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Susan Garrett

IL-10: Seals In, Garrett Out

by: James L.

Tue Jul 21, 2009 at 1:47 PM EDT

The field to replace GOP Rep. Mark Kirk in the House is quickly taking shape. First, '06/'08 Democratic nominee Dan Seals is back for a third try, according to an e-mail that his campaign sent to his supporters (Lynn Sweet has the full text here). Dan Seals is a heck of a nice guy, and he was a prodigious fundraiser last cycle, but it remains to be seen if he'll enjoy anything close to the groundswell of financial and grassroots support that he received in the '08 Democratic primary, where he absolutely crushed attorney Jay Footlik.

One thing that could make his task easier, as he attempts this third bite at the apple, is the announcement from state Sen. Susan Garrett that she will be staying put in legislature. From Roll Call:

National Democrats have tried to recruit state Sen. Susan Garrett (D) in the 10th district for the past few cycles, but she has resisted a bid each time. In a phone interview Monday, Garrett said she has decided not to run for the open-seat race.

"I made the decision this weekend, albeit it wasn't easy," Garrett said. "I'm here to stay for a while."

Garrett is close with state Rep. Julie Hamos (D), who she said will move from Rep. Jan Schakowsky's (D) neighboring district into the 10th district to run. Hamos did not return a call for comment on the race, but Garrett said she would be likely to support her at some point in the campaign.

At this point it's just Seals, state Sen. Michael Bond (whose underwhelming $86K second quarter haul did his candidacy no favors) and attorney Elliot Richardson vying for the Democratic nod, but it's possible that more names from local offices could emerge.

For the GOP, Roll Call and CQ both rattle off a similar batch of names:

  • Businessman Dick Green, CEO of Briefing.com
  • Businessman Bill Strong, former Illinois finance chairman for John McCain's Presidential campaign
  • State Rep. Ed Sullivan
  • Businesswoman/ex-Mount Prospect mayoral candidate Patricia Bird
  • Lake County Board Member Ann Maine
  • Wilmette Village President Chris Canning
  • State Rep. Beth Coulson*

Take a look at that last name on the list. Beth Coulson, a moderate Republican, would be a pretty strong choice for the GOP in theory. In an interview with Roll Call, she says that the NRCC has been in contact with her and that she'll make a decision on the race next month, but her staff doesn't seem to be on the same page -- they told CQ that she will be running for re-election instead of Congress next year. So which is it?

RaceTracker wiki: IL-10

Discuss :: (3 Comments)

SSP Daily Digest: 7/10

by: Crisitunity

Fri Jul 10, 2009 at 1:55 PM EDT

WI-Gov: Hot on the heels of changing Ohio to Lean Dem yesterday, today we're downgrading the Wisconsin gubernatorial race to Lean Dem as well. We aren't reacting to any one recent event (the only two polls so far have dramatically disparate results, but they average out to a tight race), but realized that we had no business keeping WI-Gov at Likely Dem if OH-Gov is going to be Lean Dem.

CA-Sen: Former Hewlett-Packard CEO Carly Fiorina seems to be moving toward running against Barbara Boxer after all, not taking formal steps but rubbing elbows with the right people. Here's some ill-timed bad PR for her, though: Fiorina has been telling people that she's now CEO of her own company (Carly Fiorina Enterprises) and her own foundation (Fiorina Foundation), but neither one has been registered with the proper state or federal authorities... which might lead some to question her vaunted business organization skills.

IL-Sen: The Fix reports that alleged field-clearing heavyweight Rep. Mark Kirk may still face a contested GOP primary in the Senate race; state party chair Andy McKenna, recruited as the GOP's Plan B, seems to be staying in for now, and the state's Republican congressional delegation is staying, at least publicly, neutral. The flashpoint may be Kirk's recent vote in favor of cap-and-trade.

MO-Sen: In the "did he really just say that file?" Roy Blunt offers up a doozy: in a conservative talk radio interview, he said that maybe it would have been better if the federal government had never created Medicare, Medicaid, or VA health care, because it "distorts the marketplace." Way to put the senior citizen vote in play there, Roy!

NV-Sen: Off-the-record GOP consultants say that a John Ensign resignation may be "on the table" and that there are worries that there may still be even more undisclosed payments to the Hamptons floating around. If there are public calls for resignation from the other key GOPers in Nevada -- Gov. Jim Gibbons, Lt. Gov. Brian Krolicki, Rep. Dean Heller -- it's time to prepare the fork for sticking (of course, with two of those three in deep scandal of their own, there's a certain pot/kettle thing going on).

PA-Sen: Arlen Specter made his first aggressive moves against possible primary challenger Rep. Joe Sestak today, calling him a "flagrant hypocrite" for not being a Democrat until 2006. (Sestak was an Independent during his decades of military service, and switched to Dem once he was out of the service.) Hmmm... remind me again which year Arlen Specter became a Democrat? Meanwhile, on the GOP side, the NRSC just can't help themselves from hiking the Appalachian Trail despite their efforts to fall back in love with Pat Toomey. They've been talking behind the scenes with state Sen. Jane Orie about running in the primary (although she's almost as conservative as Toomey, so it's not clear what benefit that would provide).

AK-Gov: Guess who's saying "thanks but no thanks" to the assistance offered by the divine Sarah Palin: the GOP candidates in the two very-close blue-state gubernatorial races this year, Chris Christie and Bob McDonnell. (On the other hand, Rick Perry, who needs to rally every wingnut he can get his hands on in order to win his primary in Texas, welcomes her.) The Hill also sniffs out a number of other candidates facing possibly tough races who'd like her to stay far, far away, including Reps. Lee Terry, Frank Wolf, Mike Castle, and Pete Hoekstra. (In his efforts to become World's Most Tone-Deaf Man, Roy Blunt welcomes her help, though.) Finally, check out Peggy Noonan's authoritative takedown of Palin today; say what you will about the whole pure evil thing, the woman has a way with words.

PA-Gov: With a lot of people looking at the Democratic field in the Governor's race and asking "is that all there is?" a familiar face is considering the race: Montgomery Co. Commissioner (and former Rep. and 2004 Senate candidate) Joe Hoeffel. In his favor, he'd be the only elected official from the Philly area in the race (Tom Knox is from Philly, but has never held office).

IL-10: With Rep. Mark Kirk kindly leaving an open seat for us, both the Daily Herald and Roll Call take a look at the developing fields in this race. On the Dem side, the leading contenders are state Sens. Michael Bond (already in the race) and Susan Garrett. Dan Seals, who lost in 2006 and 2008 to Kirk, is also considering a third try. The only GOPer in the race is Patricia Bird, but businessman Dick Green and state Rep. Elizabeth Coulson are likely contestants.

NY-23: Don't count out state Sen. Darrel Aubertine on becoming the Democratic candidate in NY-23, despite the ongoing craziness in the New York state Senate. Although the July 17 filing deadline is coming up and he hasn't made any noise about it, Aubertine is still considering it and will have the requisite family sit-down about it once he has the time (which maybe he'll have, now that the Senate is back to "normal").

VA-05: Rep. Tom Perriello has become the focus in the tug-of-war over cap-and-trade. A week after the NRCC made him the sole target of a TV attack ad for voting in favor, the League of Conservation Voters is running thank-you ads in his central Virginia district.

Mayors: Louisiana Lt. Gov. Mitch Landrieu has options, but he ruled out a third run at New Orleans mayor, for which he'd been considered front-runner. A run for Governor in 2011 (or maybe not until the open seat in 2015) now seems likelier. This leaves city councilor Arnie Fielkow in the driver's seat for the next mayoral election.

Caucuses: This seems like an odd time for this to happen, in the middle of the fight over health care reform: the Congressional Progessive Caucus canned its executive director, Bill Goold, without much explanation.

Discuss :: (34 Comments)

SSP Daily Digest: 4/14

by: Crisitunity

Tue Apr 14, 2009 at 4:49 PM EDT

NY-20 (pdf): This morning's update from the BoE has Scott Murphy's lead increasing a bit, up to 56 votes. Brace yourself for later today, though, when Saratoga County (Jim Tedisco's base) is scheduled to report absentees for the first time.

PA-Sen: Arlen Specter picked up an important backer in the 2010 primary: NRSC chair John Cornyn (who'd, of course, like to limit the number of seats lost on his watch). "As I survey the political landscape of the upcoming 2010 elections, it's clear we need more candidates that fit their states," said Cornyn. Although Cornyn doesn't mention his name, he obviously has in mind a guy who doesn't fit his state: Pat Toomey, who just happened to officially announce his long-rumored Senate bid yesterday.

MN-Sen: No surprise here; Norm Coleman, having lost the election yesterday according to a three-judge panel, has filed an appeal with the Minnesota Supreme Court. Election law blogger Rick Hasen looks at yesterday's opinion and the difficulty Coleman will face in getting it reversed.

FL-Sen: Marco Rubio reported raising $250,000 in the last month since opening his exploratory committee, a solid start. Meanwhile, Kendrick Meek continued to dominate the labor endorsement front, picking up the nod from the International Union of Painters and Allied Trades, AFL-CIO.

IL-10: State senator Susan Garrett says she'll decide within the month whether or not to challenge Mark Kirk (sounding like she's trying to wait as long as possible to see if Kirk jumps into the senate race and leaves an open seat). Kirk has turned back a number of serious challenges in the 3rd-most Dem-leaning district still occupied by a Republican (won by Obama with 61% of the vote).

NV-02: A credible Democratic challenger to Dean Heller has materialized. Douglas County school board president Cindy Trigg plans to announce her candidacy next week. This district, once a Republican stronghold, went for McCain by less than 100 votes.

ID-01: Walt Minnick just got some fundraising help from an unexpected place. Former two-term GOP senator from Idaho Steve Symms is headlining Minnick's April 23 breakfast fundraiser.

NRCC: Campaign Diaries has the full list of all 43 Dems targeted in the GOP's big radio-spot-and-robocall blitz.

Where Are They Now?: Tom Feeney: just took a job with noted think-tank the Heritage Foundation, to focus on "community outreach." Bob Ney: just got the 1-3 pm slot on a conservative talk radio station in Moundsville, WV. Chris Chocola: just made it official, that he will be replacing Pat Toomey as head of the Club for Growth. Vito Fossella: just pled guilty to DWI and will serve four days in Alexandria city jail.

Red Menace: Spencer Bachus (AL-06) just announced that he is holding in his hand a list of 17 socialists in Congress. We all know about Bernie Sanders; anyone care to hazard a guess who the other 16 are?

Discuss :: (47 Comments)

SSP Daily Digest: 3/24

by: Crisitunity

Tue Mar 24, 2009 at 4:16 PM EDT

IL-10: Roll Call takes a look at the potential GOP and Dem fields to replace Rep. Mark Kirk should he decide to run for Senate. A spokesperson for '06/'08 nominee Dan Seals says that he's in for a third crack at the seat if Kirk vacates the scene, but state Sens. Michael Bond and Susan Garrett are also possible recruits. For the GOP, potential contenders include state Reps. Beth Coulson, JoAnn Osmond, and Ed Sullivan Jr -- as well as state Sens. Dan Duffy and Matt Murphy. Coulson, perhaps the most moderate choice the GOP has to offer, might run into some problems in a GOP primary against a more conservative choice like Murphy. (J)

PA-Sen: The Republican caucus in the Pennsylvania state Senate seems reluctant to comply with Arlen Specter's desire to allow independents to vote in closed-party primary elections. If the state ultimately leaves the primary rules as they are, Specter will face the daunting task of convincing independents and Democrats to change their party registrations over to the GOP column in order for him to gain leverage against Pat Toomey. (J)

On a very related note, Specter just announced this afternoon that he will be opposing EFCA (an about-face from his previous support for it in previous sessions). Apparently he now thinks the GOP primary is his biggest worry, not maintaining union support for the general.

MN-06: We'll never get tired of loving Michele Bachmann. Her latest:

I want people in Minnesota armed and dangerous on this issue of the energy tax because we need to fight back. Thomas Jefferson told us 'having a revolution every now and then is a good thing,' and the people - we the people - are going to have to fight back hard if we're not going to lose our country. And I think this has the potential of changing the dynamic of freedom forever in the United States.

CO-04: Speculation is growing about who the GOP will find to take on freshman Rep. Betsy Markey in this one-time GOP stronghold turned swing district. State rep. Cory Gardner seems to generate the most buzz, who has already met with the NRCC. Other possibilities include former UC regent Tom Lucero and Ft. Collins city councilor Diggs Brown.

MI-12: Sander Levin must have had a lot of advance notice of the just-announced primary challenge from state senator Mickey Switalski, because he's already produced an internal poll from the Mellman Group showing him demolishing Switalski. Levin beats Switalski 62-14 in a head-to-head, and maintains a 74-15 favorable rating. (Switalski's favorables are 23-8, leaving 69% unsure.)

NH-02: Another GOPer has lined up for the open House seat left behind by Paul Hodes: Len Mannino, former Milford selectman and current school board member, is publicly expressing his interest. He'll face an uphill fight against talk radio host Jennifer Horn, who seems to be aiming for a rematch.

CT-Sen: In 1970, Connecticut's senior senator, beset by ethical issues (including a Senate censure) and health troubles, failed to re-claim the Democratic Party's nomation and came in third as an independent that November. That man was Thomas Dodd, Chris Dodd's father. Click the link for some fascinating details about his saga. And let's hope that history doesn't repeat - or even rhyme. (D)

TX-Gov: Todd Hill of the Burnt Orange Report sat down for an extended interview with Democratic candidate Tom Schieffer. (D)

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