SSP Daily Digest: 7/2

NC-Sen: Republican pollster Civitas poked at the Senate race, not doing head-to-heads but looking at favorables for Richard Burr and two of his likeliest challengers, SoS Elaine Marshall and Rep. Mike McIntyre. Marshall and McIntyre are little-known, with 12/7 favorables for Marshall and 13/10 and McIntyre (although he was at 38/12 in his district). The bad news for Burr? He’s barely doing better than them, with 31/19 favorables (meaning 50% don’t know him or have no opinion).

NY-Sen-B: Marist dribbles out the Senate half of its newest New York poll today (Gov was yesterday), and it finds a super-tight race in the Dem primary in wake of yesterday’s sorta-kinda entry by Carolyn Maloney: Maloney leads Kirsten Gillibrand, 38-37 (compared with a 36-31 Gillibrand lead in May). Gillibrand wins against both George Pataki (46-42, up from a 46-38 deficit last time) and Peter King (48-32). Marist doesn’t do general election head-to-heads with Maloney, although for some reason they poll a GOP primary between Pataki and King (51-36 for Pataki) despite the decreasing likelihood that either of them run.

Also of interest: Bill Clinton will be appearing at a Maloney fundraiser scheduled for July 20. Clinton isn’t wading into the race with an endorsement at this point, though; this was in the works long before Maloney announced her run, as payback for Maloney’s 2008 primary support for Hillary Clinton, and he also headlined a Gillibrand fundraiser in March.

PA-Sen: Pat Toomey got another endorsement from one of the more conservative members of Pennsylvania’s House GOP delegation: PA-09’s Bill Shuster.

AL-Gov: The Democratic field in the governor’s race in Alabama seems to be solidifying; the last question mark, Supreme Court Chief Justice Sue Bell Cobb, announced that she won’t be running. With a lot of establishment figures waiting on the fence to see if an alternative to Rep. Artur Davis and Ag Comm. Ron Sparks shows up, expect them to start choosing sides soon. Davis, meanwhile, has been staffing up with some key political players, adding Joey Ceci and David Mowery to his team (who managed the successful campaigns of freshman Reps. Parker Griffith and Bobby Bright).

CA-Gov: Sure, California’s an expensive state, but Jerry Brown and Meg Whitman have reported gigantic hauls even by the Golden State’s outsized standards. Brown raised $7.3 million in the year’s first half, while Whitman raised $6.5 million. Steve Poizner and Gavin Newsom raised huge sums and are still far behind — Poizner raised $1.3 million and loaned himself another $4 million, while Newsom raised $1.6 million, much of it online.

MN-Gov: The tradmed seems to be intent today on talking up Norm Coleman’s next logical step as being running for Governor of Minnesota, although Minnesota reporters and politicians in the know are trying to point out the sheer ridiculousness of that idea. (If Norm’s going to be doing any running soon, it’s running away from the FBI, as they investigate his links to Nasser Kazeminy.)

RI-Gov: The Democratic primary for the open Rhode Island Governor’s seat was looking to be a three-way slugfest, but Lt. Gov. Elizabeth Roberts yesterday announced that she would run for re-election instead of for Gov. Although she had started staffing up for the race, she couldn’t have been encouraged by poll numbers which showed her at a disadvantage with likely opponents Treasurer Frank Caprio and AG Patrick Lynch.

SC-Gov: Gov. Mark Sanford seems to have taken a few steps backwards this week. A snap poll from yesterday by SUSA now finds 69% of South Carolinians saying resign, as opposed to 28% saying stay. 63% say they have “no trust” in Sanford. Here’s an interesting red flag: only 20% say Lt. Gov/party boy Andre Bauer is “completely prepared” to become Governor, with 38% saying “somewhat prepared” and 34% saying “not prepared.”

WI-Gov: Real estate developer and ex-Rep. Mark Neumann, who held WI-01 from 1994 to 1998 before losing narrowly to Russ Feingold, announced his gubernatorial candidacy yesterday. Neumann’s entry had been widely anticipated; he’ll face off against Milwaukee Co. Executive Scott Walker in the GOP primary.

CA-45: With Rep. Mary Bono Mack having defected on the cap-and-trade vote, the rightosphere has been calling for her head. Their favored replacement, term-limited state Senator Dennis Hollingsworth, quickly said “no” to a primary challenge, so their wish-list has turned to ex-state Sens. Jim Battin and Ray Haynes and ex-state Rep. Bonnie Garcia.

IL-14: A second GOP challenger got into the race against Rep. Bill Foster, although this guy doesn’t sound like he’ll pose much of a threat to Ethan Hastert for the nom. Jeff Danklefsen hasn’t run for office before and is “maintenance manager for a property management company.”

LA-03: The Hill reported last week that Democratic efforts to find a replacement to Rep. Charlie Melancon have focused on state Rep. Gary Smith, who was going to run for the open seat in 2004 but deferred to Melancon. State Rep. Fred Mills was also interested, but state Rep. Damon Baldone, who might be the highest-profile candidate, is about to run in a special election for a state Senate seat and is unlikely to follow that with a U.S. House run.

PA-06: With the 2nd quarter just wrapped up, look for lots of financial reports to start getting leaked. Here’s a nice place to start: Doug Pike, in the 6th, is looking at a haul of over $500K for the quarter, thanks a recent D.C. fundraiser starring Allyson Schwartz and Patrick Murphy.

WI-08: We’re building up a backlog of Republicans trying to take on Rep. Steve Kagen. Businessman Reid Ribble jumped into the field, joining Door Co. Supervisor Marc Savard and Brown Co. Supervisor Andy Williams.

WV-02: With some prodding from the DCCC, Gov. Joe Manchin’s former general counsel, Carte Goodwin, is looking into challenging Rep. Shelly Capito Moore in the Charleston-based 2nd.  

36 thoughts on “SSP Daily Digest: 7/2”

  1. Favorable / Unfavorable

    Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D): 50 / 36

    Sen. Judd Gregg (R): 53 / 24

    Paul Hodes (D): 32 / 23

    John Sununu (R): 43 / 38

    Charlie Bass (R): 33 / 23

    Kelly Ayotte (R): 45 / 8

    Frank Tausch (R): 5 / 4

    2010 Senate

    Ayotte 39%, Hodes 35%

    Hodes 43%, Sununu 41%

    Hodes 40%, Bass 38%

    Hodes 45%, Tausch 25%

    http://www.pollster.com/blogs/

    Those Ayotte numbers seem a little implausible to me.

  2. Looks like Hodes raised $750,000 according to Blue Hampshire. It’s a decent amount that gives him some separation from any Republican candidate although a multimillion dollar total would be nice in the next quarter.

  3. That’s $20.7 million (or $16.7 million not counting the personal loan).  I don’t know how deep the CA state government is in the hole, but I doubt that’s anywhere near enough.  But still, it could help alleviate things slightly.

  4. MN-Gov: I can only assume that buzz is coming from out-of-state and out-of-touch people who don’t realize how already crowded the field is. I had to laugh seeing that headline on HuffPo stating he would be the 800-lb gorilla in the room. Give me a break. I have serious doubts about whether he could even win the primary.

    SC-Gov: Go, Andre, go… I’m still waiting for your “oh my God this isn’t what I was ready for” meltdown.

    LA-03: Only tangentially related, but anyone actually polled Vitter vs Melancon yet?

  5. MNPublis is reportiing that assistant majority leader for the state Senate, Taryl Clark, is making the rounds the 6th district to run against Bachmann.

    Clark is from St Cloud in the far northwest part of the district.  It’s a city of about 65k and is the largest city in that area with most of the city in Stearns but some spill over into Benton and Sherburne.  It’s a moderately blue city, very German Catholic, thick Minnesota accents to boot.

    This is Bachmann’s best area.  She’s actually from the suburbs of St Paul and her suburb is one that borders Ramsey county in the far southeast corner, so she isnt geographically close to her base at all.  Clark needs to drive up the Dem margins out in the NW part of the district and bring some homegirl charm to it because that is how she can win.  Bachmann already loses Washington and Anoka counties for the most part, but those exurban areas up around St Cloud are BRUTAL.  If Clark can maintain Tinklenberg’s numbers everywhere and maintain in her home area, she could finish Bachmann off.

    Oh, and Clark is by far and away going to get the nomination over Tinklenberg if she steps in, she’s easily the best candidate we got against Bachmann.  She’s one to watch but would be seriously fucked come redistricting if we lose a seat.  There is absolutely no way to give her a blue seat if we lose a seat, and there is absolutely no way we can give her a blue seat if we keep all 8.  Im gonna Dave app that one and hope I dont have to do any IHATEBUSH type of crap.  That’ll probably be my night now, heh.

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