier for Lou Barletta in the race in the 11th, where his Republican primary challenger, Chris Paige dropped out, citing family concerns. Paige, an attorney, was underfunded but had delivered some surprisingly-hard hits to Barletta, especially on Barletta's signature issue of immigration.

SC-01: The Club for Growth weighed into another GOP primary in a reddish open seat, endorsing state Rep. Tim Scott. Scott faces off in the primary against several well-known last names: Carroll Campbell III and Paul Thurmond.

HCR: The Republican pivot from health care reform to health care repeal has some implications in the gubernatorial races. Rep. Peter Hoekstra is going full-on repeal, stopping by Sunday's teabagger rally to pledge to fight that battle. It's also showing up in a number of races where the Republican AG is running for Governor and joined the multi-AG suit against HCR on easily-rebuttable 10th Amendment grounds (hint to teabaggers: read Scalia's opinion in Raich) - many in dark-red states where it probably helps more than hurts (like Henry McMaster in South Carolina). There are a few blue state AGs involved, though, like Tom Corbett (although he probably feels like he has a safety cushion to do so, thanks to his Bonusgate-related popularity). Most puzzling, though, is Washington's Rob McKenna, who got where he is only by acting moderate. Throwing off his well-maintained moderate mask and joining forces with the wackjob likes of Ken Cuccinelli seems like a weird gamble for his widely-expected 2012 run, where success is utterly dependent on making inroads among suburban moderates.

Crisitunity :: SSP Daily Digest: 3/23 (Afternoon Edition)
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By my math
20 Republican congressmen from Texas is all of them, including Barton.

34, WM, Democrat, FL-11

Heath Shuler
 Democtatic Congressman Heath Shuler, someone who voted against HCR was able to verify the disgusting behavior that the Tea Party crowd used against Emanuel Cleaver and John Lewis.  All I'd heard about this so far was either Republicans denying it happened or else playing it off as nothing.

http://www.blueridgenow.com/ar...


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

23, Democrat, IA-2


and barney frank
n/t

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 ]
Correct, my apologies


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

23, Democrat, IA-2


[ Parent ]
That was fast...
Americans Now Favor Health Care Plan
How quickly things turn: A new USA Today/Gallup poll finds that Americans have a favorable view of the health care overhaul that President Obama signed into law, 49% to 40%, a notable turnaround from surveys before the vote that showed a plurality against it.

It's just more proof Americans like to be on the winning side.

I wonder what the breakdown in PA and Washington is...  I'd bet it is very high seeing as the blue states would hav e to be high to counteract the deep south that is still probably all riled up.


It'll be the liberals
Who opposed it before it went through. See the CNN poll.

[ Parent ]
Exactly
12% to 15% of the opposition was always from the left.  Something the MSM did a horrible job reporting.  Those people were all likely to want something over the status quo it is just that they wanted more than was on offer during the debate.  Now that it is clear that this is all we can get for right now they are on board.

The upside to this win is, I think, quite big for team Blue.  The damage was all already done but this gives us a chance to motivate liberals and to recapture independants by getting something done.  It also helps if the Republicans continue to act out - whipping up tea party crowds, calling Stupak a "Baby Killer" etc - as that kind of behaviour plays well to the base but tends to turn of (real) independants who value competence over ideology.


[ Parent ]
Well, even before
Those opposed comprised of those who didn't like the bill because it was too much government power and it was those who didn't think the bill went far enough.  I think now that the fight is over, those who don't think the bill went far enough will largely fall into the approval column for this bill.  

There's also going to be an educational campaign so people know what was in the bill.  It's going to be very hard for Republicans to campaign on repeal, a strategy I would expect to backfire, before too long I expect them to go back to talking about jobs and tax cuts.  


[ Parent ]
Let us hope they dont' figure that out
Hopefully we will have more positive movement on the jobs front instead of less bad movement.  Then the dems can say see, we can walk and chew gum at the same time.  I think Obama is also an ex factor.  He's the spokesperson for the DEMS and Limbaugh, Steele, Bachman, Palin, Boehner, McConnell et al. are for the GOP.  For the msot part I'll take a hopeful tone over the scary anger that the GOP is serving up.  In 2009 and MA 2010 voters only focussed on the individuals but as the general gets closer I think national trends will be more prevailent and thus this tone advantage should play out.

[ Parent ]
Americans love winners
what's the band wagoner percentage for these things?

[ Parent ]
I won't be surprised if Rob McKenna isn't hurt by joining the suit
Bob McDonnell proved that Republicans only need to act moderate, not actually be moderate.

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/


It's really interesting that all 20 GOPers
are standing behind KBH. Not that this decision will have any electoral consequences, but one would think that this would be kind of awkward after Perry handed her a big defeat. I guess insiders look after their own...


NY-14, DC-AL (college) Distraught Mets fan

Well it won't have an effect as far as the senate but...
If she waits to retire til November then there'd be a special so noone would have to give up their seat to run.  Whereas if she does it now it could have an effect down ballot.  That is my thinking though I don't know that for sure.  But with the house so close and a competative governmor's race you don't want a bunch of open seats to have to deffend.

[ Parent ]
BTW, Michael Arcuri
keeps the hits rolling:

http://www.newschannel34.com/c...

He slams the HCR, while calling his NO vote "common sense." As a New York resident, I want Albany to dismantle his terribly-gerrymandered district into oblivion. Truly a dumb vote, compounded by Boren douchiness.

NY-14, DC-AL (college) Distraught Mets fan


John Perzel...
... was the former Republican speaker of the PA State House.

Male, 23, DC-At Large

Oooh, thanks
That's an important detail.

[ Parent ]
UT-Sen
I don't think the size of the field matters. IIRC if nobody gets 60% the candidate with the lowest vote total is eliminated and the rest of the field proceeds to another round of voting. The only way they go to a primary is if they get down to 2 candidates and neither gets 60% on the final round of voting.  

"Where free Unions and collective bargaining is forbidden, freedom is lost." - Ronald Reagan

And away we go!
Cant wait til Im back to projecting +3-to-4 in the Senate!  (Ok, Im not the delusional)

[ Parent ]
Surprise Surprise...
"Baby Killer" Neugebauer is trying to fund raise off his despicable behavior.  http://www.politico.com/news/s...

And Sarah Palin, trying to exert her influence as diva of the party has her own target list... All the more reason to show our party faithful some love.  
http://www.politico.com/news/s...


"I have in my hand the names..."
Never mind.

[ Parent ]
NY-13: Steve Harrison pondering challenge to Mike McMahon.
Not the strongest candidate given his anemic fundraising in both 2006 and 2008.  But not surprising given he wrote a letter to the editor last week begging McMahon to vote for health care reform.

http://www.silive.com/news/ind...

Editorial calling out labor unions for daring to challenge McMahon on his vote.

http://www.silive.com/opinion/...

NY-13, Democrat. Blog @ http://infinitefunction.wordpr...


Harrison will NOT defeat McMahon
Left needs someone substantially stronger. But, with rather serious Republican candidates this year (and worse political climate in general) that would increase chances of Republicans in this far-from-liberal district. I would concentrate on more "safe" districts, like Lynch's

[ Parent ]
Harrison could get WFP line
The problem for McMahon is Harrison could get the Working Family Party line. So he McMahon would have to deal with a 3 way race. It's not a problem is McMahon GOP opponent gets under 40% of the vote again. But if Grimm can make it a close race Harrison drawing votes on the left could be a problem for him.

Fight global warming & help disaster relief efforts by raising money for Music for Relief when you search the web! Click here for more info:
http://searchmfr.swagbucks.com...


[ Parent ]
Except if the conservatives nominate someone
it would then be a four-way race, and I think with a GOP/Conversative split, McMahon, as the incumbant and with the Staten Island borough president's support, will win, even if Harrison is on the WFP ling.

[ Parent ]
Not likely
Conservative Party of NY will most likely go with either Grimm (the GOP front runner) or cross endorse McMahon.

I believe McMahon got the Conservative Party line in previous City Council elections and he is quite close to SI Boro President & SI Conservative Party Chairman Molinaro (who already said he was backing McMahon).

BTW, only in NY would the Conservative Party be talking about endorsing a Democrat for re-election to congress, the Republicans endorsing a Democrat for Gov and the Democrats electing a turncoat like Pedro Espanda their Majority Leader in the State Senate.


Fight global warming & help disaster relief efforts by raising money for Music for Relief when you search the web! Click here for more info:
http://searchmfr.swagbucks.com...


[ Parent ]
They may need, but doesn't mean they have.
As I said before I thought Harrison was about the best they could get.  There are a few other names I could think of but I don't think this is the race they'd take a risk on and lose institutional support for a future race.

Harrison's main problems were organization and money.  IF the WFP can help guide his campaign like they did other candidates and help somewhat balance out the money disparity with their special kind of help he'll be on better footing.  Of course their "special kind of help" via Data & Field Services while quite successful in 2009 has been under much press as well as legal scrutiny.  Debbie Rose (who defeated McMahon protege Kenny Mitchell for his old city council seat) is still being distracted by controvery and accepting this help could bomerang if not in the primary than in the general election against someone who accepts it.

http://www.cityhallnews.com/ne...

However if some of the unions who came out against Harrison in 2006 do come out on his side he will - at least in terms of an ultra-low turnout primary - have a much different campaign than he did 2008.

That said this is just Harrison feeling things out.  The WFP may want nothing to do with him.  But any challenge could be messy.  Not just because you may have the loser in a primary still taking votes off from McMahon on the WFP ballot.  But also if McMahon goes down the probably weaker victor may also have McMahon still running on the Independence Party banner.

NY-13, Democrat. Blog @ http://infinitefunction.wordpr...


[ Parent ]

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