Tennessee Primaries Preview

TN-Gov (R): Bill Haslam hopes to bulls-eye a Wamp rat tonight (and Ron Ramsey for good measure). The Knoxville mayor is generally regarded as the frontrunner in the Republican gubernatorial field, in both polling and fundraising (much of which came out of his own pocket). Rep. Zach Wamp and Ramsey (the Lt. Governor) are further back in the polls, and trying to out-conservative each other in their messaging. In fact, this is starting to look like a replay of the Michigan GOP primary earlier this week, with the self-funding ‘moderate’ (to the extent that Haslam apparently once signed off on a tax increase, and isn’t as demagogic as the others) benefiting from a brawl between multiple conservatives.. and also in that while polling has shown Dem nominee Mike McWherter competitive against the conservative candidates, he matches up much less well against Haslam. There’s also a wild card in the form of viral video star Basil Marceaux, whose late-surging candidacy may make some inroads among the anti-traffic-stop, pro-immuning crowd. (C)

TN-03 (R): Like Peter Hoekstra in MI-02, the joy of watching one of the House’s most execrable members (Zach Wamp, in this case) give up his seat for a gubernatorial primary faceplant is tempered somewhat by the knowledge that he’ll be replaced by someone just as nasty. There are 11 GOPers in this primary, but it’s really only a two-person race, between Club for Growth-backed former GOP state party chair Robin Smith and attorney, radio talk show host, and Mike Huckabee ally Chuck Fleischmann. (Smith, you might recall, was the GOP chair during the 2008 campaign, who released the infamous “Anti-Semites for Obama” press release that had him in African tribal garb. (C)

TN-04 (R): We don’t have much intel on the Republican primary here, where the main contestants are attorney Jack Bailey, and physician Scott DesJarlais, but it’s worth keeping an eye on, as the victor will go on to face Rep. Lincoln Davis. Davis isn’t high on anyone’s target list, but in a big enough wave could get swept away just by virtue of his R+13 district. Bailey has a bit of a fundraising edge, probably thanks to connections from his former work as a Hill staffer. (C)

TN-06 (R): Let the fur fly in this Middle Tennessee district currently held by outgoing Democrat Bart Gordon. The field counts eight Republicans, with three serious contenders in former Rutherford County GOP chair Lou Ann Zelenik, state Senator Jim Tracy from the southern part of the district, and state Senator Diane Black, who represents two northern counties in the district. The mad dash, of course, is for the right, whether its immigration or misuse of government resources. Black released an internal that had her leading at 41% and Zelenik and Tracy mired in the twenties at 22 and 20, respectively. Look for sharp geographic distinctions here tonight, with each candidate having a different base in this rural-exurban district. (JMD)

TN-08 (R): For the open seat of outgoing Dem John Tanner, five Republicans have jumped into the fray. The three frontrunners — agribusinessman Steve Fincher, Shelby County Commissioner George Flinn, and doctor Ron Kirkland — have been busy bashing each other to bits. All sorts of accusations have been thrown around — Flinn’s been attacked for owning a hip-hop station in Memphis, while Fincher’s caught flak for voting in the Democratic primary for local offices in May, and Kirkland’s on the defensive for steering contributions to Democrats in the past. All three are have significant warchests to play with (Fincher $421k cash-on-hand, Flinn $275k with the ability to self-fund, Kirkland $223k). So who’s going to emerge from this bare-knucle brawl? Fincher’s the NRCC’s preferred candidate, and a recent poll had him leading with 32 to Kirkland’s 23 and Flinn’s 21. This race is largely in the air (not that presumptive Dem. nominee Roy Herron’s complaining), though unfortunately, we’ll know the winner of this fight tonight, as Tennessee has no runoffs. (JMD)

TN-09 (D): Two years ago, Nikki Tinker’s campaign against incumbent Dem. Steve Cohen was infuriating; this time, former Memphis Mayor Willie Herenton’s campaign is just laughable. Whether it’s claiming he’ll beat Cohen 3:1, losing the CBC’s endorsement to Cohen, or having less than 1/47th of Cohen’s cash-on-hand, Herenton’s campaign really makes you wonder. Let the mockery begin. (JMD)

UPDATE: Polls close at 8 pm ET/7 pm CT (the state is in both time zones, but apparently closing times are coordinated). As always, if you have predictions, let us know in the comments.

29 thoughts on “Tennessee Primaries Preview”

  1. Ok I know this is crazy but Andyroo already predicted that Basil might break double digits. Personally I think he will get 5-6 percent of the vote. What if the turnout was REALLY low and some Dems crossed over to vote and Basil somehow won with say 17-18 percent of the vote? I do not expect him to get that much but it is not impossible, he has gotten a lot of attention. Tennessee does not have runoffs. It’s not going to happen but it is interesting to consider. Safe Dem if it did happen.

    In all seriousness who should we be rooting for tonight? I would think Wamp since he polls much worse than XXXX. Any local insights.

    Also Cohen is going to CRUSH he who must not be named tonight.  

  2. Governor:

    Haslam   47%

    Wamp     29%

    Ramsey   22%

    Marceaux  2%

    TN-6

    Tracy    38%

    Black    37%

    Zelenik  25%

    TN-8



    Fincher  43%

    Kirkland 41%

    Flinn    16%

    TN-9

    Cohen    63%

    Herenton 37%

  3. You guys should pay attention to Brent Davis Staton in the Democratic primary! He’s got a great profile for the district and can turn up the heat on whoever wins the Republican primary (Read: Robin Smith). People have written off this district as extremely conservative, but that’s absolutely not the case. The congressperson holding the seat prior to Zach Wamp was Marilyn Lloyd, a Democrat. I encourage you all to take a look at giving Dr. Brent Staton your full support in the general election, and, while you’re at it, please visit StatonforCongress.com.

  4. Wamp to join other GOP Congressman failing in their bid for promotion. Barrett in SC, Hoekstra in MI, Tiahrt in KS. Doesn’t bode well for Deal in the GA runoff.

  5. Governor:

    Haslam – 44

    Wamp – 28

    Ramsey – 23

    Basil Marceaux.com – 3

    The other guy – 2

    TN-03: Fleischmann.

    TN-04: DesJarlais.

    TN-06: Tracy.

    TN-08: Flinn.

    TN-09: Cohen.

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