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SSP Daily Digest: 2/11

by: Crisitunity

Fri Feb 11, 2011 at 4:00 PM EST


AZ-Sen: As the dust settles from Jon Kyl's retirement, the biggest name on the Dem side may also be the biggest question mark: Rep. Gabby Giffords, who it turns out had been telling her staff that she'd planned to run for Senate in 2012 if an open seat arose, but whose recovery timetable is entirely unclear at this point. Local Dems are saying she has "the right of first refusal," but it may be a while till we get a decision out of her, so the Dem field is very much up in the air. One other major Dem is publicly expressing his interest, though: Phoenix mayor Phil Gordon, who's termed-out of his job this year. (The same article also finds former Arizona Diamondbacks star Luis Gonzalez declining a run; not sure why he was being asked in the first place.) On the GOP side, Gov. Jan Brewer acted quickly to quash any speculation that she might run. However, J.D. Hayworth, last seen getting creamed by John McCain in the 2010 primary, says he's interested in another run, while another unappetizing leftover, ex-Gov. Fife Symington, says he won't rule it out (as well as floating the name of former NFL quarterback Kurt Warner). If you want to see all the many potential names in one place, here's The Hill's mega-rundown.

FL-Sen: Scratch one more of the state's myriad GOP House members from the list of possible Senate candidates. FL-16's sophomore Rep. Tom Rooney says the Senate may be an eventual goal someday, but he'd rather focus on building up his credentials in the House first.

ME-Sen: It seems like his extended period of talking to himself is over, as local tea party leader Andrew Ian Dodge announced (at CPAC, instead of in Maine) that he will in fact challenge Olympia Snowe in the GOP primary. I'm not sure if Snowe is really shaking in her boots, though, if this is the best that the teabaggers can find: Dodge, though able to self-fund, is a bit of an iconoclast (and one might charitably describe his appearance as "scruffy"), and doesn't really seem to fit in with any of the various subconstituencies within the tea party umbrella. He's uninterested in social issues (he's pro-gay and indifferent to abortion) and more of a fiscal hawk, but doesn't have much common cause with the Paulists either, breaking with them on foreign policy. If he loses social con votes to the other teabagger in the race, little-known Scott D'Amboise, that split basically ensures Snowe another nomination. Further complicating matters, Dodge is allied with Tea Party Patriots, archenemy to the DC-based astroturf-flavored Tea Party Express. For what it's worth, TPX officially declared that Snowe is one of their top targets for 2012 (um, was there any doubt about that before yesterday?), but there's no word on who they plan to back in the race, and I can't imagine it being Doge.

MI-Sen: Former state party chair Saul Anuzis may be getting cold feet about a Senate run all of a sudden, if his new comments are any indication: he said he'd rather see someone else run. One name he dropped as a preferred alternative to himself is (no surprise) ex-Rep. Peter Hoekstra, but another is perhaps the one potential candidate with even less name rec than Anuzis (and also the likeliest person to run, it seems): wealthy businessman Tim Leuliette.

NM-Sen: In case Jeff Bingaman does (contrary to current expectations) resign, don't look for a Bill Richardson run to succeed him. The ex-Gov. leaves office under a cloud according to PPP, with a 34/55 approval, and 50% saying they'd never vote for him for anything again. Everyone else in New Mexico is pretty popular; Tom Udall is at 56/31 and new Gov. Susana Martinez is at 53/29.

UT-Sen: Looks like Orrin Hatch, who's in full cozy-up-to-the-tea-party mode this week, can't count on any help from his new colleague Mike Lee; Lee just confirmed that he'll remain neutral in any primary that Hatch might face. Hatch, for his part, at CPAC today, just said that he's sorry for his bailout vote, but that the bailout helped prevent a depression. So... he's sorry about having helped prevent a depression?!? Let me sit and ponder that one for a bit.

VA-Sen: Here's some good news: ex-Rep. Glenn Nye says he has "absolutely no interest" and has made "zero calls" about the Senate race on the Dem side. (That contradicts yesterday's reports that he was calling around; the "absolutely no interest" part may be true though, inasmuch as that's what he got on the other end of the line.) However, Rep. Gerry Connolly isn't doing anything to downplay his name; he isn't ruling it in or out, but is pitching himself as "viable." (Woooooo! Viable!!! The audacity of viability! We have nothing to fear but inviability itself! Mr. Gorbachev, this wall is not viable!) Connolly blanches at the pricetag though, saying this will likely be a $25 million race.

MT-Gov, MT-Sen: Well, this pretty much makes it clear that Denny Rehberg will have a stroll to the Senate nomination. Military/security-complex businessman Neil Livingstone was one of the two initial non-Rehberg names associated with the GOP side of the Senate race; with Steve Daines now in the House race, Livingstone now has decided to announce for the gubernatorial race instead. He doesn't face anyone of Rehberg size there, although ex-Rep. Rick Hill is still a pretty imposing obstacle.

WV-Gov: With tomorrow's filing deadline for the gubernatorial special election fast approaching, it's worth noting how few people (of the many, many possibles) have actually signed up. All we have so far are Natalie Tennant, Earl Ray Tomblin, Rick Thompson, and a Some Dude candidate (Arne Moltis) on the Dem side, and Clark Barnes on the GOP side. Betty Ireland was planning to file today, though, and there will probably be a rush tomorrow.

NY-26: Kathy Konst isn't the only Dem who seems to be moving forward with seeking the nomination in the upcoming special election; Erie Co. Clerk Kathleen Hochul is interested, too. (She lives slightly outside the district's boundaries in Hamburg.) Meanwhile, lots of GOPers took their names out of contention: ex-Rep. Tom Reynolds, Assemblyman Jim Hayes, state Sen. Michael Ranzenhofer, and state Sen. Joe Robach. (With George Maziarz also apparently a no, that's pretty much all the GOP state Senators who'd been floated, lessening the likelihood of more 31-31 fun.)

Mayors: There are mayoral polls in both Chicago and Philadelphia, neither one offering a surprise. In the Windy City, Rahm Emanuel finds himself just shy of clearing the runoff hurdle in a poll from Chicago Tribune/WGN; he's at 49, with 19 for Gery Chico, 10 for Carol Mosely Braun, and 8 for Miguel del Valle. (Last month's Tribune poll had Emanuel at 44 and CMB at 21.) In the Hey, Up Yours City, incumbent Michael Nutter wins easily despite some ambivalent approvals, according to Franklin & Marshall. His approval is 50/32 (60/24 among whites but only 42/41 among African-Americans, who, despite the fact that he's African-American himself, tend to be his weakest constituency); despite that, 53% say he doesn't deserve to be re-elected. Nutter beats Tom Knox 46-28 in a general election matchup (which is odd because Knox isn't a Republican, although I guess he could become one to avoid another primary loss to Nutter, which is what happened in 2007). Nutter's only announced opponent so far is former state legislator Milton Street, the brother of ex-mayor John Street; Street has a bit of a liability, though, in that he's currently on supervised release after spending 20 months in federal prison for tax evasion.

Dark money: The billionaire Koch brothers have, over the last year, suddenly gone from anonymous rich guys who like to fund right-wing think tanks to, with their efforts to move more into funding activism and advertising, public enemies #1 on the dark money front. They've set a new target for the 2012 cycle that shows just what we're up against money-wise: they plan to contribute and raise $88 million for funding micro-targeting efforts as well as ads. It's not clear whether that would all happen under the aegis of their Americans for Prosperity, or if that money would get spread around the dark money universe, but Politico's article makes it sound that the secretive Kochs aren't closely allied with, if not directly in competition with, other groups like American Crossroads.

Crisitunity :: SSP Daily Digest: 2/11
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Connolly, really?
He only barely held on 50%-49% in 2010 in a district that he would need to win by double digits in order to win statewide.  I dont think he would be very strong.  

Hmm...
Connolly got 49% of the vote in a D+2 district
Perriello got 47% of the vote in a R+5 district

I'd go with Perriello all the way


[ Parent ]
A guy who voted
for the Stupak amendment and had a more conservative voting record than Gene Taylor? No thanks.

[ Parent ]
SOURCE!
I need to see a source for that Gene Taylor comment. Cause I'm calling shenanigans now!

As for the Stupak vote, the guy was a Catholic missionary. He talks the talk and walks the walk. He's been an unapologetic democrat, supportive of our economic issues and many of the sweeping social change issues. He is a man of religion and votes his beliefs, which are representative of his district (not necessarily Catholic, but pro life yes). He hasn't been up there saying abortion is bad, but advocating for its reduction.

Periello is what awesome is made of, IMO.

26, Male, Democrat, TX-26


[ Parent ]
I'm really getting sick of this constant defense
of Democrats that vote to restrict a woman's right to choose. Especially that it is somehow principled. If it fits the district, fine, but it doesn't need to be defended. It's a douche move no matter what.

19, Self Appointed Chair of the SSP Gay Caucus (I claimed it first :p), male, Dem, IN-09 (College IN-09) (Raised IL-03, IL-09)

[ Parent ]
Wow...
Really looking forward to the new DKos/SSP, since this comment is not only mean-spirited but completely out of place here.

Done w/ this, sorry mods.


[ Parent ]
This was an inapropriate outburst on my part.
It has no place at SSP. I'm sorry you feel the need to leave. I for one will refrain from that type of talk from now on. It was one of my first and I couldn't control it.

19, Self Appointed Chair of the SSP Gay Caucus (I claimed it first :p), male, Dem, IN-09 (College IN-09) (Raised IL-03, IL-09)

[ Parent ]
Graceful apology, but actually misplaced. Your comment was fine......
Political disagreements are contentious sometimes, and there's nothing wrong with that.  You typed nothing inappropriate at all, and I don't know why you think you did.

And the response didn't come off to me like the SSPer was leaving the site, just that he made his point of disapproval and would say nothing more.  But maybe I'm wrong about that.

But on your comment for which you apologized, I read it 3 times and the subthread above it, and you said nothing inappropriate.

43, male, Indian-American, Democrat, VA-10


[ Parent ]
I've been thinking about it and
it had more to do with the fact that for a while they were the only two that responded. I felt that maybe I had gone to far. The policies are a bit vague to me. I would hope anything I say on here is appropriate.

19, Self Appointed Chair of the SSP Gay Caucus (I claimed it first :p), male, Dem, IN-09 (College IN-09) (Raised IL-03, IL-09)

[ Parent ]
Reflection is good, but I don't think you came remotely close to a line......
You didn't make a personal attack, you challenged a particular argument that people use to defend anti-abortion Democrats.  That's certainly appropriate.  And you even allowed that anti-abortion is OK if it fits the district, so you weren't even absolute.

Your comment was OK and the notion it was "mean-spirited" is laughable.  Perhaps Upstate thought you were being mean to anti-abortion Congressmen, not to the commenter to whom you replied.  But even then it wasn't over the top.  Maybe it was the use of cursing, but hell we're all adults here!

43, male, Indian-American, Democrat, VA-10


[ Parent ]
True.


19, Self Appointed Chair of the SSP Gay Caucus (I claimed it first :p), male, Dem, IN-09 (College IN-09) (Raised IL-03, IL-09)

[ Parent ]
::nods::
Absolutely not out of place at SSP whatsoever; clearly a liberal blog, obviously pro-choice then.  And I know exactly why he think he posted something inappropriate, and the move to DK will solve that most likely.

[ Parent ]
What you think about this?

SOURCE!

??

Why this mention to DKos/SSP?


[ Parent ]
Not an appropriate comment at SSP
Policy arguments are not for this place. Moving along now.

26 White Male. Born and raised in MN-8, currently living in MN-5.

"A man who stands for nothing will fall for anything."


[ Parent ]
And the previous?
SOURCE!

?


[ Parent ]
There's no source for that, he pulled that out of thin air......
Perriello is far to the left of Taylor and never presented himself as otherwise.

43, male, Indian-American, Democrat, VA-10

[ Parent ]
Yes, you are right, I agree with your comments about this.

But, I mean more about the mod in the answer. I feel some of the moderate democrats losing the patience here a little more easily, but well, I think it is not as important. I can understand it.

[ Parent ]
Not an appropriate complaint, he didn't argue policy......
He was arguing about supporting/defending anti-abortion Members and candidates, the comment was well in-bounds.  To comment that one doesn't want to support anti-abortion candidates does not make the comment a policy argument.

43, male, Indian-American, Democrat, VA-10

[ Parent ]
I'm catholic, but I need not politicians voting by his religion

I want not catholic politicians voting by his religion, I want not muslim politicians voting by his religion, I want not jew politicians voting by his religion.

The religion and the politics are separate things for me.

I would never vote a politician cause of his religion.


[ Parent ]
Perriello more conservative than Gene Taylor?
Are you thinking of someone else? Perriello almost certainly voted for Obama. And while he did vote for Stupak, he voted with the Dems on the final healthcare bill, cap and trade and stimulus. Not bad for a freshman Democrat in a tough district, and he didn't run from those votes.

[ Parent ]
Know who else is more conservative than Gene Taylor?
I'll let you guess, but his name starts with "G" and ends in "eorge Allen".  

Independent Socialist & Chair of SSP Cranky Indianian Hoosier Caucus, IN-09

[ Parent ]
No.
Perriello voted for most of the major Democratic bills last Congress. The only one I can think of he opposed was the FDA tobacco regulation bill.

[ Parent ]
And
Wall Street reform. He never explained that but I'll give him a pass for that.  

19, Male, Independent, CA-12

[ Parent ]
Periello voted for Stupak?


[ Parent ]
Wrong wrong
wrong wrong. No way in he// Periello is more conservative than Gene Taylor. Periello is a populist progressive who defended his votes and the Obama administration even when it wasn't popular. Taylor didn't vote for anything in the Obama agenda.

Stimulus vote- Periello yes, Taylor No
Cap and Trade vote- Periello yes, Taylor No
DADT repeal- Periello yes, Taylor No
Health Care- Periello yes, Taylor No

Find me one issue where Gene Taylor is to the left of Tom Periello.

19, gay male, IL-7, MN 4 (college), Dem


[ Parent ]
Oh
and Gene Taylor was the only Democrat to give 9/11 rescue workers the middle finger by voting against the 9/11 health bill. Thanks for nothing Gene.  

19, Male, Independent, CA-12

[ Parent ]
Do we know that
Matt was talking about Periello or Connoly? I think its more likely he was talking about Connely, so lets stop freaking out.

[ Parent ]
Speaking of Gene Taylor
did anyone ever do a '10 version of http://www.swingstateproject.c... ?

For '08, Taylor ranked #2 behind Chet Edwards as a D who "overperformed" his district, in terms of progressive votes from a congressman in a district with a high R PVI.

In other words, at least through '08, Taylor was more courageous with his votes than anyone except Edwards.

(since Perreillio was elected in '08, he isn't listed on the linked diary, which is why I was hoping for a '10 version of the PVI/vote index thing.)


[ Parent ]
I remember something like this with Bright at #1
and there was discussion about it, but I have no link.  Last spring I think.

[ Parent ]
I don't feel like searching right now
But this was in a post by Nate Silver on 538.com. Bright was listed as the Democratic Congressman with the highest value above replacement Congressman for his district.

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


[ Parent ]
On Glenn Nye
To give you an idea of how un-appetizing Glenn Nye would be for the Democratic base in Virginia, someone created this website.

http://draftglennnye.blogspot....

Read this and then you'll understand why there is no way in hell. Also, Perriello all the way. The only better candidate might be Tim Kaine.

24, male, Democrat, VA-06 (currently in Italy), went to school in VA-05


[ Parent ]
Tell me more.
Someone said that the only way they'd vote for Nye is if he went up against William "Dollar Bill" Jefferson.  How can he possibly be THAT bad?  I can understand how his trying not to piss anyone off with controversial votes pissed off his potential voters, but is there more to it?

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


[ Parent ]
He spent his entire term in Congress sucking up to two interest groups:
veterans and the Chamber of Commerce. He completely ignored Democrats time and time again. Every time a tough vote came up, he always said he was "considering" things, but inevitably he sided with the Republicans. The best thing you could say about him was that he was better than Thelma Drake.

[ Parent ]
That website is hilarious!
Thanks for the link.

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


[ Parent ]
I'm tired of people foolishly assuming 2010 has any predictive value. Connolly...
...DID win the district by DOUBLE-DIGITS in 2008, when it was an open seat so he wasn't even the incumbent.

Connolly would crush Allen by 15 points or more in VA-11 next year.

What I have no idea about is how he would do downstate.  He'd need to clean up in Metro Richmond and Hampton Roads on the presumption he can't keep margins down elsewhere, although heavy black turnout will help him immensely in some places like parts of Southside.

43, male, Indian-American, Democrat, VA-10


[ Parent ]
He won 55%-43% in a fantastic year for Democrats
That would probably be just enough to win statewide.  

[ Parent ]
I don't doubt he'd do better next year in VA-11 vs. Allen than he did in '08......
Again, he wasn't the incumbent in '08, that matters.  Of course 2010 was a fluke, in a "neutral" environment Connolly would have beaten Fimian by 15 or even 20 points.  And 2012 is going to be a lot like 2008 in VA-11, with an aggressive Obama campaign going to the mat on our turnout.  Allen, for his part, is much more deeply disliked in NoVA than local Republicans.  All that combined means Connolly has nothing to worry about on the homefront.

Again, Connolly's challenge would be downstate.

43, male, Indian-American, Democrat, VA-10


[ Parent ]
If Allen is so deeply disliked
in NoVa, how does win this race or at least keep it close?  

"I have never deliberately given anybody hell. I just tell the truth on the opposition-and they think it's hell."--President Harry Truman. President Obama, are you listening?

[ Parent ]
By nominating
Someone besides Tim Kaine or Tom Perriello.

24, male, Democrat, VA-06 (currently in Italy), went to school in VA-05

[ Parent ]
as an open seat in a fantastic year for Democrats
Connolly has to first win as an incumbent in a neutral year, thus giving us something to base predictions off of.

[ Parent ]
He would
of lost if Fimian's primary opponent had won.  

19, Male, Independent, CA-12

[ Parent ]
Excuse my harsh words, but i am also tired
By YOU and your style. Your use of word "foolish" in almost every post as if you know everything and other - nothing, as if you are the best and most iformed commenter here (excuse me - you are very far from being first) and so on. Your attempts "to teach" other abut what's right and what's wrong, as well as your defence of very harsh comments when they come from "your side" and outcries of protest - when from another leave bitter taste.

I repeat what i said before: climate on RRH is substantially better then NOW on SSP (there are some problems there too, of course) and i am very pessimistic looking what will happen after projected merger.


[ Parent ]
Unlike some others, user DCCyclone usually backs up his words
with data. And when he doesn't, I think he's ready to do so when asked. Perhaps its just me, but I don't mind a mild level of "trash talk" as long as it is substantiated. Politics is also an enterprise with passion.

Sometimes passion is difficult to modulate -- many of us go over a line on rare occasion. I have.

But good data makes a difference.

In this case, he also stated what he did not know. To me, that also suggests a level of humility.

While I don't share your conclusion on RRH, I do find some of their debates of interest, such as their recent discussion on the quality/credibility of PPP polling. We'll see what happens when word gets out about them in the right-wing blogsphere.


[ Parent ]
Yes. we will see
Personally i fear that both SSP after merger and RRH (after some time) will be radicalised enough that i won't be able to write neither there nor here. Well, for such cases i will still have OurCampaigns - who accepts really everyone: liberals, moderates, cionservatives - as commentators...

[ Parent ]
I am going to wait and see
how SSP fares after the move to Daily Kos. If there are a lot of people that don't like it there, then I'll be happy to set up the "Independent" version of SSP/RRH, in a style like the Atlas Forum with sections for federal races (presidential and Congressional in separate sections), state races, county races, city races, etc.

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


[ Parent ]
I wish SSP all possible success
but in such case it would be ideal solution. Thanks in advance!!

[ Parent ]
Off topic -- but funny in a junior high sort of way!
So, the city of Fort Wayne is looking for an important local person to name their new government center after.  They're running an on-line poll, and the leader with over 6000 votes (5400 ahead of the second place person) was a 1930s multi-term mayor of the city.  But the city's made it clear he won't get his name on the building.  Why -- his name is Harry Baals (yes, pronounced "Balls").  I think it's absolutly disgraceful that we are denying this honor to a well respected and legegndary Hoosier -- who I had not heard of until a couple of days ago, and can't say his name without laughing!

Haha. I saw that a couple of days ago.
I'm courious, how many Hoosiers are on here. I feel like there's an over representation.

19, Self Appointed Chair of the SSP Gay Caucus (I claimed it first :p), male, Dem, IN-09 (College IN-09) (Raised IL-03, IL-09)

[ Parent ]
at least 4...
that I can think of off the top of my head.

I can't shake the idea that you and I might know each other, since we were probably at IU together for a time =P

23, liberal democrat, SSP Gay Caucus Majority Whip, IN-02 (home), IN-03 (birth), SC-03 (early childhood), IN-09 (college);   DKos: HoosierD42


[ Parent ]
It's very possible.
I also went to high school here. Oh might I add the gay representation on this site.

19, Self Appointed Chair of the SSP Gay Caucus (I claimed it first :p), male, Dem, IN-09 (College IN-09) (Raised IL-03, IL-09)

[ Parent ]
What's next?
...The I.P Freely Municipal pool? The Seymor Butts Arena? (Sorry, my inner 14 year old couldn't resist.)

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

[ Parent ]
Don't laugh...
Ole Miss almost got Admiral Ackbar from Star Wars as their mascot due to a "popular vote" type of campaign to replace their own mascot.  Even George Lucas ended up weighing in on the "controversy".

[ Parent ]
stanford university
back in the day when the mascot "indians" was not acceptable (although redskins obviously are, as are cossacks) the students voted to become the robber barrons.  this was overridden by admin, and now they're just the cardinal

18, Dem, CA-14 (home) CA-09 (college, next year). social libertarian, economic liberal, fiscal conservative.   Everybody should put age and CD here. :)

[ Parent ]
way OT
They were the Cardinals for several years but then changed it to Cardinal which ia aupposed to mean the color as opposed to one bird. They should change their name to the Redwoods. The mascot is already a tree and the school logo has a tree on it.  

41, Ind, CA-05

[ Parent ]
is supposed*
nm

41, Ind, CA-05

[ Parent ]
The difference being, of course
The difference is that calling a building the Harry Baals Center is kinda embarrassing, but having Admiral Ackbar as your mascot Would. Be. Awesome.  

What did Ole Miss end up going with, anyway? Something along the lines of "Crimson Klansmen" or something?

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


[ Parent ]
Keep in mind that Philadelphia's mayor
is named Nutter. How about memorializing him, when the time comes, with the Nutter Hospital for the Criminally Insane?

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


[ Parent ]
The results are in, and it's a landslide
I just read at Indystar.com that the online voting has closed, and Harry Baals takes it in a landslide -- almost 24,000 votes, and the second place choice didn't even crack 3,000.  I say let the voice of the people be heard!!!  And besides, you could say things like -- "The Harry Baalz Government Center -- giving you the shaft since way back when!"  

[ Parent ]
Can you imagine how often they'd have to replace that sign?
Every frat boy within 100 miles would manage to steal one to display in their room. The replacement costs would be a major hit to the city budget.

[ Parent ]
So the obvious solution is ...
They should SELL THEM. Instant money-maker for depleted city coffers. And a sort of fun, whimsical notoriety for the city, which is seriously deficient in the whimsy department, in my opinion.  

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

[ Parent ]
I note that the Baals family
now pronounces the family name as "Bales."

[ Parent ]
I would note...
That they are probably the only ones who do so....

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

[ Parent ]
Yeah, but it's worth a try.


[ Parent ]
Indiana is also home to Ball State University


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 ]
My band teacher went to Ball State.
Every year during band camp we would make fake Ball State t-shirts and wear them on the last day. I think it was the immaturity of it. High schoolers are so uncouth. :D

19, Self Appointed Chair of the SSP Gay Caucus (I claimed it first :p), male, Dem, IN-09 (College IN-09) (Raised IL-03, IL-09)

[ Parent ]
One of my math teachers
in high school was told that this guy's nickname by football teammates was chode (because, well, use your imagination)). Not realizing what it meant, she started calling him that, although for how long I am not sure.  

"I have never deliberately given anybody hell. I just tell the truth on the opposition-and they think it's hell."--President Harry Truman. President Obama, are you listening?

[ Parent ]
Phila-Mayor
They polled it for a general under the assumption that Knox would run independent party this time around.  Petitions for candidates start next week, and the sense I get is that any challenger to Nutter will seek ballot access outside the primary, and would only need 1,845 valid signatures to do it.

You did it!
Gone are the Ann Coulter ads, now we've got Tea Party Patriots ad, thanks to the mention. Google never fails to amuse

22, Male, Conservative Republican, anti-teabag, NY-8

Fife!!
J. Fife Symington III was governor of AZ for most of the time that I was there from 1993 to 1998. He had middling approvals at the time, and was reelected by a decent margin in 1994 but that was a very good year for Republicans. He had to step down in 1997 IIRC when he was convicted of bank fraud: as a developer, he had doctored up some projects' financial records to make them look a lot better than they were. He was then pardoned by Bill Clinton right before he left office, and subsequently became a pastry chef.

If he wins the nomination, I think that race would be at least lean Dem.

On a more serious note, somebody threw out state senate leader Russell Pearce's name in one of those articles. If that's serious at all he might be one to watch. SB 1070 was his idea. He's the angriest angry white guy in the whole state and if the primary comes down to who can serve up the most red meat, he's your man. He would get his clock cleaned by any Dem with a pulse, but for most of these primary voters anger seems more important than electability.    

41, Ind, CA-05


Pearce
When even Red State is saying he is unelectable...

[ Parent ]
They actually have electability conversations?
After the whole O'donnel thing, you'd think they wouldn't even care about that.

20, Male, Democrat, CA-44 (home) CA-12 (college)

[ Parent ]
Fife saved a young Bill Clinton from drowning in 1969
Under the circumstances, I think he owed him a pardon!

BTW, Symington is a distant relative of Stuart Symington, who served in the Truman administration, was a Senator from Missouri (1952-76), and sought the 1960 Democratic Presidential nomination.


[ Parent ]
What makes Pearce so unelectable?


"I have never deliberately given anybody hell. I just tell the truth on the opposition-and they think it's hell."--President Harry Truman. President Obama, are you listening?

[ Parent ]
He associates with
a certain group of activists who wear Swastika armbands and he's not at all good at hiding it.

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


[ Parent ]
Yikes.


"I have never deliberately given anybody hell. I just tell the truth on the opposition-and they think it's hell."--President Harry Truman. President Obama, are you listening?

[ Parent ]
The dude also claims to have seen UFOs
Maybe if Fife is elected to the Senate, he and Dennis the Menace can form a bi-partisan House/Senate Conference on Inter-Planatary Relations.  In cooking school, it sounds like he stood too close to the microwave for too long.

[ Parent ]
Orrin Hatch
a Profile in Courage. Not.
Well he's like Bush 41 when Bush was quoted as saying he'd say anything to help win his reelection.

Would someone please
Replace Orrin Hatch's regular coffee with the Folger's Crystal Meth that someone is slipping Lugar? Because THAT would be fun.

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

[ Parent ]
Haha


Independent Socialist & Chair of SSP Cranky Indianian Hoosier Caucus, IN-09

[ Parent ]
Your memory is mistaken, & I think the actual quote was overblown......
Bush 41 was asked by a reporter about what he'd do for a campaign, and he said "whatever it takes to win."

Which came off as meaning he'd play dirty, so it played poorly.

But honestly even at the time I shrugged and thought that's not what he meant.  Not that I regarded him as pure, he'd pulled his share of stunts (his faux outrage at Dan Rather on the air perhaps the most notorious one).  But I took that particular comment to mean simply nothing more than what all candidates do...in effect it was a throwaway answer, at least to me.

43, male, Indian-American, Democrat, VA-10


[ Parent ]
Sadly
When a state has conventions where your fate could be decided by a mindless mob, you have little choice than to contract Stockholm Syndrome.

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


[ Parent ]
AZ-Sen
Apparently, senate democrats talked about her on Thursday: http://www.seattlepi.com/polit...

I think she gets right of 1st refusal at the least. If she starts raising money by the fall and is able to campaign a little by winter, she could easily make this a competitive race.

22, male, VA-10


Romney crushing Huntsman in UT
http://www.deseretnews.com/art...

Might give him second thoughts.


I think this hints that conservatives begruge Huntman's acceptance of the ambassadorship
The thing is, I don't think a Huntsman presidential campaign runs through uber-conservative state caucuses. Presumedly, he sees something of an opening in New Hampshire, or, more realistically, Huntsman realizes he doesn't have a shot in hell and he's merely positioning himself for VP. The same should be applied to Pawlenty.

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

[ Parent ]
It's even worse than the toplines in the article
The poll found that his support falls even lower among Republican respondents, dropping to just 15 percent compared to 72 percent for Romney. Utah's GOP primaries are closed to non-Republicans.


[ Parent ]

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