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TX-10

SSP Daily Digest: 7/7

by: Crisitunity

Tue Jul 07, 2009 at 2:51 PM EDT

MN-Sen: Our long national nightmare is finally over: Senator Al Franken was sworn in today, without any weird last minute gambits by Norm Coleman. Harry Reid announced he'll be on the HELP, Judiciary, Aging, and Indian Affairs Committees.

KY-Sen: Jim Bunning, via his regular teleconference with reporters, reminds us that he's still running for Senate. Bunning also thinks that he won't outraise SoS Trey Grayson (who raised $600,000 in the 2nd quarter) for the quarter, but it doesn't matter because Grayson won't stay in the race if Bunning stays in too.

OR-Gov: Here's a surprise: Democratic rising star state Rep. Brian Clem suddenly made his presence known in the Oregon governor's race, launching an exploratory committee and filling up his coffers with a $500,000 loan from his mother-in-law. The 37-year-old Clem, who has represented part of Salem since 2006, implied that he wouldn't pull the trigger on a run, though, if former Gov. John Kitzhaber got into the race.

SC-Gov: Mark Sanford may get to keep his job after all (thanks in part to Sarah Palin creating a distraction). The state GOP voted yesterday to censure Sanford over his doomed tango, rather than call for his resignation.

HI-01: Roll Call takes a quick look at who might run for the seat being left behind by Rep. Neil Abercrombie. Top of the list is Ed Case, a Blue Dog who used to represent HI-02 but gave up his seat for an ill-fated primary run against Sen. Dan Akaka and pissed off a lot of the Democratic base along the way. They also cite state Senate President Colleen Hanabusa, former state House majority leader Kirk Caldwell, state Democratic Party chair Brian Schatz, and also Honolulu Mayor Mufi Hannemann, who's currently exploring the governor's race but conceivably could switch races if he doesn't get any traction in the primary against Abercrombie. Also, we can't rule out Republican Honolulu city councilor Charles Djou, who seems well-thought-of but faces a steep climb given the state's lean.

IL-07: CQ provides a similar laundry list of potential candidates in IL-07, assuming Rep. Danny Davis leaves an open seat to run for President of the Cook County Board instead. Davis's former Chief of Staff Richard Boykin tops the list, but there's also state Reps. LaShawn Ford and Karen Yarbrough, state Sen. Rickey Hendon, and Aldermen Dorothy Tillman and Ed Smith. (No mention of any Republicans here, unsurprising since it's D+35.)

NY-03: Here are some folks who'd especially like Rep. Peter King to Beat It, following his Off the Wall remarks disparaging the nonstop coverage of Michael Jackson. They've started "Michael Jackson Fans Against Peter King" on ActBlue and have already raised several thousand dollars for whoever steps up to run in the 3rd.

NY-14: With Rep. Carolyn Maloney looking more likely to follow through on her Senate primary challenge, state Sen. Liz Krueger, whose turf closely overlaps the 14th, has been getting a lot of encouragement to run for the open seat. Krueger sounds politely interested, saying "I've never been in Congress so I don't know if it's less frustrating. But I suspect pretty much any job in the United States of America would be less frustrating than Albany in the last three weeks."

NY-23: A potentially strong candidate for the GOP nomination in the upcoming NY-23 special election has taken himself out of consideration: Assemblyman Will Barclay. Unfortunately for us, this may make the primary path easier for moderate GOP Assemblywoman Dede Scozzafava, who would be a tougher general election foe; the more conservative Barclay, remember, was the loser of the state Senate special election to Darrel Aubertine last year. Two other minor GOPers added their names to the list as well: YMCA director Andrew Bisselle and businessman Bart Bonner.

OH-15: His candidacy was already well in the works, but GOP former state Senator Steve Stivers made it official today that he's seeking a rematch against Rep. Mary Jo Kilroy, who barely won the open seat in 2008. Stivers may have an opening in 2010 if there's less Obama-driven college turnout in this district dominated by Ohio St., and no pro-life independent candidate siphoning votes from his right flank.

TN-09: Burned-out Memphis Mayor Willie Herenton seems to have a pattern and practice of delaying his planned resignations whenever things don't quite go right for him. Herenton, who'd planned to resign in order to devote himself full-time to his primary challenge to Rep. Steve Cohen, pushed back his resignation date (planned for July 11) to July 30, citing some unfinished items of business.

House: The Hill throws together an interesting catch-all of ten "dark horse" House races, one of which is already threatening to be top tier (TX-10), one of which features an intriguing Dem primary (FL-02), and some of which are interesting because of changing demographics (TX-32) or changing political tides (all three Dem seats in Arkansas).

DGA/RGA: In keeping with the sense that the real battlegrounds in 2010 are going to be the gubernatorial races, the DGA and RGA are both raising like gangbusters. The DGA raised $11.6 million in the first half of the year, a record for them, but the RGA nosed ahead of them, raising $12.2 million.

Census: A coalition of Colorado local governments joins New York's legislature in laying out its own funds to help assist the Census Bureau in putting together an accurate count by reducing undercounting. While Colorado isn't likely to gain or lose a House seat in 2010, it's still important in terms of securing federal funds, and with much of the state's growth coming among Latinos, the risk of undercounting is high.

Campaign Finance: Florida's Republican SoS, Kurt Browning, has decided not to appeal a federal court's ruling that found a state law regulating 527s was unconstitutional. With major implications for the Florida governor's race, now 527s can operate without disclosure requirements on who they are and who funds them. (Florida has strict $500 limits on individual contributions, so 527s are especially important there.)

Trivia: Wondering who the last Governor to resign in mid-term to focus on a presidential run was? New York's Nelson Rockefeller, in 1973. He never made it to the presidential run, although he did wind up briefly serving as Gerald Ford's fill-in vice-president.

DSCC: Friend of SSP and once-and-future DKos editor Arjun Jaikumar (f/k/a brownsox) is not just the DSCC's new media guru - he's also up for The Hill's 50 Most Beautiful in DC. Vote for the good-looking bastard by sending an email. (D)

Discuss :: (12 Comments)

TX-10/24/32: Deep In the Heart of Texas

by: displacedyankdem

Thu Apr 16, 2009 at 8:45 PM EDT


Crossposted at DailyKos

I've always wanted to go hard after a white Southern suburban district in one of the three Southern megalopolises (Atlanta, Dallas/Ft. Worth, and Houston). To win a Southern district, conventional wisdom is that as a starting point the GOP Presidential candidate has to have gotten less than 55% in said district, and the most tempting three are in Texas. There's the 10th District (Houston to Austin) and a pair of DFW metroplex district, the 32nd and 24th. Lets take a look at them.

There's More... :: (2 Comments, 1208 words in story)

TX-10: McCaul Drops AG Hopes, Will Seek Re-Election

by: DavidNYC

Thu Apr 16, 2009 at 6:36 PM EDT

Somewhat sucky news:

Less than three months after saying he would consider a run next year for attorney general of Texas, third-term U.S. Rep. Michael McCaul, R-Austin, told the American-Statesman's Danny Yadron on Wednesday that the AG option is no longer on his plate.

Asked if he was still mulling a run for attorney general, McCaul replied: "No, I'm running for re-election."

This confirms an earlier statement from a McCaul spokesman. While it would have been nice to have an open seat here, Democrats fortunately have a good candidate in Jack McDonald, who has already raised over $300K and previously said he'd run no matter what McCaul decided. Indeed, the DCCC has already targeted McCaul, firing off a few radio ads over his vote against the stimulus.

And according to SSP's analysis of the presidential vote, Barack Obama improved nicely over John Kerry's numbers - McCain won the district 55-44, versus Bush's 62-38 pounding. In a separate analysis of Texas demographics, Crisitunity observed that the 10th CD had the largest raw increase in Hispanic population from 2000 to 2006 of any district in the Houston or Dallas areas. That trend has doubtless continued, putting the GOP on ever-thinner ice.

McCaul, meanwhile, is far from entrenched - he won his last two elections with just 55% and 54% of the vote, running against underfunded opponents both times. I think this is going to be an interesting race.

Discuss :: (9 Comments)

SSP Daily Digest: 4/2

by: Crisitunity

Thu Apr 02, 2009 at 2:03 PM EDT

NY-20: Well, we know Scott Murphy can count on getting at least one vote out of the huge pile of absentee ballots in the deadlocked NY-20 election: the ballot of the woman he's seeking to replace, Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, is one of them.

NY-29: In an example of political chaos theory at work, the NY-20 election may wind up protecting Rep. Eric Massa several seats over. If Jim Tedisco wins, he's out of his current job as Assembly Minority Leader, and even if he loses, there have been rumblings to replace him anyway. His replacement as Minority Leader would likely be Brian Kolb, who, if he took the position, would probably want to focus on that and no longer be the top GOP pick to take on Eric Massa in NY-29. (Other potential GOP candidates in NY-29 include Monroe County Executive Maggie Brooks and state senators Cathy Young and George Winner.)

PA-Sen: Arlen Specter is already defending his right flank with ads attacking ex-Rep. Pat Toomey, in preparation for the 2010 primary. Specter's ad sounds a bit, um, Democratic, attacking Toomey for favoring deregulation, wanting to privatize Social Security, and for the unforgivable sin of having traded CDSs when he was working on Wall Street.

MN-Sen: The next step in the MN-Sen saga has national implications: governor Tim Pawlenty has to decide, once the Minnesota Supreme Court rules, whether to go ahead and sign the certificate declaring Al Franken the winner (and, y'know, follow the rule of law)... or whether to continue to obstruct Franken in order not to alienate the rabid Republican base he'll need in 2012 if he's going to have any hope in the presidential primary.

OH-Sen: I know I wouldn't buy a used car from Rob Portman, but he finally has some competition in the GOP primary, and it's a guy a lot of people apparently have bought used cars from. Cleveland-area car dealer Tom Ganley has also entered the race (although he shouldn't be more than a speed bump for the heavily-funded Portman).

AK-AL: Lt. Gov. Sean Parnell is "considering" another primary run at Rep. Don Young. One negative for Parnell is that, this time, he'd have to give up his LG slot for a 2010 run. But there's also the possibility that the federal investigation into Young may actually yield something in the next few years.

DCCC: The DCCC launched a new radio spot in the districts of six GOP representatives in Democratic-leaning seats, attacking them for voting against the middle-class tax cuts contained in the stimulus package. The targets are Mike Castle (DE-AL), Ken Calvert (CA-44), Bill Young (FL-10), Thad McCotter (MI-11), Charlie Dent (PA-15), and Mike McCaul (TX-10).

LA-02: The Anh Cao Watch continues! GOP leading lights John McCain and Rep. Paul Ryan (WI-01) were recently seen jawing with Cao, who hasn't yet decided how he'll vote on the Democrats' budget resolution. Would he really defect? And would it even matter? (D)

Census: The new pick for Census Director has been announced, and if the squealing emitting from Patrick McHenry is any indication, it's a good pick. It's Robert Groves, a Univ. of Michigan professor who was the Census's associate director for statistical design in the early 90s. Groves is a proponent of statistical sampling, which is the main flashpoint in debate over the census. Commerce Sec. Gary Locke has indicated that sampling won't be used for redistricting purposes, but will be used for increased accuracy (for purposes of allocating federal funds, for instance).

Discuss :: (41 Comments)

SSP Daily Digest: 4/1

by: Crisitunity

Wed Apr 01, 2009 at 2:08 PM EDT

Site News: SSP is delighted to announce that we've just welcomed our six millionth visitor to the site. Thank you, everyone! (D)

NY-20: The NRCC is already using the paper-thin margin in NY-20 last night as the springboard for a whole new fundraising e-mail pitch: the Dems are trying to "pull a Franken" and "steal" the election in the courts, so please send lawyers, guns, and money. Eric Kleefeld has a thought on why this is good news! For Pete Sessions!

One problem Murphy might have is that Al Franken's lawyers aren't available right now. And in Tedisco's favor, Norm Coleman's attorneys are busy, too.

The Fix has obtained some Democratic projections of how things will shake out after all absentees are counted (they're projecting Murphy by 210). This appears to be based on performance rates in the counties where the absentees came from (in other words, there seem to be disproportionately more absentees coming from pro-Murphy counties than Saratoga).

AK-Sen: It happened a few months too late to save Ted Stevens' job, but the DOJ has finally dropped its frequently-bungled case against Stevens after further instances of prosecutorial misconduct arose.

CT-Sen: One more 'oopsie' for Chris Dodd: he blew through a lot of his campaign war chest on his ill-advised 2008 presidential run (he transferred $4.7 million from his 2010 senate kitty to his presidential campaign). He's currently at only $670K cash on hand, compared with $1.6 million at this same point in his 2004 re-election.

FL-Sen: Kendrick Meek plays Gallant to Chris Dodd's Goofus: he raised a whopping $1.5 million in the first quarter, as he tries to nail down frontrunner status for the Democratic nomination.

CA-Sen: Carly Fiorina, who was briefly sidelined by treatment for breast cancer, seems ready to get back into the political arena. She's "seriously considering" entering the race against Barbara Boxer.

OK-Gov, OK-04: SSP's all-time favorite punching bag, Tom Cole, looks to be staying where he is. He's declined to run for Oklahoma governor, leaving fellow Rep. Mary Fallin in the driver's seat for the GOP nomination.

TX-10: Democrat Jack McDonald, an Austin-area businessman running for the seat of GOP Rep. Mike McCaul, has announced that his campaign has raised over $300,000 in its first five weeks. Those are some pretty impressive numbers at this stage in the game. (J)

NRCC/NRSC: Remember the brouhaha over the big NRCC/NRSC fundraising dinner where no one could figure out whether or not Sarah Palin was going to keynote, where it turned out that the governor's office and SarahPAC had no idea what each other were doing? Well, amateur hour is continuing apace in Anchorage, as now she's off again. In her place, Newt Gingrich (who would have ever predicted the day when Newt Gingrich would be seen, by comparison, as the GOP's sober, rational elder statesman?).

History: PolitickerNY takes an intersting trip down memory lane, looking at some of the greatest hits among previous close House elections, like CT-02 in 1994 and IN-08 in 1984.

Discuss :: (4 Comments)

SSP Daily Digest: 3/10

by: Crisitunity

Tue Mar 10, 2009 at 4:49 PM EDT

UT-Sen: With the possibility of a serious primary challenge to Sen. Bob Bennett looming, SSP is adding this contest to our "Races to Watch" list. (D)

TX-10: A spokesman for Michael McCaul claims he's running for re-election to his House seat; earlier McCaul said he might run for TX AG, but this situation still bears watching. Dem Jack McDonald apparently plans to run no matter what McCaul decides. (D)

PA-Sen: Peg Luksik, a pro-life activist who has made several unsuccessful runs for governor (both in the GOP primary in 1990 and on the Constitution Party line in 1998, when she pulled in 10% of the vote in the general), is planning to run in the Republican primary against both Arlen Specter and Pat Toomey. This may actually be good news for Specter, because a split between the religious fundamentalists and free-market fundamentalists in the primary could let Specter sneak through.

SC-01: The lackadaiscal Henry Brown, fresh off of barely beating Linda Ketner last year, is facing a primary challenge from a young go-getter with a prominent (if laughable) family name: Carroll "Tumpy" Campbell III. (His father was SC governor in the 1990s.) Many in the local GOP are worried about the safety of the seat in Brown's idle hands, and this early announcement may be done with the hope of goading Brown into retirement.

IN-05: More primary drama in another solidly Republican district. Dan Burton suddenly looked vulnerable after winning his primary by only 7% against former Marion County coroner John McGoff last year. McGoff's back for a re-run, and now three other GOPers are swarming the race: state rep. Mike Murphy, former state GOP chair Luke Messer, and former 7th district candidate Brose McVey. Marion County prosecutor Carl Brizzi also says he plans to run if Burton retires, although he seems likelier to retire in 2012.

NRCC: Seeing as how there may be a lot of major GOP primaries in 2010, the NRCC has announced that it may get involved in primaries this cycle, a departure from Tom Cole's self-destructive hands-off policy last time. The NRCC has also privately signaled that they may let flawed or insufficently aggressive incumbents get picked off in the primaries rather than have to prop them up in the general.

FL-12: The GOP and Dems already have front-runners for the nominations in the open seat race (to be vacated by Adam Putnam), GOP state representative Dennis Ross and Democratic Polk County elections supervisor Lori Edwards. But Doug Tudor, who held Putnam under 60% last year without DCCC help, is coming back for another bite at the apple. State senator Paula Dockery is also considering jumping in on the GOP side.

Caucuses: Meow! (Or woof?) The Blue Dogs are suddenly sounding catty, miffed at seeing their position as the go-to caucus for watering down progressive legislation usurped by the New Democrats in the wake of the mortgage modification bill.

Discuss :: (44 Comments)

SSP Daily Digest: 3/9

by: Crisitunity

Mon Mar 09, 2009 at 2:57 PM EDT

Here's your daily dose of bullet points...

TX-10: Democrats have lined up a solid candidate in TX-10, where Larry Joe Doherty came within 10 points of Mike McCaul last year. Jack McDonald, CEO of Austin high-tech firm Perficient, has started an exploratory committee. This fast-growing, Dem-trending district may also be an open seat in 2010, as McCaul considers a bid for Texas AG.

CA-48: It looks like GOP Rep. John Campbell is about to receive a stronger-than-expected Democratic challenge in 2010. Beth Krom, the former mayor of Irvine and a current city councilor, has made a formal announcement of her candidacy on her campaign website. A traditionally red district, Obama edged out a slight victory over McCain here in 2008, pulling 49% of the vote. (Hat-tip to Gus Ayer, friend of SSP) (J)

NV-Sen: Here's one that slipped through the cracks last week: ex-Rep. Jon Porter, who'd be the GOP's best option against Harry Reid, is staying in Washington and becoming 'director of public policy' at a lobbying shop. Not that this closes him out from running, but it diminshes the likelihood.

FL-Sen: Rep. Kendrick Meek has been racking up money ($90,000 at a recent Bill Clinton-headlined fundraiser) and endorsements (Florida's SEIU chapter and United Teachers of Dade) while primary opponent state senator Dan Gelber is preoccupied with the legislative session.

DCCC: In a big behind-the-scenes move, DCCC executive director (and Pelosi ally) Brian Wolff has left the D-Trip to become senior VP for external affairs at the Edison Electric Institute, a utility-owned trade and lobbying group that has previously given significantly more money to Republicans. (UPDATE: The DCCC's new executive director will be Jon Vogel, who previously led the DCCC's independent expenditures arm.)

WA-08: Here's an interesting take from American Prospect on what went wrong with Darcy Burner's rematch against Dave Reichert, written by Eli Sanders, the former politics reporter for the Stranger (Seattle's alt-weekly). I'm not sure I agree with the final analysis (they say it was mostly a matter of tone) but it's thought-provoking.

Discuss :: (30 Comments)

TX-10: McCaul May Run for Attorney General

by: DavidNYC

Thu Jan 08, 2009 at 10:02 PM EST

Roll Call:

Rep. Michael McCaul (R-Texas), who won a third term in November in a race that was closer than many Republicans would have liked, is expected to create an exploratory committee for a possible run for state attorney general in 2010, two Texas media outlets reported Thursday evening.

The current attorney general, Greg Abbott (R), is contemplating running for lieutenant governor next year - or for Senate if Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison (R) resigns early to pursue a gubernatorial bid.

This might be the most exciting House open seat news so far this cycle. McCaul won with just 54% of the vote in November, and 55% two years earlier. This district always looked more competitive than its (old) PVI of R+13, in large part due to an ongoing demographic sea change - in particular, Hispanic growth here has been through the roof.

I'd also be willing to bet that Bush's numbers were inflated here due to a home state effect - and that Obama did better than Kerry's 38%. The real question is whether there is something "wrong" with McCaul that's kept his numbers down - and, consequently, would we be better off running against him or with an open seat? I'll note that the DCCC didn't spend a dime on this district, but first-time candidate Larry Joe Doherty did raise an impressive $1.2 million in his losing bid.

If McCaul bails, Doherty could conceivably run again, as could international affairs consultant Dan Grant, who ran in the primary against Doherty in 2008. My question to you: Are there any other strong candidate who might be tempted to run if there's an open seat?

Discuss :: (24 Comments)

TX-10: Doherty Closes In

by: Crisitunity

Mon Oct 27, 2008 at 1:28 AM EDT

Research 2000 for Daily Kos (10/20-22, likely voters):

Larry Joe Doherty (D): 42
Mike McCaul (R): 46
(MoE: ±5%)

Texas is a long-term project for the Democrats, and districts like TX-10 are leading the way: it's one of the fastest-growing districts in the country, and most of the growth is non-white. If this poll is any indication, though, we might be on the verge of seeing some good results right away.

Mike McCaul was already publicly sweating the early voting patterns in Harris and Travis Counties (this R+13 district stretches wormlike across hundreds of miles to link Houston and Austin suburbs). This poll can't be helping him feel any better, as it's slightly better than recent Doherty internals. Between McCaul never having faced a full-on challenge before, Doherty's money and name recognition (he's a former TV judge), changes in the district, and the size of the Dem wave (McCain leads only 48-41 in the district, down from Bush's 62-38 edge), here's one more upset waiting to happen.

Discuss :: (5 Comments)

TX-10: Doherty Catching Up to McCaul in New Poll

by: James L.

Wed Oct 01, 2008 at 6:38 PM EDT

Goodwin Simon Victoria Research for Larry Joe Doherty (9/28-30, likely voters, 5/27-31 in parens):

Larry Joe Doherty (D): 38 (34)
Mike McCaul (R-inc): 43 (43)
(MoE: ±4.9%)

Here's a key finding that might help explain McCaul's sagging numbers: his name recognition is only at 59%. That's pretty bad for an incumbent running for his third term.

While this is an R+13 district, the numbers are trending in the Democratic direction (Gore won only 34% of the vote here, but Kerry kicked it up a notch to 38% in 2004). We wrote about this district as a possible pick-up opportunity way back in June 2007, so it's nice to see Democrat Larry Joe Doherty making a race of this.

Full polling memo below the fold.

There's More... :: (1 Comments, 59 words in story)

GOOD Congressional challengers on FISA: The List

by: BruinKid

Thu Jun 26, 2008 at 9:16 AM EDT

In the last couple days, there have been several posts across the blogosphere citing what various candidates running for Congress have said on FISA and retroactive immunity for the telecoms.  But so far, it's been all over the map.  I'll try to corral all their statements into this diary, so you can see who the "good guys" are.

First, let's start off with the current House and Senate members who voted against this bill.  They do deserve credit, as it's their jobs on the line.

Follow me below the fold to see the dozens of Democratic challengers who are standing up for the Constitution, and are against this FISA bill and retroactive immunity.

There's More... :: (4 Comments, 8427 words in story)

TX-10: Another Poll Indicates a Competitive Race

by: James L.

Mon Jun 16, 2008 at 4:07 PM EDT

Goodwin Simon Victoria Research for Larry Joe Doherty (5/27-31, likely voters):

Larry Joe Doherty (D): 34
Mike McCaul (R-inc): 43
(n=400)

On the generic ballot, the the GOP has a mere four-point advantage over the Democrats in this R+13 district, with a 45-41 congressional preference. The fact that McCaul is actually underperforming the GOP's generic strength here is eye-opening.

But that's not McCaul's only measure of weakness in the poll. A full 47% of respondents don't even recognize his name, and his job rating is a stunningly mediocre 28% positive, 29% negative (and 42% unsure). What's more, a massive 70% of voters rate President Bush's job performance negatively, and 69% of the district's voters think the country is seriously on the wrong track. All of this gives a big opening for a well-funded Democratic challenger like Larry Joe Doherty to exploit.

SSP first noted this race back in June 2007, when we made the case that the Democratic trend of the district and McCaul's mediocre performance in the 2006 elections might put this one in play. We've had this district on our list of races to watch for a while, and we upgraded our rating of this race from Safe Republican to Likely Republican last week after an independent poll was released showing Doherty trailing McCaul by six points.

This race has some real potential to heat up.

Discuss :: (21 Comments)

TX-10: New Poll Shows a Close Race

by: James L.

Tue Jun 03, 2008 at 1:08 PM EDT

IVR Polls (6/2, likely voters):

Larry Joe Doherty (D): 46
Michael McCaul (R-inc): 52
(MoE: ±4.3%)

While this district does have a PVI or R+13, it's been trending in the right direction: Al Gore won 34% of its vote in 2000, while John Kerry won 38% four years later. The real eye-opener came in 2006, when McCaul's performance sagged dramatically against an underfunded challenger:

Mike McCaul (R): 55
Ted Ankrum (D): 41
Michael Badnarik (L): 4

This time, McCaul is up against a fairly well-funded challenger, lawyer and local TV celebrity Larry Joe Doherty.

We've had our eye on this race for a while, but this is the first poll we've seen that actually suggests McCaul could be in trouble. In fact, it's the first poll of any kind that we've seen of this race. The same survey shows Sen. Cornyn leading Rick Noriega by 54-44, and McCain leading Obama by 55-41 in the district.

In the diaries, the pollster has more:

Historically, turnout in this district doesn't include large numbers of Latinos or African-Americans. In this poll, both groups went with Doherty, Latinos by 2-1 and African-Americans by 7-1. If Obama at the top of the ticket increases African-American general election turnout as he has in the primary, and these additional voters follow through on the down-ballot races, Doherty could close the gap even further. Increased Latino turnout in the primary was mainly a reflection of Clinton's popularity, but there is a possibility that Noriega could also increase Latino turnout for the general, further benefiting Doherty.

Interesting (and exciting) stuff.

Discuss :: (13 Comments)

TX-10 Leans Red, Moving Blue

by: IVR Polls

Tue Jun 03, 2008 at 10:55 AM EDT

In 2004, George Bush took 62% of the vote in Texas' 10th Congressional District. In 2006, Michael McCaul was held to 55% by a poorly funded Democrat and a relatively well funded Libertarian. My own polling a week before the election found 7% undecided, but the challengers had no funds to close the deal and undecided stayed with the incumbent. As a disclaimer, and an illustration of the funding issue, I did $90 in robocalls for the challenger, Ted Ankrum, in the closing days.

For the 2008 race, in polling on June 2, 528 likely voters gave McCaul a 5.4% lead over Democratic challenger Larry Joe Doherty. McCaul received 51.7% to Doherty's 46.3%, with 2.0% undecided.

TX-10 is described as a 'barbell district' due to having a large chunk of the district in Travis County (Austin), a large chunk in Harris County (Houston) and a thin strip of highway frontage in between. In 2006, Harris went 71-26 for McCaul and Travis went 56-38 for Ankrum. In this poll, McCaul takes Harris 63-33 and Doherty takes Travis by the same 63-33. Travis is the slightly larger end of the TX-10 barbell, but the 'bar' in between went 70-30 for McCaul, resulting in a McCaul lead.

Of note, I also polled Obama-McCain and Cornyn-Noriega in this district and found those races to be more favorable to the other Republicans than they are to McCaul. Cornyn leads Noriega 54-44 and McCain leads Obama 55-41. Statewide, my past results have been more in line with Baselice than SurveyUSA or Rasmussen on these races, but I do not have current statewide numbers to report.

Historically, turnout in this district doesn't include large numbers of Latinos or African-Americans. In this poll, both groups went with Doherty, Latinos by 2-1 and African-Americans by 7-1. If Obama at the top of the ticket increases African-American general election turnout as he has in the primary, and these additional voters follow through on the down-ballot races, Doherty could close the gap even further. Increased Latino turnout in the primary was mainly a reflection of Clinton's popularity, but there is a possibility that Noriega could also increase Latino turnout for the general, further benefitting Doherty.

There is no significant gender gap in these results, but age is a factor. Voters under 40 go with the Democrat in each race. Voters from 40-59 go with the Republican by small margins. Voters over 60 go Republican in all cases, but margin is much larger in races for President and Senator.

528 likely voters polled 6/2/2008, margin of error 4.3%
 

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I'm Proud to Have Labor's Support in TX-10

by: Dan Grant

Fri Jan 25, 2008 at 12:05 PM EST

I am proud to have received the enthusiastic endorsement of the Texas AFL-CIO and other Labor groups representing more than 230,000 working men and women across the state.

Every progressive movement in our nation's modern history has come about because of Organized Labor's courage and steadfast refusal to take its eye off the ball -- protecting the health and well-being of the great American middle class.

There's More... :: (0 Comments, 158 words in story)

TX-10: Dan Grant on Failed Economy Pushed By McCaul

by: Dan Grant

Mon Jan 14, 2008 at 11:33 AM EST

The reviews are in, and consumer spending this holiday season was up a mere 3.6 percent over the year before.  It was the weakest increase in at least four years, as families purchased fewer presents to put under the tree -- and spent one-third of that increase on gasoline.

The news is the latest evidence that the free spending fueled by Washington's aimless policies in Iraq has turned our economy into the equivalent of a grade-B horror flick come to life -- Return of the Living Debt.

There's More... :: (0 Comments, 741 words in story)

TX-10 - Dan Grant makes it official: "I'm in it to win it!"

by: Dan Grant

Mon Dec 03, 2007 at 2:06 PM EST

The candidate filing period opened today - and Dan was there to make it official, saying he hoped to signal his understanding of how eager Central Texas voters are to get started on changing Washington.

"I'm in this race to win this race," Dan said.

There's More... :: (0 Comments, 217 words in story)

TX-10: Grant Calls on Opponent to Put Texas Taxpayers First, Clear Channel Last

by: Dan Grant

Wed Oct 31, 2007 at 11:34 AM EDT

The Federal Communications Commission is moving ahead with plans to help big media get bigger.  A rally happening right now in front of FCC headquarters in Washington, D.C., is designed to slow the rush toward even more consolidation.

My opponent should break his silence on this important issue and explain whether he is working for the Texas taxpayers who own the public airwaves or Clear Channel, his family's mega-media company.

Call McCaul at 202-225-2401 and remind him who owns the public airwaves.

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Dan Grant: 'SCHIP Fight Not Over Yet'

by: Dan Grant

Tue Oct 23, 2007 at 11:16 AM EDT

It’s World Series week, and Congressman Mike McCaul is about to get another chance to improve his batting average when a measure providing uninsured Texas kids the kind of health insurance program he enjoys comes up again for debate.

So far, he’s batting 0-2.

First, he voted against the bi-partisan SCHIP bill that would have extended coverage to nearly 1.4 million Texas children whose parents work hard and earn too much to qualify for Medicaid but too little to afford private insurance.  Then, he remained in lockstep with the Bush-Cheney administration and voted against overriding the President’s veto.

Forty-four Republicans joined the Democratic majority in voting to override last week and guarantee access to affordable health care for the children of parents who are working hard and playing by the rules.  They ignored the misinformation spread by the White House and did the right thing.
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TX-10 - Dan Grant: 'McCaul Votes For Big Insurance First, Texas Families Last'

by: Dan Grant

Thu Oct 18, 2007 at 5:32 PM EDT

My opponent once more failed to do the right thing today.

He again put his loyalty to the Bush-Cheney administration ahead of his obligation to the families who pay for his own health care with their taxes but can't afford the same rights for their own children.

Central Texans were looking for more leadership and less followership in Washington, D.C. today, because with more uninsured children than any other state, we had more to lose. We didn't get that leadership today.

It's time for a fresh start in a new direction.

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