Google Ads


Site Stats

NH-Sen: Ayotte Leads General, Primary

by: Crisitunity

Wed Apr 21, 2010 at 1:35 PM EDT


Public Policy Polling (4/17-18, New Hampshire voters, no trendlines) (primary numbers):

Paul Hodes (D): 40
Kelly Ayotte (R): 47
Undecided: 13

Paul Hodes (D): 41
Bill Binnie (R): 46
Undecided: 13

Paul Hodes (D): 43
Jim Bender (R): 40
Undecided: 18

Paul Hodes (D): 43
Ovide Lamontagne (R): 38
Undecided: 19
(MoE: ±2.6%)

Kelly Ayotte (R): 43
Bill Binnie (R): 19
Jim Bender (R): 11
Ovide Lamontagne (R): 5
Tom Alciere (R): 1
Undecided: 21
(MoE: ±3.9%)

This is PPP's first poll of New Hampshire since Judd Gregg retired; they find what most non-Rasmussen pollsters have been finding for the last half a year, which is a high-single-digits lead for ex-AG Kelly Ayotte over Democratic Rep. Paul Hodes. PPP thinks that Barack Obama may be dragging the Dems down in this race, but Obama's approval in New Hampshire is a tolerable 47/48, pretty consistent with national averages and with New Hampshire's position near the nation's midpoint. Instead, some of the problem seems to be with Hodes himself, who's in deeper negative territory, with 32/39 favorables. (The law-and-order, no-controversial-positions Ayotte fares beter at 34/24.)

They also take a rare look at the state of the GOP primary. R2K had a look at the primary from February, finding a much closer race between Ayotte and conservative insurgent Ovide Lamontagne, which Ayotte was winning 36-27. However, that's gotten scrambled by the two random rich guys in the race, Bill Binnie and Jim Bender, spending money to introduce themselves, while Lamontagne has continued to languish in obscurity. Lamontagne seems to have been a receptacle for all anti-Ayotte votes, and they're migrating elsewhere thanks to money (despite the fact that Binnie is pretty moderate and seems to be running to Ayotte's left); as far as teabagger challenges go, Lamontagne seems to be headed in the Chuck DeVore/Patrick Hughes direction rather than that of Marco Rubio or Rand Paul.

Crisitunity :: NH-Sen: Ayotte Leads General, Primary
Tags: , , , , , , , , (All Tags)
Print Friendly View Send As Email

I don't think its Obama per se
But the general tilt of independents nationally away from all Democrats. And in New Hampshire in particular that is lethal. Their favorables are quite similar really.

Ah I misread Hodes
The other point stands.

[ Parent ]
I'm not worried
Paul Hodes hasn't started campaigning yet.
I don't think this is how a Republican gets elected in a blue state.
Her issues page is just a bunch of vapid Republican talking points, without a single original thought. She expects us to be against Hodes because, oh no, he spent 4 years working in Washington.
Unless she has a lot of good will from being the attorney general, I can't imagine her winning.

26, male, Dem, NJ-12

I agree that Hodes can win this
The thing with Ayotte is while she can peel off 10% of Dems and probably win a majority of Indies, GOP turn-out might be dampened with a RINO on the ticket. If I were hard-pressed to predict one of the two, I'd probably still bank on Ayotte, but I totally think Hodes can take this.

Oh, and Ayotte's surely winning the GOP nod. She oughta do as well as Coakley did in the MA-Sen Dem primary.

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


[ Parent ]
Hopefully the Coakley analogy
Sticks for the general. It might since this lead is far from insurmountable. I think it'll need an improving environment though.

[ Parent ]
Coakley analogy
The attorney general who's the party's nominee by default and has never run a competitive statewide campaign before. And her issues page and press releases are boiler plate party talking points, no original ideas.

26, male, Dem, NJ-12

[ Parent ]
that analogy does not hold
Coakley started off 20 points ahead. Ayotte knows she will have to work to stay in first place.

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 ]
Two thoughts...
1. How is Ayotte a RINO? Her website's issues section seems to define her as a mainstream Republican, along the lines of Judd Gregg or John Sununu. Sure, she's not in with the Tea Party or Red Staters but she doesn't strike me as the Olympia Snowe or even the Susan Collins of New Hampshire.

2. I think that people may be over-reaching a bit by calling New Hampshire a blue state. I know that it's gone slightly more Democratic than the country as a whole the last few elections, but most New Hampshirites I know still consider theirs a swing state unbeholden to either party. Democrats certainly have momentum here given recent elections, but if there is one state that may shift dramatically rightward this year, my guess is it's NH.

20, CD MA-03/NH-01/MA-08


[ Parent ]
I agree
thanks to the large numbers of independent voters. IIRC they make up a greater share of the electorate than Dems and Reps combined.

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


[ Parent ]
RINO has become a relative term
Personally, I think both parties abuse the RINO/DINO stereotype.  I don't consider Ayotte, Collins, or Snowe as RINOs basically because they are fair representatives of the Republican party in their states.  The same would apply with guys like Scott Brown.  If these people were in, say, Texas or Alabama, then yes, I would label them as a RINO.  But they are not, so I don't see how the RINO tag would apply.

If New Hampshire is anything, it's not a blue or red state.  New Hampshire is its own color of state, not even purple.  I think NH politics may be as complicated as any of the US states.  If anything, NH votes for the candidate and not the party.  Republicans won't support a weak Republican candidate, and the Democrats won't support a weak Democratic candidate.

That being said, I have no idea how the NH Senate race will play out.  Once we get more information on how Ayotte's campaigning abilities are, we will not know for sure.  Hodes comes off a bit bland to me, so maybe Ayotte will have the upper hand.

40, male, Democrat, NC-04


[ Parent ]
I don't think she's as much a RINO...
as she is an empty suit. Which is why I'm not ultra-worried for Hodes yet.

[ Parent ]
True
I expected Obama to win with a bigger majority than he did there. At the end of the day I really think New Hampshire is definitely a swing state and will be one for some time to come.  

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

[ Parent ]
Have I misread
Or did you think Obama would win NH by double digits? Kerry barely won it and McCain had a history there. The margin didn't surprise me at all. Same ballpark swing as Minnesota, Iowa and Pennsylvania.

[ Parent ]
Well
I was hoping for a better result than what we got, but my expectances were obviously not realistic.  

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

[ Parent ]
Sure she can win doing that
Running a bland, generic "good things are good" campaign in a favorable year for your party is an easy way to win. She pretends to be a pleasant, inoffensive, moderate Republican, sails into office, then votes however she really wants.

Also, if Hodes hasn't started campaigning yet, he might want to get on that. There are six months left, and he's down by 7 points. Not a great way to kick things off.


[ Parent ]
I think this is like a tossup/tilt GOP race currently
Hodes doesn't exactly set the world on fire, he won with only 56% of the vote in a bluish district in 2008 despite outspending his complete wackjob of an opponent 3 to 1.
It is also an awful cycle for Democrats and open seats are the first to go to the opposition party during wave elections. Combine that with the fact that he has yet to lead in a single poll this cycle and I say this race is not looking great for the Dems.
The one opening I could see against Ayotte is if she turns out to be a really crappy campaigner. This could happen, but I don't think the issues page on her website provides any real clues. Most candidates have generic party ideas and talking points on their campaign pages. When was the last time you read an through an issues page and were totally blown away? For me it has been never in a positive away, I have come away from a site and been like wow this person is totally out of touch. Example: http://allenwestforcongress.co... West is running for a district around Miami-Dade and is talking about being pro-2nd amendment, pro-life, and against illegal immigration. For me that is a red flag of a candidate not playing to his constituencies strengths. Anyway I think Ayotte's issue page is fine, we will see if she is the next Coakley or not once the campaign begins to heat up.  

[ Parent ]
Who the hell knows at this point
Hodes hasn't really started his campaign yet, so the fact that he's down by single digits doesn't really surprise me.  Ayotte probably has the advantage in the fact that she had recently served as the AG of NH and is not currently a member of Congress.

Contrary to opinions held by others, I think Obama helps Hodes out more than he will hinder him.  NH is probably the most conservative New England state, but based on the past 5 years, being a NH Democrat supporting a Democratic President shouldn't be a barrier for Hodes.  If Hodes tried to distance himself from Obama, he would probably upset his base which in turn wouldn't show up at the polls.


40, male, Democrat, NC-04


It's just a tossup race
fast forward five months, see what the climate is, and who runs a decent campaign, and guess who will win by four points in the end.

[ Parent ]
Will there be ticket splitters in NH-1
Is there reason to believe there will be a sizable number of ticket splitters in NH-1? (Votes for both Shea-Porter and Ayotte). If not, then if Shea-Porter gets reelected then Hodes also wins NH-1. If Hodes wins NH-1 then he should certainly win statewide.

26, male, Dem, NJ-12

Maybe for Hodes and Shea-Porter's opponent
Shea-Porter actually ran 2 points behind Obama in 2008, while Hodes and Obama ran even next door in NH-2. So some Obama voters actually went for CSP's opponent last time.  

20, CD MA-03/NH-01/MA-08

[ Parent ]
Unless the Rep primary gets really nasty
I bet Shea Porter loses in November regardless of the outcome of the Senate race. She was a fluke when she got in and it took another wave election and going against a retread just to keep her in office.

[ Parent ]
A few months ago
I would've said Shea-Porter is safer than the open NH-02 seat. Today, I'd say that's reversed. Her fundraising is terrible, despite her pro-HCR vote. Also, she can't count on a big Lynch win to provide coattails this time. Her only chance is a very bloody Republican primary.

[ Parent ]

Copyright 2003-2010 Swing State Project LLC

Primary Sponsor

You're not running for second place. Is your website? See why Campaign Engine is ranked #1 in software and support among Progressive-only Internet firms. http://www.mediamezcla.com/

Menu

Make a New Account

Username:

Password:



Forget your username or password?


About the Site

SSP Resources

Blogroll

Powered by: SoapBlox