SSP Daily Digest: 4/27 (Afternoon Edition)

FL-Sen: It’s come down to brass tacks for Charlie Crist. With fast-approaching April 30 the drop-dead date for switching over to an independent bid for the Senate, he’s set a Thursday deadline for making up his mind on the matter. So, we’ll know soon one way or the other.

MO-Sen, IL-Sen: Robin Carnahan found an excuse to avoid Barack Obama last time he was in Missouri, but, apparently realizing that she needs to rev up her base, she’s appearing with him this week when he visits an ethanol plant in Macon. Obama is also extending some of his cred to the currently very-wobbly Alexi Giannoulias, appearing with him downstate in Quincy on the same road swing.

NC-Sen: There are two different polls today of the Democratic primary in the North Carolina Senate race, both promising a very close race (with the election one week from today, although a runoff may be in the offing). SurveyUSA’s first look at the field finds SoS Elaine Marshall leading ex-state Sen. Cal Cunningham 23-19, with attorney Kenneth Lewis at 10, miscellaneous others adding up to 15, and 34% undecided. (Marshall has a 33-13 edge among liberals, while Cunningham has narrow leads among moderates and conservatives. And despite Cunningham’s relative youth, he’s in 3rd place among the 18-34 set; Kenneth Lewis actually leads among young voters, but barely makes a dent among older voters.) SurveyUSA also finds Richard Burr cruising in the GOP primary, at 59% with none of his opponents topping 6%. PPP (pdf) has similar numbers; Marshall leads Cunningham 26-23, with Lewis at 7, miscellaneous others at 10, and 34% undecided. (It’s a narrower spread from last month, where PPP saw Marshall leading Cunningham 23-17.)

NY-Sen: Finally, someone put their head in the chopping block to go up against Chuck Schumer and his $21 million warchest. Republican political consultant and Fox commentator Jay Townsend will try to… well, you can’t even hope to contain Schumer, let alone beat him.

UT-Sen: There’s yet another poll of the delegates to next month’s Republican convention in Utah, this time by Mason-Dixon on behalf of the Salt Lake Tribune. This one’s pretty bad for Bob Bennett too, suggesting he isn’t likely to even make it to the final round of convention balloting. He’s in third place among delegates’ expressed first choices. Mike Lee is at 37, Tim Bridgewater is at 20, and Bob Bennett is at 16, followed by Cherilyn Eagar at 11. (Inflammatory ex-Rep. Merrill Cook seems to have burned all of his bridges and then bagged and sold all the charcoal, as he’s polling at 1%.) Based on second choices, Lee would win the final round against Bridgewater 44-30, suggesting that Lee can’t nail it down at the convention and that he and Bridgewater would advance to the primary. (Lee wins a Lee/Bennett head-to-head 51-18.) Perhaps the most telling statistic, though, of what a thin slice of the hard right this sample is: of the delegates, 68% say they’re “supporters” of the Tea Party movement. Other Senator Orrin Hatch should be glad he’s not running this year, as he’s sufficiently impure that he’d be getting the same treatment: 71% say they’d be inclined to nominate someone other than Hatch.

AL-Gov: Ah, nothing beats good old fashioned southern hospitality. Tim James (son of ex-Gov. Fob James), running for Alabama Governor, says he’ll save money by stopping offering the driver’s license test in other languages (because, apparently, complying with the Civil Rights Act of 1964 is for suckers). James’s tagline? “This is Alabama. We speak English.”

GA-Gov: Wealthy teabagger Ray Boyd — who just recently showed up on the scene in the GOP gubernatorial field — balked at signing a Republican “loyalty oath” that’s apparently a mandatory part of running for office as a Republican in Georgia. So, Boyd took his $2 million ball, went home, and is now planning to run as an independent. A few percentage of right-wingers peeled off by Boyd may make all the difference for Democratic ex-Gov. Roy Barnes in a close election, so consider this good news.

ME-Gov: Former state House speaker John Richardson abruptly dropped out of the Democratic field in the Maine governor’s race. Richardson (already getting little traction, if another candidate’s internal is to be believed) hit ‘eject’ after finding he wouldn’t qualify for Clean Election Act public funding, after the state ethics committee found his campaign fudged documents about qualifying contributions. That brings a little more clarity to the almost-opaque Democratic field, reducing it to state Sen. President Libby Mitchell, ex-AG Steve Rowe, ex-Dept. of Conservation head Pat McGowan, and businesswoman Rosa Scarcelli.

MN-Gov: This seems like a strange time for Ramsey Co. DA Susan Gaertner to drop out of the gubernatorial race, as she was one of the candidates who was ignoring the DFL nominating convention and planning to forge ahead in the primary regardless. Maybe she was counting on a R.T. Rybak endorsement and thus being the only female candidate in the primary? At any rate, Gaertner cited money woes as the main reason for her dropout; she stopped short of endorsing Margaret Anderson Kelliher but cited the historic nature of electing a female governor and said she didn’t want to be a spoiler for Kelliher.

UT-Gov: Salt Lake County mayor Peter Corroon sounds like he’s looking to take a page from Brian Schweitzer and Kathleen Sebelius, two popular Dems who overcame their states’ reddish hue with a Republican as a running mate. Corroon didn’t name anyone specific, but said he has some GOPers on his Lt. Gov. short list.

AL-05: I don’t know if this’ll help Rep. Parker Griffith much with the local rank-and-file (for instance, the Madison Co. Republican Committee, which refused to endorse him), but all of the state’s four other Republican House members endorsed him. Said the former Democrat and Deaniac: “They have seen first-hand how hard I’ve fought Nancy Pelosi’s liberal agenda that will ruin our country if we don’t stop it.”

FL-25: Buried deep in a Roll Call article about the current state of play in the open seat in the 25th are some numbers from a month-old internal poll by Benenson taken for the DCCC. The poll may explain what got 2008 Democratic candidate Joe Garcia off the fence and back into the fight in the 25th: the poll had Garcia leading state Rep. David Rivera (looking like the likeliest GOP nominee) 38-35. As far as the GOP field goes, it doesn’t seem like rumored candidate state Sen. Alex Diaz de la Portilla is planning to show up; so far, Rivera’s main GOP opposition seems to be attorney Marili Cancio, who says she declined an invitation to the NRCC’s “Young Guns” program.

HI-01: The DCCC is slapping down an $81K independent expenditure in the 1st. It’s a media buy, not on behalf of either Dem but against GOPer Charles Djou.

KS-02: Too bad we don’t have much of a candidate on tap in the 2nd to exploit the carnage if the GOP primary goes nuclear. One-term Rep. Lynn Jenkins (who, believe it or not, hails from the “moderate” wing of the party despite a litany of right-wing-sounding gaffes) is getting a challenge from the teabag corps, in the form of state Sen. Dennis Pyle. Pyle has been threatening a bid for many months, but made it official today.

MO-04: And here’s yet more cat fud, across the state line in Missouri’s 4th. While they haven’t done anything publicly, the NRCC is apparently starting to choose sides in the primary, favoring state Sen. Bill Stouffer over social conservative ex-state Rep. Vicki Hartzler. The NRCC arranged a sitdown between the two candidates, but Hartzler apparently blew it off after finding out the point of the NRCC’s meeting was to encourage her to drop out.

WA-03: State Rep. Deb Wallace was the first Democrat to jump into the field after Rep. Brian Baird’s retirement; she got out fairly quickly once Denny Heck got in, realizing that she’d have to share the moderate side of the ledger with him and that she wouldn’t be able to compete with Heck’s financial resources. Wallace finally endorsed in the race today, opting for (no surprise here) Heck over the more liberal state Sen. Craig Pridemore (who just picked up the Sierra Club’s endorsement last week). Heck also has Baird’s endorsement, as well as that of Gov. Chris Gregoire.

56 thoughts on “SSP Daily Digest: 4/27 (Afternoon Edition)”

  1. I posted this on the morning digest, but did so fairly late, so I figure a number of people didn’t see it, so I am posting it again. This is Elaine Marshall’s first ad in the Senate race in NC, which means her, Cunningham, and Lewis are now all on the airwaves.  

  2. by each candidate, per http://www.khon2.com/news/loca

    for the Jan-Mar period

    According to itemized disbursements turned in by all three candidates Hanabusa spent $166,201.  That was followed by Djou at $91,712 and Case at $45,896.

    Obviously, that has accelerated this month (April). However, Ed Case’s campaign spending in Q1 reminds me of Jennifer Brunner.

    Ant that makes me wonder, why again does the DCCC even consider Case to be a serious candidate? (Yeah, I know, he’s still ahead of Hanubasa in the latest poll…. nominally.)

  3. http://blogs.ajc.com/political

    At the moment Jim Marshall doesn’t have any top-tier GOP opponent despite representing a pretty red district.  Heath Garrett, Isakson’s political strategist is trying to change that: while right now Austin Scott, a candidate for Governor, is contemplating primarying Lt. Gov Casey Cagle, Garrett is telling Scott to switch to the 8th district.  

    Regardless of what Scott runs for he needs to decide soon: the filing deadline is Friday.

  4. are simply STUPID.

    I think one finding in SurveyUSA’s poll of the North Carolina Democratic Senate primary might sum the whole thing up: among those who report already having voted, 20% report being undecided. Maybe they just didn’t want to say who they voted for. Or maybe they already forgot.

  5. In yesterday’s, a poll was posted showing 26% say he deserves re-election and 44% say time for a new person.

    I decided to take 5 minutes and go through SSP and find Dole’s numbers to compare as I remembered them being pretty damn  bad as well and she got spanked once voters met their alternative.

    Ended up at Dkos where they have a post discussing a DSCC poll of the race.  The numbers were…

    Looking ahead to the next election for U.S. senator, will you vote to reelect Elizabeth Dole, consider voting for someone else, or vote to replace Elizabeth Dole with someone new?

    Reelect Dole 35%

    Consider someone else 26%

    Replace 23%

    Depends 9%

    Not sure 7%

    The only thing Burr has going for him compared to Liddy was that he has the benefit of running in 2010 while she got to run in 2008.  Hopefully the even more worse off nature of Burr and his numbers will pull our Dem over the finish line anyway.

  6. Yesterday Russell Edwards (D-Athens) qualified to run against incumbent Representative Paul Broun for the 10th Congressional district in Georgia. A former teacher and community activist Edwards says it's time for reasonable representation for the 10th rather than pursuing the divisive, extremist agenda of Rep. Broun. Although an uphill battle Edwards thinks he can win by persuading moderate and progressive voters in the district to come together to elect a Representative to get things done instead of cause conflict and controversy. 

     

    *Note: I am the Finance Director for Russell Edwards

  7. Almost across the board positive Dem/Obama movement between March and April.

    Obama job approval

    54-44 (53-43)

    Obama approval on the economy

    49-49 (45-52) Best numbers since November.

    Party trust

    Dems 46-32 (43-37)

    Trust on the economy

    Obama 49-38 (47-42)

    Financial regulation

    Obama  52-35 (Great wedge building here)

    Federal budget deficit

    Obama 45-41 (45-43)

    Health care reform          

    Obama 49-39 (46-41)

    Blame for economy

    Bush 59-25 (58-24)

    Blame for deficit

    Bush 60-22

    Financial reform

    Support 65-31 (62-34)

    Reform Wall Street

    Support 63-29

    Generic ballot

    Dems 48-43 RV (48-44)

    http://www.washingtonpost.com/

    Things are clearly getting better. Still think November will surprise.

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