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Governor

My Predictions for 2010

by: californianintexas

Tue Nov 02, 2010 at 5:04 AM EDT

At long last, I have finished making predictions, this time mixing my "gut feeling" predictions from earlier with the formula prediction methods I had used since 2006. I found the dearth of House polls very annoying, so many of my House predictions could be way off. We shall see in 12 or so hours.


GOVERNOR
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Alabama: Bentley by 15.33%
Alaska: Parnell by 15.67%
Arizona: Brewer by 15%
Arkansas: Beebe by 25.67%
California: Brown by 14.33%
Colorado: Hickenlooper by 3.67%
Connecticut: Malloy by 5.67%
Florida: Sink by 1.67%
Georgia: Deal by 7.67%
Hawaii: Abercrombie by 5%
Idaho: Otter by 22%
Illinois: Brady by 4.67%
Iowa: Branstad by 10.5%
Kansas: Brownback by 27%
Maine: LePage by 11.33%
Maryland: O'Malley by 12.67%
Massachusetts: Patrick by 2.67%
Michigan: Snyder by 16.67%
Minnesota: Dayton by 1.33%
Nebraska: Heineman by 42%
Nevada: Sandoval by 15.67%
New Hampshire: Lynch by 8.33%
New Mexico: Martinez by 8.33%
New York: Cuomo by 22%
Ohio: Strickland by 1%
Oklahoma: Fallin by 18.5%
Oregon: Kitzhaber by 1.67%
Pennsylvania: Corbett by 9%
Rhode Island: Chafee by 8%
South Carolina: Haley by 8.33%
South Dakota: Daugaard by 13.67%
Tennessee: Haslam by 28%
Texas: Perry by 1%
Utah: Herbert by 25.33%
Vermont: Shumlin by 2%
Wisconsin: Walker by 8.67%
Wyoming: Mead by 36%

OVERALL: Republicans gain a net of 5 for the majority of governorships, 27-22-1


SENATE
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Alabama: Shelby by 28%
Alaska: McAdams by 0.67% (Miller in 2nd; Murkowski in 3rd)
Arizona: McCain by 23%
Arkansas: Boozman by 19.67%
California: Boxer by 6.67%
Colorado: Buck by 1%
Connecticut: Blumenthal by 8%
Delaware: Coons by 14%
Florida: Rubio by 16%
Georgia: Isakson by 25.67%
Hawaii: Inouye by 24.5%
Idaho: Crapo by 44%
Illinois: Kirk by 4.33%
Indiana: Coats by 10.33%
Iowa: Grassley by 31%
Kansas: Moran by 40%
Kentucky: Paul by 3.18%
Louisiana: Vitter by 5.87%
Maryland: Mikulski by 26.67%
Missouri: Robin Carnahan by 0.67%
Nevada: Reid by 0.67%
New Hampshire: Ayotte by 15%
New York A: Schumer by 28.67%
New York B: Gillibrand by 18.33%
North Carolina: Burr by 12.33%
North Dakota: Hoeven by 47%
Ohio: Portman by 9.83%
Oklahoma: Coburn by 40%
Oregon: Wyden by 15.33%
Pennsylvania: Toomey by 4.67%
South Carolina: DeMint by 42% (The Green candidate may get more votes than the Greene candidate.)
South Dakota: Thune by 70-90%
Utah: Lee by 25.33%
Vermont: Leahy by 35%
Washington: Murray by 1.88%
West Virginia: Manchin by 1.33%
Wisconsin: Johnson by 7.67%

OVERALL: Republicans gain a net of 5, but Democrats retain control 54-46


HOUSE
Light Blue = D+1; Light Red = R+1; Red = R+2; Medium-Dark Red = R+3; Dark Red = R+4; Very Dark Red = R+5

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AL-02: Bright by 3.75%
AZ-01: Gosar by 4% (R pickup)
AZ-03: Hulburd by 1.17% (D pickup)
AZ-05: Schweikert by 0.67% (R pickup)
AZ-07: Grijalva by 4.08%
AZ-08: Giffords by 6.12%
AR-01: Crawford by 5.56% (R pickup)
AR-02: Griffin by 11% (R pickup)
CA-03: Lungren by 3.75%
CA-11: McNerney by 2.75%
CA-18: Cardoza by 10.75%
CA-20: Costa by 2.87%
CA-44: Calvert by 13.17%
CA-45: Bono Mack by 15%
CA-47: Sanchez by 8.25%
CO-03: Salazar by 1.25%
CO-04: Gardner by 3.58% (R pickup)
CT-04: Himes by 2.42%
CT-05: Murphy by 4.17%
DE-AL: Carney by 9.83% (D pickup)
FL-02: Southerland by 9.25% (R pickup)
FL-08: Webster by 3.25% (R pickup)
FL-22: Klein by 0.94%
FL-24: Adams by 6.25% (R pickup)
FL-25: Rivera by 3%
GA-02: Bishop by 2.67%
GA-08: Scott by 12.5% (R pickup)
HI-01: Hanabusa by 2.17% (D pickup)
ID-01: Minnick by 2.42%
IL-10: Seals by 7.6% (D pickup)
IL-11: Kinzinger by 5.13% (R pickup)
IL-14: Hultgren by 0.31% (R pickup)
IL-17: Schilling by 2.63% (R pickup)
IN-02: Donnelly by 4.38%
IN-08: Buschon by 8.75% (R pickup)
IN-09: Hill by 0.52%
IA-01: Braley by 10%
IA-02: Loebsack by 8.75%
IA-03: Boswell by 8.07%
KS-03: Yoder by 10% (R pickup)
KY-03: Yarmuth by 10.5%
KY-06: Chandler by 3.69%
LA-02: Richmond by 11.83% (D pickup)
LA-03: Landry by 12.25% (R pickup)
ME-01: Pingree by 12.42%
MD-01: Harris by 4.92% (R pickup)
MA-10: Keating by 2.63%
MI-01: Benishek by 2.71% (R pickup)
MI-07: Schauer by 0.44%
MI-09: Peters by 3.88%
MN-01: Walz by 10.42%
MN-08: Oberstar by 4.88%
MS-01: Childers by 0.88%
MS-04: Taylor by 2.69%
MO-03: Russ Carnahan by 5.63%
NV-03: Titus by 0.33%
NH-01: Guinta by 10.25% (R pickup)
NH-02: Bass by 0.08% (R pickup)
NJ-03: Runyan by 1.13% (R pickup)
NM-01: Barela by 0.63% (R pickup)
NM-02: Pearce by 4.83% (R pickup)
NY-01: Bishop by 7.56%
NY-13: McMahon by 7.5%
NY-19: Hayworth by 1.02% (R pickup)
NY-20: Gibson by 3.46% (R pickup)
NY-23: Owens by 0.88%
NY-24: Arcuri by 3.31%
NY-25: Maffei by 6.58%
NY-29: Zeller by 12.5% (R pickup)
NC-02: Etheridge by 2.5%
NC-07: McIntyre by 3.75%
NC-08: Kissell by 2.38%
NC-11: Shuler by 11.88%
ND-AL: Berg by 4.97% (R pickup)
OH-01: Chabot by 6.25% (R pickup)
OH-06: Wilson by 2.06%
OH-13: Sutton by 10%
OH-15: Stivers by 6.25% (R pickup)
OH-16: Renacci by 0.63% (R pickup)
OH-18: Gibbs by 1.88% (R pickup)
OR-05: Schrader by 2.75%
PA-03: Kelly by 6.25% (R pickup)
PA-04: Altmire by 12.58%
PA-07: Meehan by 3.83% (R pickup)
PA-08: Fitzpatrick by 4.53% (R pickup)
PA-10: Marino by 4.57% (R pickup)
PA-11: Barletta by 2.13% (R pickup)
PA-12: Critz by 5.38%
PA-15: Dent by 11.63%
RI-01: Cicilline by 4.94%
SC-05: Mulvaney by 4.75% (R pickup)
SD-AL: Noem by 0.31% (R pickup)
TN-04: DesJarlais by 1% (R pickup)
TN-06: Black by 12.5% (R pickup)
TN-08: Fincher by 9.5% (R pickup)
TX-17: Edwards by 1.72%
TX-23: Rodriguez by 2.15%
TX-27: Ortiz by 2.88%
VA-02: Rigell by 3.04% (R pickup)
VA-05: Hurt by 5.28% (R pickup)
VA-09: Boucher by 4.5%
WA-02: Larsen by 5.75%
WA-03: Herrera by 3.56% (R pickup)
WA-08: Reichert by 5.38%
WV-01: McKinley by 2.25% (R pickup)
WI-03: Kind by 8.75%
WI-07: Duffy by 7.21% (R pickup)
WI-08: Ribble by 5.46% (R pickup)

OVERALL: Republicans gain a net of 42 for control 220-215

Discuss :: (2 Comments)

California Race Chart 2010 (Part 1 of 3: Statewide Races)

by: californianintexas

Thu Oct 21, 2010 at 8:26 AM EDT

Cross-posted at Daily Kos, Calitics, and Democracy for California.

Here I will cover the eight constitutional offices, three State Supreme Court justice confirmations, and nine ballot measures. In the second diary, I will cover the U.S. Senate race and the House races, and in the third the state legislature. I will also combine my regular registration updates within the diaries.

Speaking of registration updates, as you will see in the layout of the statewide registration numbers, Democrats are more pumped up here, adding almost half a million voters to their rolls since 2008. The Republicans in comparison added just 13,000 in the same amount of time. So if you are looking for a lethargic Democratic base, look elsewhere because you won't find it here!

More info can be found at the 2010 Race Tracker.

Here is the most recent registration data: http://www.sos.ca.gov/election...
Here is the list of candidates that will appear on the ballot: http://www.sos.ca.gov/election...


Statewide Layout
Democrats: 7,531,986 (44.32%)
Republicans: 5,257,669 (30.94%)
Decline to State: 3,427,395 (20.17%)
Others: 776,025 (4.56%)


Key: I will list the incumbent first, in boldface (in the case of open seats, the incumbent party first without boldface), and all minor parties after the two major parties.

D: Democratic
R: Republican
L: Libertarian
G: Green
AI: American Independent
PF: Peace and Freedom
NP: Nonpartisan
SW: Socialist Workers


Race Ratings
Toss-up: Margin by less than 5%
Lean: Margin by 5-10%
Likely: Margin by 10-15%
Strong: Margin by 15-20%
Solid: Margin by more than 20%


Governor: Ex-eBay CEO Meg Whitman (R) vs. Attorney General Jerry Brown (D), Laura Wells (G), Dale Ogden (L), Chelene Nightingale (AI), Carlos Alvarez (PF), and Lea Sherman (SW-W/I)

Profile: Forgive me for being a broken record as I have been in past comments, but again, I see no way Whitman can win. Running as an outsider when the current governor, who also ran as an outsider, is leaving office with 20% approval ratings, is a surefire losing strategy. And pissing voters off by running ads nonstop and spending nine-figure sums of money while they're forced to cut back is not going to help at all. Brown is leading by example, running on a shoestring budget and calling for everyone to sacrifice, meaning no sacred cows. Polls may not yet show it, but in my opinion I think Whitman is finished. In fact, I'll be very surprised if she even manages to make it a low-teen loss.

Outlook: Likely to Strong Brown (D pickup)

Lieutenant Governor: Interim Lt. Gov. Abel Maldonado (R) vs. S.F. Mayor Gavin Newsom (D), Jimi Castillo (G), Pamela Brown (L), Jim King (AI), and C.T. Weber (PF)

Profile: Here we have quasi-incumbent Abel Maldonado, appointed after John Garamendi went to Congress, running to be elected in his own right against Newsom. While Maldonado is moderate for a Republican (though that is not saying much), being closely associated with Arnold is going to be a huge liability, which I do not think he will overcome.

Outlook: Lean Newsom (D pickup)

Attorney General: S.F. DA Kamala Harris (D) vs. L.A. DA Steve Cooley (R), Peter Allen (G), Timothy Hannan (L), Dianne Beall Templin (AI), and Robert J. Evans (PF)

Profile: This is the only statewide race in California I am worried about, and where my theory (that California has just become too Democratic for even a moderate Republican to win barring unusual circumstances) will be put to the test. Cooley is not that bad for a Republican, having had the audacity to stand against popular opinion of issues such as three strikes and Jessica's Law, though he is also against dispensaries for medical marijuana. Harris is a rising star in Democratic circles, and is a more formidable opponent than any of Cooley's challengers in the past. The wild card is the big enchilada of L.A. County, where Harris' name ID is low and she'd need to win by 18-20% to win statewide. I am of course pulling for Harris because I want our bench to stay nice and full for the inevitable retirements of DiFi probably in 2012, Boxer probably in 2016, and for the open governorship in 2014 or 2018; and also because she has courageously stood up to Prop 8, while Cooley pledges to defend it in court.

Outlook: Toss-Up

Secretary of State: SoS Debra Bowen (D) vs. businessman Damon Dunn (R), Ann Menasche (G), Christina Tobin (L), Merton D. Short (AI), and Marylou Cabral (PF)

Profile: Bowen is a lock for reelection.

Outlook: Solid Bowen

Treasurer: Treasurer Bill Lockyer (D) vs. State Senator Mimi Walters (R), Kit Crittenden (G), Edward Teyssier (L), Robert Lauten (AI), and Debra Reiger (PF)

Profile: Lockyer is a lock for reelection.

Outlook: Solid Lockyer

Controller: Controller John Chiang (D) vs. State Senator Tony Strickland (R), Ross Frankel (G), Andy Favor (L), Lawrence Beliz (AI), and Karen Martinez (PF)

Profile: A rematch from 2006, only with Democrats more pumped up, Chiang will win by a wider margin this time around.

Outlook: Strong to Solid Chiang

Insurance Commissioner: State Assemblyman Mike Villines (R) vs. State Assemblyman Dave Jones (D), William Balderston (G), Richard Bronstein (L), Clay Pedersen (AI), and Dina Padilla (PF)

Profile: In California, when a non-damaged Democrat is up against a generic Republican, the Democrat wins. Take it to the bank.

Outlook: Likely to Strong Jones (D pickup)

Superintendent of Public Instruction: Retired Superintendent Larry Aceves (NP) vs. State Assemblyman Tom Torlakson (NP)

Profile: Torlakson voted against Race to the Top and believes parents, teachers, students, and communities alike all need to come together to improve our schools, while Aceves believes that the problem with public schools is the teachers and hedge funds and billionaires should have more control over K-12 education. This will be a close one.

Outlook: Toss-Up


State Supreme Court confirmation - Tani Cantil-Sakauye: Voters are being asked whether to confirm Tani Cantil-Sakauye, Arnold's pick to replace Chief Justice Ron George. She is seen as uncontroversial, but likely to share Arnold's views on corporate power.

Outlook: Lean Confirm

State Supreme Court retention - Ming Chin: Chin was in the minority that voted to uphold the state's ban on marriage equality in 2008, and is one of the most right-wing justices on the state Supreme Court. I want to see him go, but it doesn't look likely.

Outlook: Likely Retention

State Supreme Court retention - Carlos Moreno: Moreno was the only justice who courageously voted to overturn Prop 8 at the State Supreme Court last year, and has been a reliable vote for equality and so should be voted to be retained.

Outlook: Likely Retention


Ballot Measures: Nine measures will be on the California ballot this fall. Information can be found here: http://www.smartvoter.org/2010... Field has released polls on 19, 23, and 25. http://www.field.com/fieldpoll...

Prop. 19 (Marijuana): If passed, this proposition would legalize the possession and growing of marijuana for personal use of adults 21 years and older, and allow state and local governments to regulate and tax related commercial activities. This proposition winning may make Washington reexamine its own policy towards marijuana, since what happens in California often makes it way to the other side of the country. Polls have shown Yes leading by single digits, so I'll call 19 a passing proposition.

My recommendation: YES!
10/21/2010 Outlook: Lean Pass

Prop. 20 (Redistricting Congressional Districts): This proposition would amend the state Constitution be amended to have the Citizens Redistricting Commission (prop 11 from 2008) redistrict for the U.S. House of Representatives seats. This initiative calls for each district being composed of people of the same income level and people with the same work opportunities, which to me feels like a backdoor to the old bygone Jim Crow ways. And passing this prop while giving free passes to Republican-controlled legislatures in Texas and Florida to gerrymander the hell out of those states is likely to put California at a disadvantage when competing for federal dollars. In addition, there is no way this commission can be held accountable.

My recommendation: NO!
10/21/2010 Outlook: Toss-up/Lean Fail

Prop. 21 (Vehicle License Surcharge): Establishes an $18 annual vehicle license surcharge to provide funds for maintaining the state parks and wildlife programs, and grants surcharged vehicles free admission to the state parks. Our cash-starved state parks could use the extra funds. In addition, the governor can't take funds from this coffer when other coffers are low. The tough economy may dampen the chances of this prop passing, though.

My recommendation: YES!
10/21/2010 Outlook: Toss-Up

Prop. 22 (Local Government Funds): Prohibits the state from taking funds used for local government services. It is well-intentioned but flawed. The cities and counties would get an immediate payment of over $1 billion, forcing further cuts to vital public services.

My recommendation: NO!
10/21/2010 Outlook: Toss-Up/Lean Fail

Prop. 23 (Suspension of AB 32): Backed by Texas oil interests, this prop would suspend AB 32 until unemployment dropped to an unrealistic 5.5% for a whole year and hurt the state's fledgling green jobs industry, doing the exact opposite of what its backers claim: it would actually kill more jobs than create more jobs. (Here in "business-friendly" Texas, the economic situation is also pretty bad, with unemployment here at its highest level since the late '80s [and me being unable to find a job to save my life] and an $18 billion deficit for the 2011 budget session, which will make 2003 look like the good old days.) Polls have shown a low double-digit lead for the No side.

My recommendation: NO! NO! NO!
10/21/2010 Outlook: Likely Fail

Prop. 24 (Corporate Loopholes): A long-overdue measure that would close corporate tax loopholes, reducing the budget deficit by $2 billion.

My recommendation: YES!
10/21/2010 Outlook: Toss-Up

Prop. 25 (Majority Vote on Budget): Another very long-overdue measure that eliminates the ridiculous 2/3rds rule to pass a budget in the state legislature. This prop is passing by double-digits in the polls.

My recommendation: YES! YES! YES!
10/21/2010 Outlook: Likely Pass

Prop. 26 (Two-Thirds Vote on Fees): Would require two-thirds vote approval for the imposition of certain state and local fees, including those on businesses that adversely impact the local community and environment. The last thing we need is higher vote thresholds.

My recommendation: NO! NO! NO!
10/21/2010 Outlook: Toss-Up

Prop. 27 (Redistricting Commission): This proposition eliminates the Citizens Redistricting Commission from Prop 11, which barely passed, suggesting some voters have some doubts about its effectiveness. This commission also gives Republicans much more power than their current share of the population.

My recommendation: YES!
10/21/2010 Outlook: Toss-Up

Discuss :: (17 Comments)

Handicapping MN-Gov

by: Mark

Thu Oct 07, 2010 at 8:39 PM EDT

I noticed today that Nate Silver crunched the numbers for the Minnesota Governor's race and determined that Democrat Mark Dayton had a 77% chance of victory.  Pretty generous.  With the exception of the 1994 Arne Carlson reelection landslide, Minnesota has had 20 years worth of gubernatorial elections that have had so many dramatic twists and turns that they could have been made into movies.  One actually was!  Given this record of volatility and other specifics of this contest, I think Nate's traditional calculus needs to be thrown out.  This race is far from over, and all three candidates still have a viable path to victory.
There's More... :: (85 Comments, 1597 words in story)

Pat Williams Running for Montana Governor?

by: Bob Brigham

Sat Sep 11, 2010 at 8:01 PM EDT

I doesn't seem like it was that long ago when Swing State Project celebrated the Democratic Sweep in Montana that elected Brian Schweitzer Governor. But next spring will be Governor Schweitzer's last legislative session and due to term limits the seat will be open in 2012.

The great news is that former Congressman Pat Williams is considering a run for governor!

There's More... :: (5 Comments, 323 words in story)

New 2010 projections: Dems lose House by 12

by: Twohundertseventy

Mon Sep 06, 2010 at 5:30 PM EDT

crossposted at StochasticDemocracy and DailyKos

These are the Labor Day election forecasts of Stochastic Democracy, in collaboration with Professor Wang of the Princeton Election Consortium. We  have launched a new Election Forecasting System for House, Senate and Gubernatorial Elections and for tracking the Generic Ballot.

But before we discuss the forecasts in more detail, let me first get out of the way who we are and why you should listen to what we're predicting:

Who we are (quoted from the FAQ at our site):

The team consists of David Shor, Harry Enten, and Rasmus Pianowski. David is a Math student currently visiting Princeton University as a Visiting Graduate Student. Harry is an undergraduate at Dartmouth and an intern at Pollster.com. Rasmus (that's me) is a freshman at University of Hamburg, he has done political consulting and Media Outreach work for Montana congressional candidate Tyler Gernant.

The site is closely affiliated to Professor Wang's Princeton Election Consortium.

Why you should listen to us

We have an outstanding track record.

In 2008, we correctly predicted the results of 49 of the 50 states in the Presidential Election, missing only Indiana (where we predicted that Obama had a 48% chance to win). We correctly predicted every single Senate and Gubernatorial election, and were off on the national popular vote for President by only 0.08%..

We also predicted that Obama would get 364 Electoral Votes, he ended up with 365 Electoral Votes.

In 2009, we correctly predicted the outcome of the 2009 Israeli Knesset election as well as 4 of the 5 notoriously hard to predict 2009 off-year elections- Pollster.com got only 2 correct, 538.com didn't even put up predictions.

And we have a solid forecasting methodology that combines advanced statistical techniques with a huge polling database- and we do account for House Effects, so that you can be sure that our ratings aren't swayed by Republican-leaning Rasmussen Reports polls too much.

Now on to the Forecasts.

Let me get out the bad news, and there is a lot of bad news, quickly:
The GOP is favored to take over the House, several Senate seats and Governorships.

SummaryLast

For a complete list of election results, please visit Stochastic Democracy, here you'll only find an analysis of several important races, maps and tables with results for select races.

Senate

SenateMap2

SenatePickup1

As you can see, things look rather badly for the Democrats on the Senate front. While Republicans seem like relatively heavy underdogs to get a majority in the Senate, they at least will pick up several seats.

Arkansas, North Dakota, Indiana and Delaware are gone. With deficits of more than 15% in even the closest of these four races, it doesn't make much sense to keep fighting except for helping down-ballot races.

In Pennsylvania, Joe Sestak has a fighting chance to mount yet another comeback, but so far his campaign hasn't really taken off and with less than two months to go until the election he's down against Pat Toomey by a bit less than 6%.

Colorado is close right now, even though the Republican candidate Ken Buck is ahead by a bit more than three points right now. The infighting among Colorado Conservatives in the Gubernatorial race might help Bennet to catch up.

In Florida the race is all but officially between incumbent Governor Charlie Crist, the Republican-turned Independent, and Tea Party favorite, Marco Rubio. The Democratic candidate Kendrick Meek has just about a 1 in 200 chance to win, while Rubio maintains a 4.5 point-advantage over Crist. The race is so unstable though that Crist can easily come back- or collapse.

In all other races, the incumbent party is currently favored (more or less) to retain their seats. For the Republicans, that means that Rob Portman (OH), Roy Blunt (MO), Rand Paul (KY), Richard Burr (NC) and the winner of the New Hampshire GOP primary (probably Kelly Ayotte) will more likely than not win.

The likely Democratic winners include Harry Reid (NV), Alexi Gianoullias (IL), Barbara Boxer (CA), Russ Feingold (WI)and Joe Manchin (WV), who is so heavily favored to retain the late Senator Byrd's seat that this race doesn't show up in the 'most likely pickups' table. On the other hand, Gianoullias, Reid and Feingold are all in races that could still go either way, even though they're favored over their respective opponents right now.



Gubernatorial races




GovMap

GovPickups

In the gubernatorial races, there are a few more highlights for Democrats, even though the bottom line looks rather bleak for Democrats here as well.

We are almost sure to lose six Governorships to the Republicans: In Kansas, Michigan, Iowa, Tennessee, Pennsylvania and Illinois. In every of those races except for Illinois, the Republican candidate is ahead by double digits, and most likely less than two months won't be enough to close that gap.

On the bright side, we're also almost certain to pick up the Governorships of Hawaii, Minnesota and Connecticut.

Maine is a race that doesn't qualify as a 'sure loss' yet, but it doesn't look good for Democrats, as Republican Paul LePage is leading Democrat Libby Mitchell by more than 8 points.

In the close battleground races it currently looks like Republican John Kasich is going to unseat incumbent Governor Ted Strickland of Ohio, Kasich is currently ahead by 4 points. The same could be said of New Mexico's gubernatorial race, where Republican Susana Martinez is favored to beat the Democratic Lieutenant Governor Diane Denish. Both of these races are close enough for Strickland and Denish to mount a comeback though.

Meanwhile, Democrats look like slight favorites in the gubernatorial elections of Florida, where Democrat Alex Sink leads the scandal-ridden Republican nominee Rick Scott, and in Rhode Island, where Democrat Frank Caprio is a slight favorite to win the governorship, edging former independent U.S. Senator Lincoln Chaffee. The Republican candidate is far behind.

Meanwhile, the true Toss-ups right now are in California (Brown vs. Whitman), Wisconsin (Barrett vs. Walker), and Oregon (Kitzhaber vs. Dudley). None of these races have a clear favorite right now, even though Barrett, Brown and Dudley would be slight favorites if the election was held today.

Democratic Governor Martin O'Malley (MD) and Republican Governor Rick Perry (TX)are both moderately favored to win their re-election bids against strong challengers, respectively former Governor Bob Ehrlich and Houston Mayor Bill White.

Incumbent party-candidates in New Hampshire (Lynch), Georgia (Deal), Massachusetts (Patrick) and in all races that aren't listed here are favored to win their elections.




U.S. House


HouseMap2

HousePickup3

I don't have enough space here to talk about all the interesting races as in the Senate and Governor sections, so let me just highlight the results of a couple of races that I know are dear to the netroots and of some especially close races:

In Florida-08 (Grayson-D), Alan Grayson is projected to lose to his challenger, Dan Webster, by 7.5%. He still has about a 25% chance to win reelection. Keep in mind that our model does not directly look at fundraising (it does look at Cook ratings though, and Cook does include fundraising in his ratings)- and Grayson has a gigantic warchest.

In Illinois-10 (open-R) Dan Seals is a slight favorite to finally become a U.S. Representative after twice unsuccessfully running against Mark Kirk.

In New York-20 (Murphy-D), Scott Murphy, who was elected with a strong Kossack phonebanking drive in the 2009 special election to replace Senator Gillibrand, looks like a slight favorite to win reelection. Bill Owens in NY-23 is a slight underdog though.

In Virginia-5 (Periello-D), red-district Progressive Tom Periello will almost certainly lose reelection.

In Idaho-1 (Minnick-D), the probably most conservative House Democrat Walt Minnick is projected to be a slight underdog in his reelection bid. You shouldn't take this number too seriously though: This race is extreme. Minnick was, and the model can't incorporate this, endorsed by the Tea Party Express and the Chamber of Commerce and praised by the Club for Growth, and the NRCC has already pulled resources from this district in the light of polls that show Minnick far ahead of his Republican opponent. Expect this number to shift as more polls come in, but right now our model isn't convinced of Minnick's staying power, as McCain won the district by a 61-35 margin in the 2008 Presidential Election while Minnick just barely beat a disliked Republican incumbent who won only 60% of his primary vote after winning a six-way GOP primary with 26% of the vote in 2006.

Races on knife's edge: Here you can really make a difference
Julie Lassa (D) vs. Sean Duffy (R) (WI-07, Obey retiring)
Rep. Gerry Connoly (D) vs. Keith Firmian (R) (VA-11)
Rep. Phil Hare (D) vs. Robby Schilling (R) (IL-17)
Colleen Hanabusa (D) (likely) vs. Rep. Charles Djou (R) (HI-01)
Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D) vs. Jesse Kelly (R) (AZ-08)

All of these 5 races are so close that every additional volunteer or donor might tip the race.

Summary:
Again, the bottom line isn't pretty: The Democrats are likely to lose the House, several Senate seats and more Governorships than they will pick up.
Talking about continuing the gains that Democrats made in 2006 and 2008 is irrational now- what we can all do is pick a few campaigns and invest a lot of our time and put our best efforts into limiting our losses.

What the DCCC does- cutting incumbents that can't win loose, might be a good strategy for private volunteers and donors as well.

Discuss :: (97 Comments)

IA-Gov news roundup

by: desmoinesdem

Fri Jul 02, 2010 at 3:23 PM EDT

I've been posting less often at Swing State Project lately because Iowa campaign news is keeping me busy at my home blog, Bleeding Heartland. From time to time I will keep SSPers up to date on our highest-profile races: Roxanne Conlin's bid against five-term Republican Senator Chuck Grassley and Democratic Governor Chet Culver's re-election campaign against four-term former Governor Terry Branstad.

After the jump you'll find lots of links on the Iowa governor's race since Branstad won the June 8 primary with about 50 percent of the vote to 41 percent for Bob Vander Plaats and 9 percent for Rod Roberts.

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Palin's Iowa endorsement could hurt her in 2012

by: desmoinesdem

Sat Jun 05, 2010 at 9:01 AM EDT

If Sarah Palin runs for president in 2012, she will regret endorsing Terry Branstad Thursday in the Republican primary for governor.

First thoughts on how this will play out are after the jump.

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AL Post Primary Rundown

by: Merlin

Wed Jun 02, 2010 at 1:10 PM EDT

Last night, the voters in Alabama voted on nominees for each party to contest seats up for election in November. Here is a rundown of how things went in the Yellowhammer State last night:
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IA-Gov: PPP polls GOP primary

by: desmoinesdem

Tue Jun 01, 2010 at 8:43 PM EDT

A week before Iowa's primary election, Public Policy Polling released a poll showing former Governor Terry Branstad leading Bob Vander Plaats 46 percent to 31 percent, with State Representative Rod Roberts well behind at 13 percent. The firm surveyed 474 "likely GOP primary voters" between May 25 and 27, and the margin of error is plus or minus 4.5 percent.  
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TX-Gov: Something Interesting Occurring in Texas and, No, It's Not Secession

by: sschmi4

Mon Apr 19, 2010 at 7:57 PM EDT

Rasmussen Reports released polling for the Texas Governor's race today. Surveying likely voters, they found incumbent Republican Gov. Rick Perry ahead 48% - 44% over former Houston Mayor Bill White.

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

(Per Political Wire)

There's More... :: (3 Comments, 724 words in story)
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