SSP Daily Digest: 12/7

AR-Sen: State Sen. Gilbert Baker has generally been treated as the frontrunner in the Arkansas GOP’s Senate field, and that became a little clearer over the weekend with the state party’s straw poll. It was a close race, though: Baker got 35% (out of 700 votes), followed closely by businessman and Huckabee crony Curtis Coleman at 33. The biggest surprise may be who finished 3rd: former Army colonel and “Christian identity” enthusiast Conrad Reynolds, at 23, followed by head teabagger Tom Cox at 4, state Sen. Kim Hendren an embarrassing 2, and some dudes Fred Ramey and Buddy Rogers at 2 and 1 apiece.

LA-Sen: Republican SoS Jay Dardenne isn’t seeming to take any steps to gear up for a primary challenge to Sen. David Vitter, but he keeps not doing anything to make the rumors go away, either. Dardenne recently said he’s considering polling the race soon, which would require setting up an exploratory committee. The only poll of a Vitter/Dardenne matchup, from R2K in March, gave Vitter an 11-pt edge.

MT-Sen: If Max Baucus is running again in 2014, this is the kind of publicity he doesn’t need in the meantime. It turns out that Baucus, who separated from his wife last year, then began an affair with his office director Melodee Hanes — and then nominated her to be Montana’s new US Attorney. She didn’t get the position, although she does now work in a different role for the DOJ.

NC-Sen: After a lot of back and forth, former state Sen. Cal Cunningham made his campaign for the Democratic Senate nomination official today. You can see his launch video at the above link. However, Chapel Hill mayor Kevin Foy, who’d floated his name out there for the Democratic nod, confirmed that he won’t be getting in the race.

NY-Sen-B, NY-Gov: After trumpeting the rumors a few weeks ago that Rudy Giuliani was poised to enter the Senate race against Kirsten Gillibrand, now the Daily News is assessing Rudy’s decision to take on a long-term, high-profile consulting gig as security expert for the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, and concluding that he’s not looking so likely as a candidate for anything now. Meanwhile, over on the Dem side of the aisle, Manhattan borough president Scott Stringer, who briefly planned a primary challenge to Kirsten Gillibrand, has now finally offered an endorsement to her.

PA-Sen: Rep. Joe Sestak pulled in his first endorsement from a fellow Congressperson in his primary campaign against Arlen Specter. Rep. Barney Frank offered his support today, saying that he considers Sestak one of the most valuable members of Congress.

NV-Gov: With a recent Mason-Dixon poll showing Democratic Las Vegas mayor Oscar Goodman with a small lead as an independent in various gubernatorial race permutations, Goodman is now publicly weighing the race. He says he’ll have an answer “real soon,” but that his wife has already given him the green light on a run.

AL-02: Can teabagging save Bobby Bright next year? Not by him doing it (or we can only hope)… instead, Montgomery city counilor Martha Roby, the NRCC’s pick in the race, is going to face a primary challenge from the ultra-right. Businessman Rick Barber, who’s been active in local tea parties and the 9/12 Washington march, is planning to take on Roby. He has to be encouraged by an interesting new poll from Rasmussen, which suggests that, given a choice between a Democrat, a Republican, and a Tea Party member in the upcoming election, the Tea Partier would beat the Republican, 23-18 (with the Democrat prevailing at 36%).

PA-06: Wealthy pharma executive Steven Welch, who fled from the race in the 7th to the 6th when Patrick Meehan appeared, is now earning “RINO” labels and the enmity of the RedStaters. Welch not only gave Joe Sestak $300 in 2006, but also was a registered Democrat from 2006 through 2008. Also, another GOPer is sniffing out the race (as the possible fifth entrant in the GOP field): Scott Zelov, commissioner of very wealthy and moderate Lower Merion Township on the Main Line.

TN-08: State Sen. Roy Herron is fighting back against the wide-ranging attacks leveled against him by the NRCC, as his candidacy for the 8th enters its second week. (Recall from last week that the NRCC has been gay-baiting Herron.) Herron called the NRCC’s attacks “ridiculous and desperate,” to which the NRCC said Herron was “foaming at the mouth” and “hurling ‘Yo mama’-style insults.” As much as the NRCC is transparently guilty of what they accuse Herron of, they at least win some points for evocative language here. An article from the Tennessean lists a few other Dems who may be interested in the seat, despite Herron’s quick entry, one of whom is a big name: former state House speaker Jimmy Naifeh (who had considered a run in 1988, when John Tanner took over the seat). They also list state Sen. Doug Jackson as a possibility.

NY-St. Sen.: State Sen. Hiram Monserrate is managing to escape his misdemeanor assault conviction with no jail time, leaving his colleagues wondering what to do with him (including censure, suspension, or expulsion). Also, good news for the Dems as they look for ways to expand their narrow majority: one of the last Republicans left in the Senate within the New York City limits, Frank Padavan, may get a top-tier challenge next year from former city councilor Tony Avella (last seen losing the mayoral primary to William Thompson).

Mayors: Kasim Reed has been certified as elected as the new mayor of Atlanta. His opponent, city councilor Mary Norwood, still plans to request a recount of the election, decided by a margin of less than one thousand votes. In New York City, guess who finished fourth in the mayoral race: fictional character C. Montgomery Burns, who got more write-in votes than any other candidate. Why just vote for a billionaire buying the office who’s only a little bit creepy and evil, when instead you can go the Full Monty?

History: Here’s an interesting piece of trivia: a woman was not elected to the U.S. Senate, without having been the wife or daughter of a previous Senator, until 1980. That woman was Republican Paula Hawkins, who served as Florida’s Senator for one term, and in her outspoken self-proclaimed averageness, telegenic ultra-conservatism, and resentments of liberal media elites, was something of a Sarah Palin prototype. Hawkins died over the weekend at age 82.

Polltopia: Here’s another thoughtful article at Pollster.com on what’s driving Rasmussen’s perceptibly pro-Republican house effects, from professor Alan Abramowitz. He says that there’s more going on than just their use of a likely voter model; he sees a major difference between Rasmussen and other pollsters in terms of the Democratic advantage in party identification. Meanwhile, PPP is asking for your help yet again: they’d like your input on which House district to poll next. Should it be CO-03, CO-04, ID-01, NH-01, NM-01, NM-02, or SD-AL?

83 thoughts on “SSP Daily Digest: 12/7”

  1. though my second choice would have been NH-01.

    Also, re: NRCC gay-baiting people: I want to know just how many NRCC people are “nasty, naughty boy[s]”.

  2. I was under the assumption that we were pretty safe there, considering SHS won the last two elections by 40 points and 36 points. Is there a big time challenger this year or something?

  3. This is the kind of garbage we don’t need in the US Senate primary in North Carolina if we want to defeat Richard Burr.

    The below statements from Elaine Marshall’s campaign manager Thomas Mills:

    12/1: “It’s pretty tasteless to leak or announce you’re running on the day that Secretary Marshall’s dealing with her husband’s funeral.  But if he is running, this is all about D.C. money.  He’s waited until he got the approval of D.C. power brokers – that’s not a very good indication of the type of Senator he would make.”

    12/7: “Cal Cunningham is the hokey pokey candidate.  First he was in, and then he was out, and now he’s back in.  He’s in this election because Washington wants to choose North Carolina’s Democratic Senate nominee.”

    What the hell is this shit.  The Marshall campaign is already going negative.  HE JUST ANNOUNCED TODAY and her minions are already setting a divisive tone for an important primary.  This is pathetic.  I’m losing more and more respect for Secretary Marshall every day.

  4. Salazar, Heinrich, and Herseth-Sandlin even being included in a poll right now worries me.

    Anyway, I’ll go with ID-01, curious to see how Minnick is looking. He’s worked hard to craft an image that fits his district.

    SD-AL would be my second choice. Herseth-Sandlin is one of my favorite Democrats. I’m hoping we have nothing to worry about.

  5. Republicans spending money to hack themself up in a primary over an R+15 district is a dream come true.  They should have to spend about $10 to win this district, but instead it looks like it could be one of their biggest expenditures in the country.

  6. (R)asmussen polled the South Carolina Governor’s race.  The democratic frontrunner Rex holds up very well, beating Bauer and staying close to the other two.  Guess Bauer being Lt. Gov under Sanford hurts him, even if the two dislike each other.  

    http://www.rasmussenreports.co

    South Carolina Survey of 500 Likely Voters

    December 2, 2009

    2010 South Carolina Governor Race

    Gresham Barrett(R) 39%

    Jim Rex (D) 33%

    Some Other Candidate 7%

    Not Sure 21%

    2010 South Carolina Governor Race

    Andre Bauer (R) 35%

    Jim Rex (D) 36%

    Some Other Candidate 13%

    Not Sure 16%

    2010 South Carolina Governor Race

    Henry McMaster (R) 39%

    Jim Rex (D) 32%

    Some Other Candidate 10%

    Not Sure 19%

    2010 South Carolina Governor Race

    Gresham Barrett (R) 45%

    Vincent Sheheen (D) 23%

    Some Other Candidate 11%

    Not Sure 20%

    2010 South Carolina Governor Race

    Andre Bauer(R) 39%

    Vincent Sheheen (D) 29%

    Some Other Candidate 13%

    Not Sure 19%

    2010 South Carolina Governor Race

    Henry McMaster(R) 43%

    Vincent Sheheen (D) 26%

    Some Other Candidate 10%

    Not Sure 21%

     

  7. Gay marriage passes judiciary committee 7-6.

    Dems Paul Sarlo and John Girgenti joined Repubs Jennifer Beck, Gerald Carnivale, Christopher Bateman, and Joe Kyrillos in opposition. Republican Bill Baroni joined Dems Nia Gill, Ray Lesniak, Nick Scutari, Bob Smith, Brian Stack, and Loretta Weinberg in support.

    Seeing as how Sarlo and Girgenti are chair and vice-chair respectively of the committee, I can’t imagine that primary challenges would go anywhere.

    Baroni’s vote is definitely a psychological boost, proves that the Republican bandwagon we saw in NY isn’t always the case.

    Assuming Richard Codey can break ties (I’m not sure how that works in NJ…) we can only afford to lose 2 more Dems. That is, unless other Rs see Baroni and think, hey, just because I’m a Republican doesn’t mean I have to be a heartless twat.

    Anyone with more knowledge of NJ politics have an idea of our chances?

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