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NC-Sen: SSP Moves Race to "Likely Republican"

by: DavidNYC

Sat May 10, 2008 at 2:29 AM EDT


SSP is moving NC-Sen from "Safe Republican" to "Likely Republican." Several factors contribute to this change:

1) Democrat Kay Hagan (who convincingly won her primary earlier this week) has done a good job raking in cash so far, raising $1.5 million since she got into the race, including $900K in the first quarter. She had to spend a lot of her warchest in her race against Jim Neal, but it looks like her fundraising will continue to be strong.

2) Democratic turnout rocked the house on Tuesday. In the most directly comparable races, the parallel gubernatorial primaries, the number of votes cast on the Dem side was almost three-and-a-half times greater than in the GOP contest. Of course, Dem turnout was likely to be greater given the presidential battle atop the ticket, but new Democratic voter registrations are far outstripping Republican registrations. There has also been a huge flux of new independent registrations, and early voting patterns show that indies overwhelmingly prefer Team Blue.

3) The Obama factor: Barack Obama almost certainly makes this state far more competitive than Hillary Clinton would have. We're not saying Obama's going to win NC, but it will be in play. And while Obama's nomination has been inevitable for months, his grudging coronation by the tradmed finally allows him to focus on the general election. This is good news in the Tarheel State.

4) Finally, Liddy Dole's polling is less than stellar. A Rasmussen poll a month ago put the race at 52-39, while a more recent Research 2000/DailyKos poll showed a tight 48-41 margin. Now that Hagan is past the primary, much like Obama, she can turn her attention to her Republican opponent.

SSP's complete Senate race ratings are available here.

DavidNYC :: NC-Sen: SSP Moves Race to "Likely Republican"
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She's clearly running a strong campaign
She and Neal were polling close to even at the beginning, weren't they?  And she crushed him.


John McCain: Healthcare for kids?  Not for a Bush-McCain America.

Well, yes
But those polls had 60 percent undecided. However, Hagan utterly dominated in the primary, showcasing both political skill and superior fundraising.

[ Parent ]
with mike easley leaving as one of the most popular
governor's in the nation after 2 terms; and bev perdue leading the slate at the state level; and hagan's very effective campaign structure so far; AND obama drawing out the large black vote; and excellent candide recruiting down ticket(larry kissel, etc.); north carolina has the potential to go ENTIRELY BLUE this november

New poll by Rasmussen on this race
Hagan - 48%
Dole - 47%

http://www.rasmussenreports.co...


To get into it a little more
Favorables
Dole - 56/38
Hagan - 53/30

Not seeing any cross tabs from the link...  Oh well.  Still, this is a hell of a place to be though.  I wonder if her ad buys for the primary closed the gap.  


[ Parent ]
Perhaps you spoke too soon
Similar to Hagan first saying she wasn't interested...

This is probably much closer to Lean Republican at this point.


It may be
But let's see how Hagan's fundraising progresses, and what the next few polls show first.

[ Parent ]
why not toss-up (or at least lean rep)?
This might even be a toss-up.  I know it's just one poll, but Dole's polling has looked lousy all year.  I think Dole may be in some trouble.  More money might help Dole hang on, but she's not well liked in NC, and doesn't have roots around the state.

What objective criteria are you using for rating this "Likely Rep"?  I think that most prognosticators are MUCH too slow to change race ratings - they aren't any better than bond rating services (remember that Enron wasn't downgraded until right before it went under).  We can do better than that.


[ Parent ]
Name recognition
Hagen still has a long ways to go on name recognition.  So I can still see why they haven't rated it as tossup yet.

That, and, NC tends to be split with parties...the last several elections have seen Democrats do well on state races but Republicans do better on Federal ones.  That could change this year, of course, but you can't blame the pollsters and political analysists from still considering that factor.


[ Parent ]

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