SSP Daily Digest: 10/7

DE-Sen: Here’s an ominous possibility: it’s been taken on faith that Beau Biden will still run for the Senate even with Mike Castle’s entry… but what if he doesn’t? The rumor mill is suddenly wondering if Biden has developed cold feet, especially keeping in mind that he’s only 40 and can pretty much waltz into the job in four years, rather running the risk of damaging his brand by losing an election in 2010.

FL-Sen: Former Miami mayor Maurice Ferre, who just re-appeared on the scene this week, has already moved quickly to get into the race, announcing his candidacy for the Democratic nod today. Ferre is 74, a bit old to be launching a Senate bid, but he should have a lot of appeal in the Hispanic communities (although it’s worth noting he’s not Cuban, but Puerto Rican). On the other side of the aisle, Republican underdog Marco Rubio seems on the precipice of a big score that will help him tap into a nationwide base of donors (although his recent fundraising numbers suggests he’s already gone nationwide): the Club for Growth is feeling sufficiently confident to get involved on his behalf.

NV-Sen: I’ve lost count of who’s in the lead, Mark Sanford or John Ensign, in terms of how many times he’s had to tell the press that he won’t resign. Anyway, it was Ensign’s turn again yesterday, as he faces a ramped-up Senate Ethics investigation.

VT-Sen: A primary challenge to Pat Leahy from the left? This seems unlikely to go anywhere, but Daniel Frielich, a military doctor from Wilmington, VT, will announce his candidacy today. His bid seems to focus mostly on health care (he’s a single-payer backer and not a fan of the Dems’ watered-down approach).

OR-Gov: Couple minor tidbits from the Beaver State: one, Steve Novick (who fared well in the 2008 Dem Senate primary) had been occasionally rumored to be interested in running for Governor, but makes his Shermanesque ‘no’ statement in a Blue Oregon piece detailing his road map for the next guv. Also, as Republicans cast about for a palatable candidate, the fickle finger is now pointing at state Sen. Frank Morse, who says he may get in. Morse has a moderate or at least pleasant reputation within the Senate, but has no statewide profile.

VA-Gov: Reading between the lines, it sounds like Creigh Deeds might be looking for excuses for his increasingly probable defeat in November. He blames some of his travails on the “spending” and “noise coming out of Washington D.C.”

FL-08: With Orange County Mayor Rich Crotty out, former state Sen. Daniel Webster is still a maybe (although his registering “danielwebsterforcongress.com” may tip his hand). Regardless of what Webster is doing, at least one other Republican is wading into the fray: wealthy businessman Jerry Pierce, who says he’ll run with or without GOP backing. (Pierce has given $15K to the Club for Growth over the last decade, so maybe he’s hoping they’ll return the favor.)

NH-02: Jennifer Horn, who lost to Rep. Paul Hodes in 2008, isn’t getting out of the way for ex-Rep. Charlie Bass’s possible comeback. Horn is expected to publicly announce her candidacy today.

VA-05: As had been expected, state Sen. Rob Hurt filed his paperwork yesterday to run against Rep. Tom Perriello in the 5th. Hurt is from near Danville at the district’s south end, setting up a battle of the regional bases with the Charlottesville-based Perriello.

Mayors: Here’s an ignominious end of the road for three-term Albuquerque mayor Martin Chavez (who, Bloomberg-style, overturned a term limits ordinance in order to run again): he got bounced from office in a primary. Somewhat surprisingly, Republican state Rep. Richard Berry cleared the 40% mark in the three-way primary, which means that he wins without the trouble of a general election. Berry got 44% to Chavez’s 35% and 21% for Democratic state Sen. Richard Romero. (UPDATE: This technically was a general election, not a primary, under local law; had no one broken 40%, the top-two November election would have been considered a runoff.)

NRCC: The NRCC announced which five of its Patriots (the vulnerable incumbents, akin to the Dems’ Frontline program) will get the first infusion of cash. The beneficiaries are Mary Bono Mack, Charlie Dent, Pat Tiberi, Lee Terry, and Tom Rooney, all of whom have drawn high-profile challengers.

88 thoughts on “SSP Daily Digest: 10/7”

  1. one suspects that the White House will have some say in this, because if he runs and loses, it’ll be a black eye for the Administration.  By the same token, I don’t think they can really afford to lose one of the more liberal-leaning Senate seats either, so that might weigh on them going full-court-press to win.

  2. Chavez’s greed has led to a Republican mayor. Stupid, stupid, stupid. On the up side, Chavez won’t be around any more to screw with Dem party politics.

  3. for the citizens of Albuquerque, require that one needs to win 50%+1 in the primary to win the mayoral seat because that is some fucked up bullshit.

    Who would come up with such a stupid law that you can skip a general election if you win big enough in a primary, that is NOT how our electoral system is supposed to work.

  4. I missed it.

    It’s too bad we waited so long on Tiberi.  Challenges would have been easier in 06 and 08 than they will be in 10.  Hopefully we can soften him up and drain his account in 10, and then make a hard run at him in 12 when the president is being re-elected.

  5. …especially since all of the few FL-Sen-Dem Primary polls have shown the vast majority of voters in the undecided column. If Corrine Brown jumps in (my understanding is her exploratory run is very much serious, but she probably won’t reach her set fundraising goal), the race will become a complete mess. There’s Kevin Burns too, who could do very well among SE liberals.

  6. Are we really that sure of the outcome? People were writing off Deeds a month out from the primary and he ended up running away with the thing. No one seems to be able to agree on the size of McDonnell’s lead, so why are we taking it as a given that the guy’s more or less unstoppable? Can we not just see a little bit more polling data in the last few weeks of the campaign before deciding that all is lost?

  7. This wasn’t like what Louisiana used to do (where there was a “primary” where all Democrats and Republicans just ran against each other and the two biggest vote getters went to a run off), rather this was a general election (Albuquerque city elections are nonpartisan, so there are no primaries)

  8. NRCC says she’s vulnerable, so please let this be the year that someone finally takes out Mary Bono Mack.

    She represents the Palm Springs metro, one of the gayest cities in one of the gayest states in the entire US and she voted with Republicans to try and strip the repeal of Don’t Ask Don’t Tell out of the defense reauthorization bill. Like, seriously, Mary? A repeal of DADT even has majority support among Republicans. Ugh.

    Full disclosure: I’m not affiliated at all with any campaigns, I’ve just met her and I simply do not care for her. At all.  

  9. I’d like to seen Alan Khazei gain some more traction in the Massachusetts race, but that probably won’t happen in such a short time span.  The more I read about him the more he impresses me though.  

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