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SSP Daily Digest: 9/27 (Afternoon Edition)

by: Crisitunity

Mon Sep 27, 2010 at 3:54 PM EDT

IA-Sen: Selzer & Co. for Des Moines Register (9/19-22, likely voters, 11/8-11/09 in parentheses):

Roxanne Conlin (D): 30 (30)
Charles Grassley (R-inc): 61 (57)
Undecided: 6 (10)
(MoE: ±4.2%)

Not much to see here other than the remarkable consistency over the almost one year's period since the previous Selzer poll of this race. (I just learned a new word today, while searching for how to describe this race, linked to the Chet Culver vortex: "syntropy." It's synergy + entropy.)

NH-Sen, NH-Gov: American Research Group (9/22-26, likely voters, Dec. 2009 in parentheses):

Paul Hodes (D): 32 (36)
Kelly Ayotte (R): 46 (43)
Undecided: 20 (21)

John Lynch (D-inc): 42
John Stephen (R): 40
Undecided: 14
(MoE: ±3.5%)

ARG, mateys! Here be a mighty treasure trove of undecided scallywags! (And here be the gubernatorial link.)

OH-Sen, OH-Gov: Univ. of Cincinnati for various Ohio newspapers (9/16-20, likely voters, 5/11-20 in parentheses):

Lee Fisher (D): 40 (47)
Rob Portman (R): 55 (46)
Undecided: 5 (6)

Ted Strickland (D-inc): 45 (49)
John Kasich (R): 49 (44)
Undecided: 6 (6)
(MoE: ±3.4%)

University of Cincinnati hasn't been in the field for a while, so they missed the very steady decline of the Dems in Ohio, making it look like more of a sudden collapse. At any rate, this is actually Ted Strickland's best non-internal showing since early August.

WA-Sen: Commonsense Ten is out with a $412K independent expenditure in the Washington Senate race, on Patty Murray's behalf. (Wondering who they are? This Hotline article from July explains how they're something of a Dem answer to groups like American Crossroads, as well as giving some legal background on just how it came to be that the super-wealthy can give endless money to 527s to spend endlessly on IEs.) Meanwhile, there are dueling ads in Washington. As one might expect, Patty Murray lets Dino Rossi hang himself with his own anti-Boeing words, while Rossi hits Murray on her support of tarps. (Since most Washingtonians own several tarps -- they only thing that allows them to go camping during the ten rainy months of the year -- I don't see what the big deal is.)

WV-Sen: The Dems are definitely getting active in here: the AFL-CIO is out with a huge direct mail blitz in West Virginia, and the DSCC is placing a major ad buy there starting tomorrow. In the meantime, John Raese, Tweeter and Facepage aficionado, is sticking to the GOP party line on global warming: it's all volcanoes' fault! (Wait... I thought it was sunspots. They'd better get their stories straight.)

AK-Gov: Bill Walker, after weeks of dithering in the wake of losing the GOP gubernatorial primary, has formally decided against a write-in bid (despite having an easier-to-spell name than Murkowski). No word on an endorsement of either Sean Parnell or Ethan Berkowitz, although Berkowitz has been steadily reaching out to Walker.

GA-Gov: With Nathan Deal not really having done much to deflect the attention being paid to his family's imminent financial collapse, now he's having to run damage control on another issue: his campaign is accused of having spent $135K to lease aircraft from a company where Deal himself is a part-owner. State ethics law bars candidates from using campaign funds for personal benefit, although the open legal question here is whether this turns into "personal benefit."

NM-Gov: Third Eye Strategies for Diane Denish (9/21-23, likely voters, no trendlines):

Diane Denish (D): 46
Susana Martinez (R): 46
Undecided: 7
(MoE: ±4.4%)

This is kind of odd... we just got a Diane Denish internal poll from a totally different pollster (GQR) in the middle of last week. Does she have two different pollsters working for her? At any rate, the news is decidedly better in this one, showing a tie where last week's poll had her down by 5.

TX-Gov: Blum & Weprin for Texas newspapers (9/15-22, likely voters, 2/2-10 in parentheses):

Bill White (D): 39 (37)
Rick Perry (R-inc): 46 (43)
Kathie Glass (L): 4 (-)
Deb Shafto (G): 1 (-)
Undecided: 8 (13)
(MoE: ±3.9%)

The Texas race is extremely stable (check out the flatness in Pollster's regression lines, with a mid-single-digits spread). While I'd like to think that Bill White can get over 50% on his own, his best hope at this point might be for Libertarian candidate Kathie Glass to start taking a bigger share (presumably out of Rick Perry's hide, via the same crowd who went for Debra Medina in the primary).

FL-24: Hamilton Campaigns for Suzanne Kosmas (9/22-23, likely voters, 8/25-29 in parentheses):

Suzanne Kosmas (D-inc): 45 (43)
Sandy Adams (R): 43 (49)
Undecided: 12 (9)
(MoE: ±3.7%)

This is the first internal we've seen from Team Kosmas, and while it's not the kind of numbers that fill you with great confidence (up 2 in one's own internal), it is an indicator that we're still looking at a Tossup here instead of Lean R (which is where some of the other prognosticators have been sticking this one). The movement in Kosmas's direction suggests that voters have found out more about the crazier side of Adams in the wake of her surprise primary victory.

MS-04: Tarrance Group for Steven Palazzo (9/21-22, likely voters, December 2009 Tarrance Grop poll for NRCC in parentheses):

Gene Taylor (D-inc): 45 (68)
Steven Palazzo (R): 41 (24)
(MoE: ± ?%)

There were reports last week that the NRCC was starting to smell smoke in this race (despite having an underfunded, low-name-rec candidate in Palazzo), and was going to try out a round of polling. Seems like their hunch may be right, as long-time Rep. Gene Taylor (who hasn't given Dems much reason to take interest in him lately... well, ever, really) is up only by single-digits in a new poll from the Palazzo camp.

PA-10: Momentum Analysis for Chris Carney (9/23-25, likely voters, no trendlines):

Chris Carney (D-inc): 46
Tom Marino (R): 38
Undecided: 17
(MoE: ±4.9%)

Chris Carney, having been slightly on the wrong end of a public poll from the Times-Leader (and on the very wrong end of that sketchy AFF poll last month), rolls out an internal giving him an 8-point lead over Tom Marino. Marino (who's pretty underfunded, although the NRCC is starting to get involved) is little-known (only 26/24 faves), so this is going to be one of many races where the Dem's survival is based on localizing in order to fend off Generic R.

PA-16: I'm not sure what to make of this: the uphill campaign of Lois Herr (going against Joe Pitts in the 16th, which is solidly Republican but moved a lot in the Dems' direction in 2008) is out with a second internal poll from PPP that has her within single digits of the GOP incumbent. Pitts leads 41-34, which seems kind of bizarre considering that we're seeing polls in Pennsylvania with incumbent Dems losing by larger margins than that in much friendlier districts.

SD-AL: Bennett Petts and Normington for Stephanie Herseth Sandlin (9/22-23, likely voters, no trendlines):

Stephanie Herseth Sandlin (D-inc): 51
Kristi Noem (R): 38
Undecided: 10
(MoE: ±4.9%)

Here's one race that seems to be becoming a little more comfortable for the Democrats. (Recall that Herseth Sandlin led in the last Rasmussen poll of this race, after months of trailing.) I wonder how much of that has to do with the reveal of Noem's atrocious driving record, given voters' memories of leadfooted ex-Rep. Bill Janklow?

DLCC: If you're looking to really micro-target your financial contributions to where your dollars get stretched the furthest and the leverage is the greatest (given the knife-edges on which many state legislatures, and the entire 2012 redistricting process, rest) the DLCC has rolled out its "Essential Races" program. This points to some of the tightest races in the tightest chambers; the link details their first wave of 20.

CA-Init: There are some Field Poll leftovers to look at, concerning three of the biggest initiatives on the ballot this year. The news is good all around, although the margins aren't decisive: Proposition 19 (marijuana legalization) is passing 49-42 (it was failing 44-48 in the July Field Poll). Proposition 23 (undoing greenhouse gases limiting legislation) is failing 34-45. And maybe most importantly, Proposition 25 (allowing budget passage with a simple majority) is passing 46-30.

Florida: Mason-Dixon's latest Florida poll (we gave you Sen and Gov numbers over the weekend) has a lot of miscellany in the fine print that's worth checking out. They find the GOP leading narrowly in three major downballot races: Pam Bondi leads Dan Gelber in the AG race 38-34, Jeff Atwater leads Loranne Ausley in the CFO race 29-27, and Adam Putnam leads Scott Maddox in the Ag Comm race 36-32. They also find that Amendment 4 has a shot at passing; it's up 53-26, although bear in mind that you need to clear 60% for a Florida initiative. Amendment 4 would require localities to put changes to comprehensive zoning plans up to a public vote; Josh Goodman has a good discussion of it today along with several other initiatives in other states that may pass despite having both sides of the entire political establishment lined up against them.

SSP TV:
FL-Sen: Marco Rubio rolls out his first ad en espanol, a biographical spot
PA-Sen: How many freakin' ads has Pat Toomey come out with? Anyway, here's another one
CT-02: Joe Courtney stresses his independence, especially regarding TARP
CT-05: Chris Murphy's new ad focuses on stopping outsourcing
PA-03, PA-11: The DCCC is out with new ads in the 3rd and 11th, continuing the trends of hitting Mike Kelly as out-of-touch millionaire and hitting Lou Barletta for sucking as Hazleton mayor

Rasmussen:
AL-Sen: William Barnes (D) 30%, Richard Shelby (R-inc) 58%
CT-Sen: Richard Blumenthal (D) 50%, Linda McMahon (R) 45%
DE-Sen: Chris Coons (D) 49%, Christine O'Donnell (R) 40%, Mike Castle (I) 5%
GA-Sen: Michael Thurmond (D) 36%, Johnny Isakson (R-inc) 52%
IA-Gov: Chet Culver (D-inc) 37%, Terry Branstad (R) 55%
ND-Sen: Tracy Potter (D) 25%, John Hoeven (R) 68%
SC-Sen: Alvin Greene (D) 21%, Jim DeMint (R-inc) 64%

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SSP Daily Digest: 8/23 (Afternoon Edition)

by: Crisitunity

Mon Aug 23, 2010 at 3:27 PM EDT

KY-Sen: The online "moneybomb" technique seemed to help Rand Paul get a lot of traction in the early months of the Republican primary, but his latest few scheduled moneybombs have been fizzles. Yesterday's was a case in point: $258K is still a lot of dough for two days, but it was far short of the planned $400K. (And every penny counts: Paul reported only $319K CoH at the end of June.) Are Paulists feeling tapped out these days, or are his early-adopting libertarian-minded nationwide fans chafing that he's increasingly parting ways with his dad and becoming more of an NRSC sock puppet? (As seen just today with their divergence over Cordoba House.)

PA-Sen: Two pieces of good news in Pennsylvania: first, Joe Sestak is rolling out an endorsement from Chuck Hagel, the former GOP Senator from Nebraska who was on the short list for an Obama cabinet position. Not that Hagel is probably a household name in the Keystone State, but it certainly burnishes Sestak's bipartisan (and military) cred. Also, the DSCC is planning to spend even more on this race, letting Sestak, presumably, keep marshaling his resources for a big late push (the kind that helped him shoot past Arlen Specter in the closing weeks in the primary). They're spending $546K on broadcast media this week, on top of $494K last week; the DSCC's total spending and reservations so far in this race amount to $4.4 million.

WI-Sen: Hmmm, maybe all that sunspot and Greenland stuff actually started to stick. Republican wingnut candidate Ron Johnson is trying to undo the crazy on his various climate change comments, offering the usual last refuge of the pathetic walkback, that his remarks were "taken out context." Johnson is also trying to walk back his previous support for elimination of the home mortgage interest deduction, about as popular a provision of the tax code as there is. If you wanted to simultaneously set back both the entire real estate business and the middle class by several decades, eliminating the home mortgage interest deduction would be a good way to do it.  

IL-Gov: The exodus from the field of broken dreams that is the Pat Quinn camp just continues. Today, the departee is CoS Jerry Stermer, and while it isn't a rancorous departure (as was the case with Quinn breaking it off with David Axelrod's media firm last week), he is resigning to avoid being a distraction with an ethics investigation (over whether he sent political e-mails from his government account) hanging overhead. With Quinn seemingly circling the drain, that ain't gonna help.

AZ-05: In the "ooops, spoke too soon" department, presumed Republican primary frontrunner David Schweikert opted for a last-minute ad buy for $14K on cable, apparently worried that he was losing momentum going into tomorrow's primary. Last week, his camp had said he was so far ahead they were just going to go dark and start saving money for the general. Meanwhile, next door in AZ-03, Steve Moak, the only candidate who rivals Ben Quayle on the money front, is out with a new ad hitting Quayle over his pseudonymous tenure writing for the website that was the precursor to TheDirty.com.

FL-24: Wow, Craig Miller actually went there: he sent out a last-minute mailer going after the widely-known, but not yet broached in the campaign context, issue of GOP primary opponent Karen Diebel's mental stability. Maybe he'd been planning to do a last-minute boom-lowering all along, but it seems kind of strange, as Miller's millions have seemed to have the race locked down, not requiring him to get his hands dirty. Was there a last minute Diebel surge (she's been attacking him on being too soft on immigration)?

TX-23: Republican challenger Quico Canseco is out with an internal poll, via OnMessage, giving him a small lead over incumbent Dem Rep. Ciro Rodriguez. The poll gives Canseco a 43-37 lead, a turnaround from Rodriguez's lead of 48-45 in a Canseco poll from June.

Ads: Bobby Bright's out with his first ad, in AL-02. SSP southern correspondent Trent Thompson's description of the ad says it all, so I'll just quote him: ""Bobby" voted against everything Obama. Also, he kisses a baby." Ben Chandler is also out with an ad in KY-06, touting his saving the local VA Hospital. Finally, Rick Boucher's GOP opponent, Morgan Griffith, is also out with a new TV spot, reminding you that he's a conservative. (As an interesting ethno-linguistic observation, one clear indicator that VA-09 is an Appalachian district, not a Southern district, is that Griffith cites "Warshington" as being the source of all our problems.) NWOTSOTB, in all three cases.

We Ask America: The quirky little Republican-linked pollster that could, We Ask America, is out with an array of polls in Illinois (the state where they're based). They find Mark Kirk leading Alexi Giannoulias 39-33, but they also look at three House races. In fact, they looked at these races back in March, so we now have trendlines. In IL-11, they find Adam Kinzinger leading Debbie Halvorson 52-32 (down from an already bad 42-30); in IL-14, they have Randy Hultgren leading Bill Foster 44-37 (also down, from 38-36). The good news: they have Dan Seals leading Bob Dold! in IL-10, 43-40 (Seals led 40-37 in March, so he's holding his own). We've also discovered a few recent WAA odds and ends that we didn't cover earlier: they also see Roy Blunt leading Robin Carnahan 47-43 in MO-Sen, and see Sean Duffy leading 42-33 over Julie Lassa in WI-07.

Rasmussen:
AL-Sen: William Barnes (D) 28%, Richard Shelby (R-inc) 60%
AR-Gov: Mike Beebe (D-inc) 53%, Jim Keet (R) 33%
MD-Sen: Barbara Mikulski (D-inc) 55%, Eric Wargotz (R) 39%
TX-Gov: Bill White (D) 41%, Rick Perry (R-inc) 49%

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SSP Daily Digest: 7/27 (Afternoon Edition)

by: Crisitunity

Tue Jul 27, 2010 at 4:04 PM EDT

CO-Sen: Andrew Romanoff, who's had seeming trouble articulating a motivation for his primary campaign against appointee Michael Bennet (other than "it was my turn"), still seems like he's confident in his chances of winning the primary. He just doubled down by selling his house and lending the $325K proceeds to his campaign (or maybe he was just eager to sell the dump, anyway). Romanoff had $464K CoH on June 30, but most of that has been gobbled up by ad buys. Also on the ad front in Colorado, the shadowy, Ken Buck-backing 501(c)(4) Americans for Job Security is out with another anti-Jane Norton ad, attacking her over her support for anti-TABOR Proposition C.

DE-Sen: Christine O'Donnell, the forgotten right-winger in the Delaware GOP primary against Rep. Mike Castle, keeps hitting wingnut paydirt. Having already secured the Susan B. Anthony List endorsement, she's now getting backing from two more of the engines pulling the crazy train: the Tea Party Express (the corporate astroturf umbrella org for the teabaggers), and Concerned Women for America (Phyllis Schlafly's group). The Politico article includes a litany of O'Donnell's baggage as rattled off by Delaware's GOP state party chair, so it seems like the establishment is taking note and starting to push back.

FL-Sen: Well, that was fast; I guess when you have a few hundred million dollars at your disposal, you can whip up ads pretty quickly (or just have  a couple extra sitting in the can, ready to go). With Kendrick Meek having launched his first Dem primary ad yesterday, a negative ad against Jeff Greene, today Greene hit back with two different anti-Meek ads. One focuses on Meek's family connections to a corrupt developer, and the other focuses on the cigar-maker carveout from SCHIP. As always, NWOTSOB.

KY-Sen: The Jack Conway camp has leaked Daily Kos an internal from Benenson giving them a 44-44 tie with Rand Paul, and a 48-46 lead over Paul with leaners pushed. The poll's a little stale, having been taken June 26-29, but it's good news; if nothing else, it's confirmation for the most recent PPP poll, which also saw a tie. We have a copy of the full memo here. Another small reason for optimism in the Bluegrass State: there's word of a new (and apparently nameless, for now) 527 headed by former progressive Democratic '08 Senate candidate Andrew Horne, that will be playing in the Kentucky race. They have $2 million pledged by various business leaders to work with, and they've lined up Anzalone Liszt and Zata|3 to work for them.

CT-Gov: This is one of my favorite headlines since "Lamborn Primaried by Local Crank": "Looney Backs Malloy in Governor's Bid." (Martin Looney is the state Senate majority leader.)

FL-Gov: Taking a page from Raul Labrador, Bill McCollum's out with an internal. His own poll from McLaughlin & Associates finds him trailing Rick Scott 37-31. (The polling memo actually has the audacity to ask, "Why hasn't Rick Scott done better?")

MD-Gov: Local pollster Gonzales Research is out with their second look at the Maryland gubernatorial race; they find a 45-42 lead for Martin O'Malley over Robert Ehrlich, which very closely echoes the PPP poll from a few weeks ago. Their trendlines go back to January, when a Ehrlich re-run was only vaguely being discussed; then, O'Malley had a 9-point lead.

MN-Gov: Fundraising reports in Minnesota were due yesterday. GOPer Tom Emmer might well need to use that giant jar of pennies he had dumped on his table in order to buy some ad time, as he's lagging on the financial front. Emmer has less than $300K CoH and raised under $800K in the first six months of the year, while DFL endorsee Margaret Anderson Kelliher has $385K CoH and raised about $1 million. Kelliher, however, still might not get out of her primary against two rich guys: Matt Entenza raised $360K during that period but also loaned himself $3.5 million (and spent $3.9 million, mostly on TV ads). Mark Dayton hasn't filed yet.

OR-Gov: Republican Chris Dudley is padding his financial advantage over John Kitzhaber in Oregon's gubernatorial race: he's raised $850K since the May 18 primary, compared with $269K for Kitzhaber. Dudley has raised $2.6 million all cycle long, compared with Kitz's $1.7 million. (One historical note, though: Ted Kulongoski was easily re-elected in 2006 despite being outspent by opponent Ron Saxton and his $7 million.) Much of Dudley's money seems to be coming in from out-of-state, as the former NBA player and current financial advisor is getting a lot of Wall Street and sports industry money. Interestingly, the timber industry, usually a Republican force in the state, is staying largely on the sidelines this election, as they're fairly friendly with Kitzhaber.

TN-Gov: Having nowhere to go in the GOP primary polls but up, Lt. Governor Ron Ramsey is going the out-and-proud Islamophobe route. Spurred on by the ongoing controversy over the construction of a mosque in Murfreesboro, Ramsey, in response to a question at an appearance, said, "You could even argue whether being a Muslim is actually a religion or is it a nationality, way of life or cult, whatever you want to call it."

ID-01: Raul Labrador, a conspicuous absence from the NRCC's anyone-with-a-pulse Young Guns program, says that he "opted out" of the Young Guns. (Yeah... just like I "opted out" of junior prom.) He didn't give a specific reason why, although tensions between him and the NRCC have been high.

MN-03: I'm not exactly sure why Jim Meffert thought it was a good idea to release this internal, but I guess he needed to let people know that he's actually contesting this thing. His poll (no mention of the pollster in the article) finds him trailing freshman GOP Rep. Erik Paulsen 44-27, with 7% for an IP candidate. The number he'd probably like us to focus on is that Paulsen has only a 33% re-elect (although only 12% say they're a definite "no").

MN-06: Seems like Johnny Law doesn't like Michele Bachmann's particularly freaky brand of law and order: the state's police union, the Minnesota Police and Peace Officers Association, just gave its endorsement to Dem Tarryl Clark in the 6th.

RI-01: The American Federation of Teachers, having just endorsed indie Lincoln Chafee instead of Dem Frank Caprio, also went for unconventional with their 1st District endorsement. They went for young up-and-comer state Rep. David Segal, who's tried to stake out the most progressive turf in the Dem primary, instead of Providence mayor and presumed frontrunner David Cicilline.

TN-09: On top of having gotten SSP's annual John Hostettler Award for outstanding performance at filing quarterly reports (for failing to electronically file his FEC report on time, despite having only $19K CoH), Willie Herenton got a much worse piece of news: the Congressional Black Caucus either doesn't think much of his chances, or think much of him. Although they wouldn't let Steve Cohen join their club in 2007, they did just endorse him, and sent $5,000 his way.

Rasmussen:
AL-Sen: William Barnes (D) 29%, Richard Shelby (R-inc) 59%
AZ-Sen (D): Rodney Glassman (D) 15%, Cathy Eden (D) 11%, Randy Parraz (D) 10%, John Dougherty (D) 7%
CO-Sen: Andrew Romanoff (D) 40%, Jane Norton (R) 44%
CO-Sen: Michael Bennet (D-inc) 39%, Jane Norton (R) 48%
CO-Sen: Andrew Romanoff (D) 42%, Ken Buck (R) 48%
CO-Sen: Michael Bennet (D-inc) 42%, Ken Buck (R) 48%
MA-Gov: Deval Patrick (D-inc) 38%, Charlie Baker (R) 32%, Tim Cahill (I) 17%

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AL-Gov: Davis Leads in Primary, But Dems Trail in General

by: DavidNYC

Mon May 24, 2010 at 12:53 PM EDT

Research 2000 for Daily Kos (5/17-19, likely voters, no trendlines):

Democratic Primary:

Artur Davis (D): 41
Ron Sparks (D): 33
Other: 8
Undecided: 11
(MoE: ±5%)

Republican Primary:

Bradley Byrne (R): 29
Roy Moore (R): 23
Tim James (R): 17
Robert Bentley (R): 9
Bill Johnson (R): 3
Other: 2
Undecided: 17
(MoE: ±5%)

In my role as Daily Kos contributing editor, I asked Markos to poll this race because of a string of stories (as well as rumors of polls) claiming that Rep. Artur Davis was suffering in his primary against Ag. Comm'r Ron Sparks due to his vote against healthcare reform. Of course, since this is our first poll here, it's hard to tell if there's any truth to this narrative without trendlines. On the one hand, perhaps not - Davis does, after all, have an eight-point lead. On the other hand, that doesn't seem so imposing, given that Davis has outspent Sparks by a large margin. In any event, the numbers are not too far off from a recent Davis internal, which had him up 46-33. Sparks hasn't released any of his own polls.

As for the GOP race, crazy Ten Commandments judge Roy Moore could make this interesting. If no candidate gets 50% on June 1st, there will be a run-off on July 13th. As you'll see below, Dems perform best against Moore, who is currently vying for the top spot with ex-state Sen. Bradley Byrne. Tim James, son of former governor Fob and notorious for his recent "This is Alabama - we speak English" is also in contention. The internal polling has been all over the map here, with James claiming the lead in one of his own surveys.

General Election:

Artur Davis (D): 31
Bradley Byrne (R): 48
Other: 7
Undecided: 14

Artur Davis (D): 38
Roy Moore (R): 43
Other: 9
Undecided: 10

Artur Davis (D): 37
Tim James (R): 45
Other: 8
Undecided: 10

Ron Sparks (D): 34
Bradley Byrne (R): 45
Other: 9
Undecided: 12

Ron Sparks (D): 40
Roy Moore (R): 41
Other: 12
Undecided: 7

Ron Sparks (D): 38
Tim James (R): 44
Other: 19
Undecided: 8
(MoE: ±4%)

The numbers look pretty bad for Dems - but it's Alabama in a very difficult year, so you can't say any of this is unexpected. I do think there is something disturbing about these results, though. Sparks and Davis have almost identical statewide favorables - 42-38 and 44-40 respectively. Why, then, does Davis perform consistently worse across the board against all Republicans? Though Davis is African American, he and Sparks do equally well among blacks in head-to-heads with Republicans. But Sparks does consistently better among whites. In any event, Dems should still be rooting for a Roy Moore primary win.

R2K also looked at the sleepy Senate race:

Democratic Primary:

William Barnes (D): 39
Simone De Moore(D): 11
Other: 3
Undecided: 47
(MoE: ±5%)

Republican Primary:

Richard Shelby (R-inc): 64
Clint Moser (R): 14
Undecided: 23
(MoE: ±5%)

General Election:

William Barnes (D): 33
Richard Shelby (R-inc): 57
Other: 3
Undecided: 7

Simone De Moore(D): 27
Richard Shelby (R-inc): 62
Other: 3
Undecided: 8
(MoE: ±4%)

Since we were already in the field, we were curious to know if Sen. Richard Shelby's teabagging opponent was getting any traction. Answer: no. In fact, Shelby's the only candidate among these four to have even filed an FEC report - and the 76-year-old Shelby has an amazing $17 million on hand.

Discuss :: (16 Comments)

Rasmussen Reports, You Decide, Vol. 13

by: Crisitunity

Sun Apr 04, 2010 at 2:28 AM EDT

Ever take the week off, and come back to find your inbox full of spam?

AL-Gov (3/29, likely voters):

Artur Davis (D): 33
Bradley Byrne (R): 50
Some other: 9
Not sure: 9

Artur Davis (D): 36
Kay Ivey (R): 43
Some other: 12
Not sure: 8

Artur Davis (D): 35
Tim James (R): 49
Some other: 10
Not sure: 7

Artur Davis (D): 44
Roy Moore (R): 40
Some other: 11
Not sure: 6

Ron Sparks (D): 33
Bradley Byrne (R): 43
Some other: 11
Not sure: 13

Ron Sparks (D): 33
Kay Ivey (R): 39
Some other: 15
Not sure: 13

Ron Sparks (D): 34
Tim James (R): 38
Some other: 13
Not sure: 14

Ron Sparks (D): 40
Roy Moore (R): 35
Some other: 15
Not sure: 10
(MoE: ±4.5%)

AL-Sen (3/29, likely voters):

William Barnes (D): 32
Richard Shelby (R): 59
Some other: 3
Not sure: 6
(MoE: ±4.5%)

AR-Sen (3/30, likely voters, 3/1 in parentheses):

Blanche Lincoln (D): 36 (39)
John Boozman (R): 51 (48)
Some other: 6 (6)
Not sure: 7 (7)

Blanche Lincoln (D): 36 (40)
Gilbert Baker (R): 51 (45)
Some other: 6 (6)
Not sure: 7 (8)

Blanche Lincoln (D): 35 (38)
Kim Hendren (R): 51 (43)
Some other: 5 (7)
Not sure: 8 (12)

Blanche Lincoln (D): 36 (41)
Curtis Coleman (R): 48 (43)
Some other: 7 (7)
Not sure: 8 (10)

Blanche Lincoln (D): 35 (38)
Jim Holt (R): 51 (45)
Some other: 7 (6)
Not sure: 7 (10)

Bill Halter (D): 34 (33)
John Boozman (R): 48 (55)
Some other: 8 (6)
Not sure: 11 (9)

Bill Halter (D): 36 (37)
Gilbert Baker (R): 44 (43)
Some other: 7 (5)
Not sure: 12 (13)

Bill Halter (D): 34 (35)
Kim Hendren (R): 42 (42)
Some other: 10 (7)
Not sure: 13 (15)

Bill Halter (D): 37 (35)
Curtis Coleman (R): 40 (38)
Some other: 10 (9)
Not sure: 13 (18)

Bill Halter (D): 34 (38)
Jim Holt (R): 43 (42)
Some other: 9 (8)
Not sure: 14 (12)
(MoE: ±4.5%)

FL-Gov (3/18, likely voters, 2/18 in parentheses):

Alex Sink (D): 36 (35)
Bill McCollum (R): 47 (48)
Some other: 5 (4)
Not sure: 12 (12)
(MoE: ±3%)

FL-Sen (3/18, likely voters, 2/18 in parentheses):

Kendrick Meek (D): 34 (32)
Charlie Crist (R): 45 (48)
Some other: 11 (11)
Not sure: 10 (9)

Kendrick Meek (D): 34 (31)
Marco Rubio (R): 48 (51)
Some other: 6 (7)
Not sure: 11 (11)
(MoE: ±3%)

HI-Gov (3/24, likely voters):

Neil Abercrombie (D): 54
Duke Aiona (R): 31
Some other: 6
Not sure: 9

Mufi Hannemann (D): 50
Duke Aiona (R): 29
Some other: 14
Not sure: 7
(MoE: ±4.5%)

HI-Sen (3/24, likely voters):

Dan Inouye (D): 65
Linda Lingle (R): 25
Some other: 3
Not sure: 6
(MoE: ±4.5%)

IA-Gov (3/17, likely voters, 2/18 in parentheses):

Chet Culver (D): 36 (37)
Terry Branstad (R): 52 (53)
Some other: 6 (6)
Not sure: 6 (4)

Chet Culver (D): 40 (40)
Bob Vander Plaats (R): 42 (46)
Some other: 8 (7)
Not sure: 11 (7)

Chet Culver (D): 40
Rod Roberts (R): 38
Some other: 10
Not sure: 13
(MoE: ±4.5%)

ID-Gov (3/23, likely voters):

Keith Allred (D): 28
Butch Otter (R): 60
Some other: 3
Not sure: 9
(MoE: ±4.5%)

ID-Sen (3/23, likely voters):

Generic Democrat (D): 28
Mike Crapo (R): 60
Some other: 3
Not sure: 9
(MoE: ±4.5%)

MI-Gov (D) (3/24, likely voters):

Andy Dillon (D): 12
Alma Wheeler Smith (D): 10
Virg Bernero (D): 8
Some other: 17
Not sure: 53
(MoE: ±4%)

MI-Gov (R) (3/24, likely voters):

Peter Hoekstra (R): 27
Rick Snyder (R): 18
Mike Cox (R): 13
Mike Bouchard (R): 6
Some other: 5
Not sure: 32
(MoE: ±4%)

NC-Sen (3/22, likely voters, 2/23 in parentheses):

Elaine Marshall (D): 35 (34)
Richard Burr (R): 51 (50)
Some other: 6 (4)
Not sure: 8 (12)

Cal Cunningham (D): 32 (29)
Richard Burr (R): 51 (51)
Some other: 7 (6)
Not sure: 11 (14)
(MoE: ±4.5%)

ND-AL (3/23-24, likely voters, 2/9-10 in parentheses):

Earl Pomeroy (D): 44 (40)
Rick Berg (R): 51 (46)
Some other: 1 (3)
Not sure: 4 (11)
(MoE: ±4.5%)

ND-Sen (3/23-24, likely voters, 2/9-10 in parentheses):

Tracy Potter (D): 25 (17)
John Hoeven (R): 68 (71)
Some other: 2 (4)
Not sure: 5 (8)
(MoE: ±4.5%)

NM-Gov (3/24, likely voters):

Diane Denish (D): 51
Susana Martinez (R): 32
Some other: 7
Not sure: 10

Diane Denish (D): 52
Pete Domenici Jr. (R): 35
Some other: 6
Not sure: 6

Diane Denish (D): 45
Allen Weh (R): 35
Some other: 7
Not sure: 13

Diane Denish (D): 52
Janice Arnold-Jones (R): 30
Some other: 6
Not sure: 12

Diane Denish (D): 43
Doug Turner (R): 34
Some other: 7
Not sure: 16
(MoE: ±4.5%)

NY-Gov (3/29, likely voters, 3/1 in parentheses):

Andrew Cuomo (D): 52 (55)
Rick Lazio (R): 29 (30)
Some other: 6 (5)
Not sure: 13 (10)

Andrew Cuomo (D): 51 (56)
Carl Paladino (R): 28 (27)
Some other: 6 (6)
Not sure: 15 (11)

Andrew Cuomo (D): 50
Steve Levy (R): 26
Some other: 7
Not sure: 17
(MoE: ±4.5%)

OH-Gov (3/30, likely voters, 3/4 in parentheses):

Ted Strickland (D): 45 (38)
John Kasich (R): 46 (49)
Some other: 2 (6)
Not sure: 7 (7)
(MoE: ±4.5%)

OH-Sen (3/30, likely voters, 3/4 in parentheses):

Lee Fisher (D): 38 (39)
Rob Portman (R): 43 (44)
Some other: 4 (5)
Not sure: 14 (12)

Jennifer Brunner (D): 38 (37)
Rob Portman (R): 45 (43)
Some other: 4 (6)
Not sure: 13 (15)
(MoE: ±4.5%)

RI-Gov (3/25, likely voters, 2/25 in parentheses):

Frank Caprio (D): 28 (27)
John Robitaille (R): 22 (19)
Lincoln Chafee (I): 39 (37)
Not sure: 11 (17)

Patrick Lynch (D): 22 (24)
John Robitaille (R): 26 (22)
Lincoln Chafee (I): 37 (38)
Not sure: 15 (16)
(MoE: ±4.5%)

SD-AL (3/25, likely voters, 2/23 in parentheses):

Stephanie Herseth Sandlin (D): 44 (45)
Chris Nelson (R): 42 (38)
Some other: 6 (6)
Not sure: 9 (11)

Stephanie Herseth Sandlin (D): 46 (49)
Kristi Noem (R): 35 (34)
Some other: 8 (4)
Not sure: 10 (13)

Stephanie Herseth Sandlin (D): 45 (51)
Blake Curd (R): 33 (33)
Some other: 8 (5)
Not sure: 14 (12)
(MoE: ±4.5%)

SD-Gov (3/25, likely voters, 2/23 in parentheses):

Scott Heidepriem (D): 32 (32)
Dennis Daugaard (R): 49 (41)
Some other: 6 (7)
Not sure: 13 (19)

Scott Heidepriem (D): 37 (34)
Dave Knudson (R): 32 (31)
Some other: 13 (13)
Not sure: 19 (22)

Scott Heidepriem (D): 39 (37)
Gordon Howie (R): 34 (29)
Some other: 9 (12)
Not sure: 17 (22)
(MoE: ±4.5%)

TN-Gov (3/22, likely voters):

Mike McWherter (D): 27
Bill Haslam (R): 45
Some other: 5
Not sure: 23

Mike McWherter (D): 29
Ron Ramsey (R): 43
Some other: 5
Not sure: 23

Mike McWherter (D): 31
Zach Wamp (R): 41
Some other: 7
Not sure: 22

Kim McMillan (D): 26
Bill Haslam (R): 46
Some other: 5
Not sure: 23

Kim McMillan (D): 25
Ron Ramsey (R): 43
Some other: 8
Not sure: 24

Kim McMillan (D): 29
Zach Wamp (R): 42
Some other: 5
Not sure: 25
(MoE: ±4.5%)

WY-Gov (3/25, likely voters):

Mike Massie (D): 25
Matt Mead (R): 43
Some other: 8
Not sure: 24

Mike Massie (D): 23
Ron Micheli (R): 45
Some other: 8
Not sure: 25

Mike Massie (D): 26
Rita Meyer (R): 43
Some other: 7
Not sure: 25

Mike Massie (D): 26
Colin Simpson (R): 41
Some other: 8
Not sure: 25
(MoE: ±4.5%)

Discuss :: (25 Comments)

SSP Daily Digest: 1/25

by: Crisitunity

Mon Jan 25, 2010 at 3:26 PM EST

Site News: SSP is instituting a one-week waiting period for new users to post diaries. New accounts can still post comments right away.

AL-Sen: This race has to rank somewhere around 32 or 33 in order of likelihood to change hands among Senate races this November, but at least we're showing up to compete: Birmingham-area attorney William Barnes announced that he'll run against Richard Shelby for Team Blue. It's his first run for office, and he says it'll be a "total grassroots" effort (which I think is code for "can't self-finance").

AZ-Sen: J.D. Hayworth and Dana Rohrabacher always seemed like kindred spirits in their particularly loudmouthed version of ultra-conservatism. That seems to continue today, as the Orange County Congressman gave his former colleague his first big-name endorsement in his newly-minted primary challenge to John McCain.

MA-Sen (pdf): There's a wealth of data in the Washington Post's post-game poll of the Massachusetts special election; it's well-worth looking through the whole memo. As with other polls, it points to a confluence of Republican enthusiasm and a Democratic failure to define the opposition (or themselves). Interestingly, only 60% of Brown voters say they favor Republican policies in Congress, and only 19% of them want him to work mostly to oppose Democratic policies instead of working to get Republican ideas into Democratic policy.

NY-Sen-B: His helicopter's warming up on the launch pad: Harold Ford Jr. seems to be moving closer to a Senate primary run. An ally says he's "80 percent" likely to run, and various steps he's taking suggest he's getting his ducks in a row - reserving web domains, and even crisscrossing the state, visiting that previously unknown sixth borough of New York City known as "Buffalo."

WA-Sen: Republican insiders seem to be wondering if they can use the Massachusetts results to coax a top-tier (or any-tier, really) Republican to get into the race against Patty Murray. The problem for them is that there are really only two GOPers who are appealing and moderate enough to play at the statewide level, and AG Rob McKenna already seems to have his ticket booked for a 2012 gubernatorial run. That leaves Rep. Dave Reichert, whose spokesperson made a run sound unlikely, while still saying he "is not one to shut doors on any opportunity."

IL-Gov: It may be news to you that someone named Bob Schillerstrom was running for Governor. Apparently it was news to the people of Illinois, too, as he dropped out at a strangely late stage (after consistently polling in the low single digits) and endorsed ex-AG Jim Ryan for the Republican nod. Schillerstrom's lack of traction is kind of strange, since, as DuPage County Board Chairman, he has nearly a million constituents. His name will remain on the ballots, which have already been printed.

MD-Gov: The one elected Republican who seemed to be following through on running for Maryland governor decided against it and opted for a different course instead. State Del. Patrick McDonough is now running for Baltimore County Executive. McDonough had previously said he wouldn't run if ex-Gov. Bob Ehrlich tried for a rematch, and while Ehrlich hasn't done anything public on that end, McDonough said he thinks Ehrlich is planning to do it.

OH-Gov: More polling bad news for incumbent Democratic Gov. Ted Strickland: he's trailing ex-Rep. John Kasich 51-45 in the new poll from the Univ. of Cincinnati. (Strickland led 49-46 in their previous poll in October.) One bit of the poll gives Strickland a potential way forward, though, if he can get his messaging to work: "When asked who's to blame for Ohio's economic misery, Bush ranked first, at 24 percent, followed by Wall Street and financial institutions at 23 percent and the U.S. Congress, 19 percent. President Barack Obama got the blame from 13 percent while just 3 percent blamed Strickland."

PA-Gov: Another poorly-kept rumor panned out to be true: that wealthy Philadelphia businessman Tom Knox was going to drop out of the race and endorse Allegheny Co. Exec Dan Onorato, which happened over the weekend. Knox said he could have funded a big ad blitz to get competitive (he'd been polling in single digits) but didn't want to hand ammunition to the Republicans. It's unclear whether the big beneficiary here is Onorato, though, or ex-Rep. Joe Hoeffel, who benefits from being the only Philadelphia-area candidate left.

SC-Gov: Looks like Lt. Gov. Andre Bauer isn't going to lay claim to the mantle of "compassionate conservatism" any time soon. The would-be successor to Mark Sanford compared poor people to stray animals over the weekend, saying: "You're facilitating the problem if you give an animal or a person ample food supply. They will reproduce, especially ones that don't think too much further than that." He tried walking that back today, regretting his choice of words and also adding that he's "not against animals," either.

UT-Gov: Enthusiasm about our chances in the Utah governor's race, thanks to the entry of Salt Lake County Mayor Peter Corroon and a recent Deseret News poll showing a competitive race, has to be tempered by the new Mason-Dixon poll of the race on behalf of the Salt Lake Tribune. They find incumbent GOP Gov. Gary Herbert with a more substantial lead over Corroon, 55-30.

WY-Gov: Former US Attorney Matt Mead made his widely-anticipated entry into the race official, as the backlog of top-tier Republicans running for the state house continues to grow. There's still no word from incumbent Dem Dave Freudenthal on what his plans are, regarding the possibility of challenging the state's term limits law and running for another term.

PA-08: Ex-Rep. Mike Fitzpatrick had only a short exploratory period before an official launch of his campaign to get back his seat from Rep. Patrick Murphy; he announced his candidacy at a public appearance on Saturday.

PA-10: Some Dude named Ted Yale announced his candidacy on the Republican side in the 10th. Considering that the news story doesn't even note his occupation, I'm not convinced Yale poses much of a threat, but there is something more interesting buried in the article... former US Attorney Thomas Marino is now "expected" to announce his candidacy next week.

Retread watch: Can you believe that more than 20 former House Republicans are running again this year, either for Senate, governor, their old seat or, in the case of Richard Pombo, some completely other seat? The Hill runs down the full list.

Redistricting: Republicans have realized that the way back to power lies in the state legislatures, via their control over the post-2010 redistricting process in most states, and they're budgeting accordingly. A new enterprise, the American Majority Project, and an old one, the Republican State Leadership Committee, are looking to get more involved in closely-controlled legislatures, and they have some big-name backers involved.

Discuss :: (35 Comments)

Senate 2010 outlook

by: Nathaniel90

Thu Jan 07, 2010 at 7:47 PM EST

A whopping eight months since my last Senate roundup, I figured it was high time to survey the landscape again. Overall, things have gotten significantly better for the Republicans in the last year, though not nearly as overwhelmingly so as the drama-prone national media might have you believe.

A continued Democratic majority in the Senate is all but assured after November (and is still quite likely in the House as well). The probable range, IMO, is a Democratic caucus in the 112th Senate of between 54 seats at the low end and 58 seats at the high end.

Read a race-by-race analysis (with pretty maps) below the fold...

There's More... :: (30 Comments, 1238 words in story)

AL-Sen: Shelby Says He'll Run Again

by: James L.

Wed Nov 12, 2008 at 5:38 PM EST

Laura Henderson, the press secretary for the office of Alabama Sen. Richard Shelby, sends us the following note after picking up on our discussion from yesterday:

I saw your posting from yesterday.  I can assure the readers of your blog that Senator Shelby has announced that he is running for reelection in 2010 and has every intention of remaining Alabama's senior senator.

Of course, plans and intentions can change -- for a while, it looked like Sens. Domenici and Hagel were going to run for another term this year. But at the age of 76 when he'll be up for re-election in 2010, Shelby does have at least one term's worth of gas left his tank, if he wants to use it. However, unlike Markos, I doubt that Shelby will face any Democrats of note if he indeed runs for another term.

Discuss :: (9 Comments)

AL-Sen, AL-Gov: Statewide Recruitment Thread

by: James L.

Tue Nov 11, 2008 at 12:00 PM EST

During each weekday this month, we'll be looking at a new state featuring senatorial or gubernatorial races in 2010, and asking for your thoughts on who Democrats should recruit to take on these races.

Yesterday was Alaska, and today we turn our eyes to Alabama. Incumbent Republican Gov. Bob Riley is term-limited, and several Democrats of note are giving this race a look (notably, Agriculture Commissioner and SSP hero Ron Sparks, Lt. Gov. Jim Folsom, Jr., and Rep. Artur Davis).

On the Senate side, GOP Sen. Richard Shelby has yet to announce his re-election plans, but with $13 million in his campaign's coffers, I highly doubt any Democrats of note will want to receive a pummeling by that kind of money. Still, Shelby will turn 76 in 2010, and a retirement is not out of the question. If that seat opened up, we could see a serious game of musical chairs up and down the ballot on both sides of the aisle.

So, whom should the Democrats recruit for these races? And whom might step forward from GOP bench for either of these races (assuming that Shelby retires)?

Discuss :: (56 Comments)

A look at the 2008 Senate races, August edition

by: BruinKid

Fri Aug 01, 2008 at 7:34 PM EDT

So with about three months to go, with Ted Stevens' indictment dominating the Senate news, it's time for another look at all the 2008 Senate races.  There are 35 seats up for election because of a scenario in Wyoming and Mississippi where both seats are up, due to the passing of Craig Thomas and the resignation of Trent Lott, respectively.  Now obviously, quite a few of the races are considered "safe" for the incumbent.  So what are the competitive races?

I'll rank these in terms of tiers.  The top tier will be the races where the party holding the seat has a real shot of switching (but I ain't guaranteeing anything).  The second tier are races that could become top tier races, but are not at this point.  Tier III are ones where a major event would need to happen for the seat to come into play.  And the safe seats?  Well, Mike Gravel has a better shot at winning the presidency than those incumbents have of losing their races.

This is meant to be a primer for both newcomers and political junkies alike, so some of the information may seem repetitive for you junkies out there.  Also see my previous May diary to see what things have changed since my last update.

There's More... :: (11 Comments, 4465 words in story)
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