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SSP Daily Digest: 4/23

by: Crisitunity

Fri Apr 23, 2010 at 2:51 PM EDT


CA-Sen, CA-Gov: SurveyUSA (4/19-21, likely voters):

Tom Campbell (R): 34
Carly Fiorina (R): 27
Chuck DeVore (R): 14
Tim Kalemkarian (R): 3
Undecided: 23
(MoE: ±4.3%)

Meg Whitman (R): 49
Steve Poizner (R): 27
Others (R): 9
Undecided: 15
(MoE: ±4.3%)

Jerry Brown (D): 63
Richard Aguirre (D): 6
Lowell Darling (D): 6
Peter Schurman (D): 1
Others (D): 6
Undecided (D): 18
(MoE: ±3.6%)

It's nice to see SurveyUSA getting into the game in California (although this poll is primaries only); they find, as did Capital Weekly yesterday, that Meg Whitman's big lead over Steve Poizner is dissipating. However, with only a few weeks left until early voting begins (on May 10), it seems unlikely Poizner will be able to catch up all the way. Unlike Capital Weekly, though, they find, like most pollsters, that Tom Campbell's lead over Carly Fiorina in the Senate primary is down in the single-digits. And apparently Jerry Brown has some primary opposition. Who knew? Peter Schurman is one of the founders of MoveOn.org, who launched a last-minute candidacy, but his lack of name recognition seems to relegate him behind some other no-names who at least have more interesting-sounding names (Lowell Darling?).

FL-Sen: Awwwwwk-ward. George LeMieux is Charlie Crist's former chief of staff and his hand-installed seat-warmer in the Senate seat that Crist assumed was his for the taking. But now, LeMieux is weighing whether he'll have to say that he'll endorse Marco Rubio for the seat if Crist pulls the trigger on his anticipated independent bid. LeMieux is reportedly interested in a 2012 Senate bid against Bill Nelson, and unless he too plans to take the indie route, can't afford to anger the GOP rabble. PPP's Tom Jensen takes a look at LeMieux and finds that, with his 13/33 approval (including 15/29 among Republicans), he isn't likely to be a viable 2012 candidate regardless of how he plays his cards next week.

KY-Sen: It looks like the story about Dan Mongiardo's housing stipend may have some legs to it. It was revealed a few weeks ago that Mongiardo was living with his in-laws in Frankfort but still accepting the housing stipend that comes with his job, but now the news is that he used his $30K/yr. housing allowance to buy a Frankfort-area farm where he didn't live but that, in 2003, he looked into trying to develop as a subdivision. There's also a last-minute hit on the Republican side of the race, as Trey Grayson filed complaints with a variety of agencies alleging that Rand Paul hasn't been paying the proper withholding taxes on some of his campaign staff. (They're listed as "independent contractors," which means there's no withholding, but it's doubtful they meet the legal criteria for being independent contractors.)

LA-Sen: Local Democrats are asking for federal investigation into allegations that David Vitter threatened to pull federal funds to the (private) University of New Orleans if it allowed Charlie Melancon to speak at a Democratic committee meeting scheduled on campus on April 10. The meeting was subsequently canceled.

NV-Sen: There's a debate among the Republican candidates for Senate in Reno tonight; it's the first major public appearance for Sue Lowden after the chickens-for-care fiasco, so it'll be interesting to see whether her opponents shower her with derision or if they try to outflank her on the right by throwing even more white meat to the base. Here's a clue: one of Lowden's predecessors, former state party chair Chuck Muth, says "It is absolutely breathtaking at how badly the Lowden camp has mishandled the situation."

MI-Gov: Ordinarily Mitt Romney endorsements don't get too much ink here, but this is an interesting one: he endorsed Rep. Peter Hoekstra for Michigan governor. This is relevant in a couple ways: one, Romney is the son of ex-Gov. George Romney and those are meaningful connections, seeing how he fared well in the Michigan primary in 2008, so it carries some weight. And two, if Romney is going to try to be the moderate, sane guy in the 2012 GOP primary, you'd think he'd find a different way to show it than by endorsing the hard-right, strident Hoekstra.

MN-Gov: The DFL endorsing convention in Minnesota is tomorrow, and the main event is who gets the gubernatorial endorsement... which, given the big crowd, could require many ballots to decide. Six Dems are still left contesting the nomination: Minneapolis mayor R.T. Rybak, state House speaker Margaret Anderson Kelliher (considered the two frontrunners, based on the precinct-level straw polling), state Sen. John Marty, state Reps. Tom Rukavina and Paul Thissen, and former state Rep. Matt Entenza. Former Sen. Mark Dayton and Ramsey Co. DA Susan Gaertner are also running, but plan to contest the primary no matter what and therefore aren't bothering with seeking the endorsement. (Entenza also plans to be in the primary no matter what, which means he's unlikely to get any support at the convention, but still is participating at the convention.)

NY-Gov: Remind me again why Suffolk Co. Exec Steve Levy is running for Governor as a Republican? I suppose it was because state chair Ed Cox promised him a smooth ride to the nomination, but if the endorsements of the various county-level GOP chairs around New York is any indication, it looks like Cox sold Levy a bill of goods. Levy has been endorsed by only 14 county chairs, with a weighted vote of 26%, while ex-Rep. Rick Lazio has the backing of 27 county chairs with a weighted vote of 51%. 19 chairs remain neutral.

OH-Gov: When we talk about the money chase, it's usually focused on the federal races, but Ohio is a good reminder that the money pours into the state-level races too. Big money is at work in the Buckeye State, as incumbent Dem Ted Strickland raised $1.6 million last quarter and has $7.1 million CoH, while GOP challenger John Kasich raised $2 million and has $5.1 million CoH. Even the downballot races aren't immune: GOP SoS candidate Jon Husted has $2 million in the bank (dwarfing Democratic opponent Maryellen O'Shaughnessy), while Democratic Auditor candidate David Pepper is sitting on $785K, giving him a huge advantage over his GOP opponents.

FL-08: Former state Sen. Daniel Webster (who's known for not following through on his intentions to run for things) decided to go through with his threats to run against Rep. Alan Grayson, getting a late start on the race. Webster probably could have cleared the field if he'd gotten in the first time around, half a year ago, but now the various primary opponents (state Rep. Kurt Kelly, Bruce O'Donoghue, Todd Long) say they won't get out of the way. Webster comes to the table with two big-name endorsements, though, which might help him make up some fundraising ground quickly: Jeb Bush and Mike Huckabee. The local GOP establishment is fractured, though, as Mel Martinez is sticking with his ally O'Donoghue.

GA-04: Rep. Hank Johnson, facing a competitive Dem primary with Vernon Jones, got a big endorsement today, from one Barack Obama. (Johnson was the first member of the Georgia delegation to endorse Obama.) With Obama having won the black-majority 4th by a 79-21 margin, it's an endorsement I'd expect that Johnson welcomes.

NM-02: Apparently there had been some goading of Democratic freshman Rep. Harry Teague from Republican quarters for him to release his internal polling, which he hasn't done previously. Ask and ye shall receive... Hamilton Campaigns finds Teague leading ex-Rep. Steve Pearce 47-46. That compares favorably to Teague's internal from August, which, unsurprisingly, he didn't release; there, Teague trailed 52-42. The one public poll of the race, from PPP in February, gave Pearce a 43-41 lead.

NY-19: Here's a weird story out of the GOP primary in the 19th, where ophthalmologist Nan Hayworth is already brandishing lots of money. Apparently there's a phantom candidate out there by the name of Kristia Cavere, who's claiming to have raised $300K in a matter of weeks and is now sitting on $400K CoH. That can't be verified, however, because Cavere's camp hasn't filed an FEC Q1 report yet, though, and her spokesperson pointed to a loophole that doesn't really exist. Furthermore, no one really seems sure what the 31-year-old Cavere does, other than having recently gotten a master's degree, or how she'd have access to such money.

OH-13: This is one of those "huh?" moments that makes you check the calendar to see what century you're living in. The Medina County GOP sent out a mailer with a bullet-pointed list of to-do items. One of them was "Let's take Betty Sutton out of the House and put her back in the kitchen!"

Crisitunity :: SSP Daily Digest: 4/23
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OH-13
Ow, just... ow

Top ten signs you're an SSPer #1: your favorite song is "Panic At Tedisco" and no one understands what you mean.

Holy hell
OH-13 is my home district, and I can tell you right now, that if this gets any traction whatsoever, Tom Ganley, unlucky for him, is going to get trampled by a stampede of angry women voters from throughout the district.  OH-13 is a fairly affluent, well-educated district stretching from Lorain and Elyria in the west to Akron in the east, and one thing that isn't tolerated around here is blatant sexism like this.  Medina County is one of two GOP leaning districts in the greater Cleveland area, and this kind of rhetoric might play well among the GOP base there, but the Medina county portion of this district is very, very small.  Most of OH-13 are in liberal leaning Lorain and Summit counties.  The Cuyahoga parts of the district, towns like Strongsville (my hometown), North Royalton, and Brecksville, are generally swingish/lean GOP, but independents generally swing the race here, and they aren't going to react well to this.  

I wonder if Betty Sutton will see this and decide to follow Jennifer Brunner's lead and put a deep emphasis on women's issues.  I think Brunner's hammering of issues such as equal pay for women and abortion rights is a big reason why she's still running close to Lee Fisher (and Rob Portman) despite not having any cash whatsoever.  But Sutton could simply go on her record as well, most notably her work on Cash for Clunkers (which unfortunately for Ganley is going to be tough to retort)

Full disclosure, I think Tom Ganley is a good guy, and I don't think he's a whack-job politically, but this was a bad matchup for him to get into.  He can't afford county level GOP hacks pulling stunts like this.  

23, Male, Democrat, OH-13


[ Parent ]
University of New Orleans is a public school, not a private school
http://colleges.usnews.ranking...

I was there for Obama's NOLA town hall in October.  It's a pretty nice place.  

21, male, CA-15 (home and voting there), LA-2 (college)



Huh
I'd always thought it was Jesuit, like most other "Univ. of [City]" schools, like Univ. of San Francisco or Univ. of Detroit. Learn something new every day; thanks.

[ Parent ]
We do have a Jesuit school in NOLA: Loyola University New Orleans
The University of New Orleans is part of the Louisiana State University System.  It was originally called Louisiana State University in New Orleans.  

Interestingly Tulane (a private school) has its official name as "The Tulane University of Louisiana".  It used to be the public University of Louisiana but it went private in the late 19th century.  There's still some "University of Louisiana at..." schools however.  

21, male, CA-15 (home and voting there), LA-2 (college)



[ Parent ]
Other examples
The University of Baltimore, University of Pittsburgh, University of Akron, University of Cincinnati and University of Toledo are all state schools.

[ Parent ]
University of Louisville too
Fun fact: John Yarmuth used to do University Relations for them.
 

21, male, CA-15 (home and voting there), LA-2 (college)



[ Parent ]
lemieux has NO CHANCE of election
in his own right; NO ONE knows who this guy is(other than a seat warmer); i have been involved in FLA democratic politics for 30 years and he is literally the most UNKNOWN senator EVER here

Daniel Webster should run on the Whig party line
and yes, they exist:
http://www.floridawhig.com/

Tonight we're going to party like it's 1839...

28, Unenrolled, MA-08


Hank Johnson? Isn't he the Congress-dope . . .
that said Guam would tip over? Ugh.

Have you seen the whole clip?
He was asking very serious and pointed questions and then said that in a poor attempt at hyperbole.  

[ Parent ]
yeah, his Guam comment was taken pretty out of context
Oh the joys of being a politician.....

[ Parent ]
Better that than the Bush-lovin' DINO that is Vernon Jones.


[ Parent ]
And he got rid of McKinney.


[ Parent ]
WA Rossi senate update
He is waiting on one last poll before deciding whether to run or not. He also called DC a "snake pit of a city."

http://politicalwire.com/archi...


I'm scratching my head
about why Taegan linked to that article. It's from the 18th. If said poll was in the field on the 18th, he should know by now.

[ Parent ]
Sorry about that, I just saw it on the wire
and figured it wasn't old news. My bad

[ Parent ]
AZ-Gov: Brewer signs controversial immigration bill
http://www.cnn.com/2010/POLITI...

Without going into the policy aspects of it, how will this affect her chances in the GOP Primary and (if she makes it that far) in November?

Some things to consider:

Latinos were 7% of the voters in the 2008 Republican primary. http://www.cnn.com/ELECTION/20...

Independents can vote in the primary.
http://ballotbox.governing.com...

The primary isn't until August: will anger/ delight over the bill have faded?

21, male, CA-15 (home and voting there), LA-2 (college)



I suspect this probably helps Brewer in the primary
The thing is, while Brewer's approval is hardly stellar (isn't it in the high 30s/low 40s or so?), if the Gubernatorial race becomes a direct referendum upon the immigration bill, she might actually be able to pull off a surprise victory. I imagine, at least for now, opinion will be pretty split statewide in terms of favorability on it.

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

[ Parent ]
GOP Field Against Gillibrand looks set
http://www.lohud.com/article/2...
Pretty much the last person considering a run, Rockland County exec Scott Vanderhoef has announced he wont run

Rob Portman is a freakin machine!
http://blogs.cqpolitics.com/ey... He raised $214,000 in the 1st two weeks of April and has 7.7 million on hand, as of April 14th. Fisher raised 53k and Brunner 33k in those two weeks.

Portman is unbelievable
When it comes to fundraising.

However, money doesn't make you a good candidate.  The fact that he's tied with both Fisher and Brunner and not leading in this environment, in a purple state like Ohio, is evidence of that.  This is one race where the money isn't going to matter as much as it usually does, especially if the charismatic and articulate Brunner is the nominee.  Even if Fisher is the nominee, Portman is going to have a tough sell with his free-trading, and anti-regulation positions that are very unpopular in Ohio.

23, Male, Democrat, OH-13


[ Parent ]
Name rec
I'm sure that has alot to do with it. Fisher has run statewide many, many times. Brunner has also run statewide and has a high-profile job as Ohio SoS. Portman has not held elective office in Ohio in 5 years. Once there is a nominee, I think Portman will take off. He will probably have around 10x as much money as Fisher and about 150x as much as Brunner. The Dem nominee will have to raise alot more money fast, while Portman is free to define himself and maybe even his opponent.  

[ Parent ]
The polling suggests
That the Dems aren't that well known either. Though fewer know Portman certainly.

[ Parent ]
Ohio is really to big to have such a large COH defecit.
The DSCC isn't exactly the juggernaut it was in 2006/8 either it's essentially on equal ground with the GOP. whoever wins the Dem primary is going to have to raise lots of cash fast. I hate to say it but I don't see how Brunner could compete financially I think Fisher at least has a chance.  

CO-02 (college)/FL-15 (home).  

[ Parent ]
Why do people assume Brunner's fundraising troubles
would continue after she won the primary?  Sure, her fundraising probably wouldnt be anything spectacular, but it seems more logical to assume that it would at least be somewhere around average for being the Democratic nominee for an open US Senate seat in as competitive of a state as OH.  Success breeds success; winning a competitive primary on a shoe-string budget vs someone whose been around longer and who has more money would certainly be an indication of her strength as a candidate to people.

(Or maybe Im a little wrong on the last sentence, anyone from OH who can tell me if Brunner can win simply on base support vs actually having to be a talented pol?)


[ Parent ]
Because of how bad her fundraising has been
Of course she'd do "better" if she won the primary, but that's a relative term, it's not possible for her to do any worse than she has been in the fundraising department.

I said this in another thread, but I'd love to be able to support Brunner, but her fundraising isn't even mediocre, it's so bad that I can't imagine her being able to raise enough to remain competitive with Portman financially (yeah, I know that Fisher's fundraising has gone downhill lately, but even this performance is still a lot better than Brunner's has been throughout the whole cycle).

Politics and Other Random Topics

24, Male, Democrat, NM-01, Chairman of the Atheist Caucus, and Majority Leader of the "Going to Hell" caucus!


[ Parent ]
I doubt the DSCC will let him define himself
And regardless, he was still Bush's budget director.  If he gets elected, then the Democrat facing him pulled a Choakley.  I cant imagine any amount of money being able to cover that fact up.  Especially this election cycle, this is easily the worst election cycle Portman could have ever chosen to make his return.

[ Parent ]
How many people know
He was Bush's budget director? Not many. Such is the problem.

[ Parent ]
that's what campaigns are for!


[ Parent ]
Obviously
But either Dem will struggle to get that message out through the deluge of positive Portman ads.

[ Parent ]
I dont get that logic
The best year for Republicans in 16 years is NOT the worst time a Republican could choose to make a return to politics. When Americans are tied on whether they would prefer Bush or Obama, it is not a negative like it would have been in 2008. Running on Bush will hurt Dems I think. People are tired of it. It would be like if we were still running against Clinton.  

[ Parent ]
Depends
I agree it isn't a good strategy nationally but if there is one place it could work it would be here. People still blame Bush far more than they blame Obama for the economy.

[ Parent ]
AFAIK, Rs ran against President Clinton through '06
though it certainly stopped working in favor of Rs in '06.

Nevertheless, you may still be right, in general.


[ Parent ]
You are generalizing the entire election cycle
I certainly agree with everything you said, but not applied to Portman.  Former Bush Budget Director, I mean come on.

Also, this Gallup poll says that plenty of people blame Bush for a lot of our problems.  And if the economy keeps picking up steam and the Democrats get the credit, the meme of the campaign season could quickly turn into, GOP/Bush fucked everything up and now Obama and the Democrats have fixed it.


[ Parent ]
Gallup poll, Voters still overwhelmingly blame the economy on bush
Over Obama. Portman is the reason for the economy, not a hard sell, especially in a place like Ohio where free trade is so unpopular.  

[ Parent ]
The DSCC won't be able to do it
Ohio is an expensive market, and it really does require a lot of money to get your message out, and the DSCC has to put their money into other races (they'll protect their incumbents in Arkansas, Nevada, and Colorado first and foremost, plus they'll be playing defense in Indiana and Illinois, since they're going to do whatever they can to make sure that Obama's seat doesn't go to the Republicans).

Politics and Other Random Topics

24, Male, Democrat, NM-01, Chairman of the Atheist Caucus, and Majority Leader of the "Going to Hell" caucus!


[ Parent ]
The DSCC
would be downright insane to pour money into Arkansas instead of Ohio.  Arkansas is pretty much a lost cause at this point, and it would be dollars horribly spent.  Aside from the dynamics of the race being so bad, why on earth would you rather have Blanche Lincoln instead of Jennifer Brunner/Lee Fisher?  You wouldn't.  Of course if Bill Halter wins the primary there then you might want to chip in more cash to help him out.  I wouldn't lift a finger to help Blanche, especially not when there are other competitive races on the board like Ohio that are more readily winnable.

Nevada I don't think is a big deal because of Harry Reid's ridiculous warchest, but they'll definitely chip in there.  Colorado is definitely a hotspot for cash too.  I would expect Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Pennsylvania, Missouri, New Hampshire, and Florida to be the big money races this cycle.  

23, Male, Democrat, OH-13


[ Parent ]
Main job is incumbent protection
Before playing offense, the campaign committees will always help the incumbents.  

[ Parent ]
Even they know a lost cause when they see one
If Lincoln is the nominee, they'd probably spend until mid-October when its obvious she's a goner.

If Halter is the nominee, would they still keep AR a priority unless they see its a goner due to it being still one of our seats vs a pick-up?


[ Parent ]
Probably
Especially if Boozman somehow loses. Who do ya'll think wins a Lincoln-Halter run-off though? I would think Lincoln has the most votes to pick up, as the 3rd candidate is basically a Republican.  

[ Parent ]
I wonder what Arkansas's laws are on primary voting
They have open primaries, so it's entirely possible (assuming the election law allows it) that many of the "Democrats" switch over and vote in the Republican run-off (rather than trying to vote for the "lesser of two evils" from their point of view).

Politics and Other Random Topics

24, Male, Democrat, NM-01, Chairman of the Atheist Caucus, and Majority Leader of the "Going to Hell" caucus!


[ Parent ]
Hey, I wouldn't want to help Blanche Lincoln either
But then again, the DSCC isn't necessarily in the business of electing progressives, they're in the business of electing Democrats, and particularly protecting their incumbents (much as I dislike Blanche Lincoln she is an incumbent Democratic senator). I don't know why you'd expect them to do otherwise either.

Like I said before, Ohio is a really expensive media market, I'm sure they'll chip in some money, but "some money" doesn't mean that they'll put in nearly enough to put out a substantial media buy to define Portman (they can do that more readily in a state like New Hampshire, where it's a lot cheaper to advertise).

And given that Illinois, Pennsylvania, and Florida (all three pretty damn expensive states to advertise in) are probably going to make the DSCC a lot less likely to intervene in Ohio unless fundraising for Fisher/Brunner picks up significantly (especially for Brunner).

Politics and Other Random Topics

24, Male, Democrat, NM-01, Chairman of the Atheist Caucus, and Majority Leader of the "Going to Hell" caucus!


[ Parent ]
Brunner is raising enough money to compete in a
House seat, not for Senate. Do you think she would be a better nominee than Fisher despite the fund raising? If a candidate cannot raise a significant amount of money for a campaign in a large, in both population and land area, state they are usually dead in the water.
The polls right now are more about where a race is to start b/c most campaigns haven't kicked into high gear, at least IMO. Having a $5 million plus advantage in CoH is a bfd, especially in an open seat where it is basically Generic R vs Generic D. Tough sells are easier when you have boatloads of cash.  

[ Parent ]
Rossi to enter?
http://blog.seattlepi.com/seat...
Chris Widener is dropping out. He said he would drop out if Rossi told him he was going to run.  

Murray poll 49-41
I imagine Rossi might have better numbers. We shall see.

[ Parent ]
Poizner's whole strategy has been anticipating this
His commercials now are absolutely ruthless, explicitly tying Whitman to Arnold.  No doubt those are sticking with both conservatives and (less usefully) with more independants.

He has claimed he wasn't going to advertise heavily until May, though maybe he has moved that up.  He has deliberately allowed Whitman to build up a big lead.  Most everybody else thinks this has been stupid, but if he is right it will be one of the best tactical campaigns ever.  Average voters are soooo suck of fast forwarding through her commercials, even though they are decent commercials... and the carpet bombing by its nature will even get more extensive.  (And the newer attack commercials on Poizner are not nearly as effective as Poizner hanging Arnold around her neck.)

This one could be a huge surprise, although even if it isn't Whitman is a much weaker candidate now than a month ago.


New DRA data
I love Dave's Redistricting App and was just curious as to when the next round of partisan data will be released and what states will be included? It would be really awesome if North Carolina was part of the next update.  

I agree
 It would also be nice if Florida and New Jersey were included.

for more election analysis, visit  http://frogandturtle.blogspot....




17, CA-06,  


[ Parent ]
Seems like SurveyUSA
Are coming out of hibernation. Not a moment too soon.

Sigh
Sigh, sigh sigh, sigh, and more sigh.

http://www.chicagobreakingbusi...

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


I guess we should all start learning to say
Senator Mark Kirk. Unless the D's pull a Toricelli

[ Parent ]
That means nothing to me.
He doesn't work for that bank anymore.  And so what if it's going away?

Ad hoc, ad loc and quid pro quo!
So little time, so much to know!


[ Parent ]
It
really doesn't matter what we think, it matters about what the voters think. This will not go well with the voters. Whether Alexi (don't try and get me to spell it) is really innocent doesn't matter. Now sure Blago was re-elected with bigger ethical problems, however that was in a much better year. The bad thing is that we knew this before the primary, and the guy won despite it. It would be really nice if we could replace him on the ballot. This looks bad, really bad.

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

[ Parent ]
Bad that his family ran it or bad that it's closing?
Now that it's gone, it will wither away as an issue.

Ad hoc, ad loc and quid pro quo!
So little time, so much to know!


[ Parent ]
The
latter. I wouldn't think for a second that this will wither away; this will be a major campaign issue. I don't want to sound like a troll or anything, but I am just really concerned about this.  

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

[ Parent ]
I agree
no way this goes away as an issue. I can't believe how badly Illinois Dems hurt themselves with the primary results. I really can't think of a primary where a statewide party has done as much damage to its chances in the fall recently. Maybe Republicans in Colorado, California, Kentucky, and Indiana will give the IL Dem primary voters a run for their money in terms of self harm, but until then, the Democrats in the Land of Lincoln take the cake.  

[ Parent ]
At least for the moment.


Ad hoc, ad loc and quid pro quo!
So little time, so much to know!


[ Parent ]
I don't think it matters to voters
that once upon a time he ran a bank and many years later it closed

[ Parent ]
That is a gross oversimplification
Trust me, it matters.

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 think it's likely to cost him the election
But then again - and no offense to people from Illinois - given the track record of odoriferous or worse politicians who've been elected in Illinois, who knows?

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


[ Parent ]
I go to school in Chicago
so I feel somewhat qualified to say that I just don't see Alexi getting away with this. Maybe in 2006 or 2008, but not this year when he was already going to have to work hard.

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 ]
The whole thing just sounds bad
If Kirk can somehow saw the words bank, Alexi, bailout, failure all in one ad, that's all people will hear considering our current events.

I dont blame Alexi, but he's going to get the shit end of the stick regardless.


[ Parent ]
And if Alexi can successfully dodge this issue
It would probably involve being on the defense for months and having to spend millions on getting people to recognize the bank failing has nothing to do with him and that he hasn't in fact even worked there in 4 years, long before everything went sour.

Having to defend against this type of thing is going to dog his whole campaign.  It'd be a giant expenditure of his resources to get by this.


[ Parent ]
Ditto
I would love to agree with lovespolitics views, but I just have to be realistic about the situation.  

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

[ Parent ]
What a fast fall!
Christie now has a 33% approval, with 63% disapproving.

http://abclocal.go.com/wabc/st...

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


Well somebody is wrong
Rasmussen had him at 53% approval and 45% disapproval 5 days ago.

[ Parent ]
Snark
I wonder who?  

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

[ Parent ]
Hmm
I'll wait for the ppp poll to come out.

[ Parent ]
I
trust SUSA. Why should we mistrust these results? Or are you just saying you want confirmation?  

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

[ Parent ]
This
is what happens when you cut state aid to school budgets by 95%. My school is being so tight for money right now next year they will be no more clubs (including Student Council which I sit on) and almost half of the sports will not continue til next year (mostly girls sports are being cut including SDA while football is not losing a dime)  

17, Gay Male, Democrat, NJ-8  

[ Parent ]
Have you asked your teacher's why they aren't
willing to pay for their healthcare? I would also point out that when a state is facing a $10 billion deficit, programs are going to be cut. I wonder if so many of the voters are hating Christie, why did a majority of school districts see their budgets rejected by voters? I also would like to see the approval ratings for the legislature in Congress and the public employee unions.  

[ Parent ]
legislature in Trenton
Freudian slip

[ Parent ]
The
biggest reason why teacher unions are refusing to pay for their benefits is not because it would coast them money but because it would give the local Board of Educations the power to annul written contracts between the BOE and the unions. By allowing the BOE to decide that contracts need to be changed halfway through the "term" of the contract then it gives them the power to go back on their word. When the economy is bad why should government have the ability to ask for a change in the contracts when the unions are not allowed to do the same either when the economy is good or bad. By changing their contracts before they expire, the unions see this as an infringement of their collective bargaining ability.  

17, Gay Male, Democrat, NJ-8  

[ Parent ]
They couldn't make it a one time only change?
I just find it hard to believe that (A) money has nothing to do with it and (B) it is impossible for a there to be some sort of middle ground where they allow a part of their contracts to be rewritten only due to the extraordinary circumstances facing the state. I understand the reluctance to allow labor contracts to be annulled but, when everybody else in the state is suffering, the optics look pretty awful. Either way the choices are pretty unpalatable when the situation is so poor.  

[ Parent ]
Of
course money is a factor but it's not the biggest factor. If they allow is change to occur once who is it to say the BOE will never try this tactic again. Every time the school budget comes to a vote the local BOE always argues if this budget fails Armageddon will occur (snark). BOEs have problems with writing budgets every year and if changing contracts mid year becomes a precedent then it will place a huge weight on the teachers while giving the government yet another tool to "screw" us over

I sounds like a Republican when I talk about the evils of Gov. but essentially I believe what I'm arguing. I see your point totally and might even support teachers paying part of their income toward their healthcare (which they short of already do since the reason teacher salary isn't high in NJ is because they agreed to get a good portion of their income through benefits) once the contract negotiations start again when they expire. I do however don't believe teachers should get automatic salary increases every year.        

17, Gay Male, Democrat, NJ-8  


[ Parent ]
Roger
Thanks for the info about Jersey. I hope your student council gets back up and running soon.  

[ Parent ]
Honestly
with the people on my council I think it's better that we probably didn't have one lol

Especially since my school President is a self proclaimed tea bagger (who used to be a full out communist last year) who doesn't believe the holocaust ever happened and thinks the American family should go back into the 1950 model  

17, Gay Male, Democrat, NJ-8  


[ Parent ]
what...?
from communist to teabagger? how does that even make sense askdkjah.

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 ]
He
went from Democrat to socialist to commi to strict constructionist to tea bagger. Me and a couple of friends are making bets to see when he tries to take over the world. Lets just say as Alan Grayson is a "few fries away from a happy meal" this kid is "a few fries over"

17, Gay Male, Democrat, NJ-8  

[ Parent ]
Oh Student Council
The winning candidate for senior class secretary dressed up as Fidel Castro to give his election speech, called himself an atheist and explicitly made fun of the K-Lifers (young fundamentalist Christians, of whom one was his opponent). He made posters all about how he was a Communist and would bring Communism to the school (which, amusingly, is probably the wealthiest in Kansas). Coincidentally, he would later move to Berkeley and marry a Chinese girl.

If your school is anything like mine was, everybody just voted for the people we thought most likely to annoy the school administration.

Student Council: all the fun of politics, minus most of the destructive power.

Holocaust denial, though? That's just sick and wrong. Being anti-establishment is cool. Being anti-Semitic is not.  

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


[ Parent ]
I sure hope
Rybak wins tomorrow. If one of the two isn't going to contest the primary, it had better be Kelliher. And I haven't really heard anything about Rukavina or Gaertner, and I don't think Thissen has any shot.

On a completely random note
I just learned today that vanquished senator Jim Talent (R-MO)'s son goes to my college. (small world...)

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/


I went to college with Norm Coleman's son
knew one of his roommates.

[ Parent ]
Hah.
    Did he smoke as much pot as his father did in college?

24, Male, GA-05

[ Parent ]
Hahahaha, no, then we would have been friends!


[ Parent ]
At our state convention last weekend...
I saw both Peter Schurman and Richard Aguirre there.  Put it this way.  If Schurman is running a quixotic campaign to Brown, then Aguirre is running a quixotic campaign to Schurman.  How the holy hell is that dude getting 6%??  He showed up wearing a blue jumpsuit, and looked like he just walked into the convention after a workout at Venice Beach!  In other words, he looked like a homeless drifter muscleman.  Color me WTF.


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