SSP Daily Digest: 6/17 (Afternoon Edition)

AK-Sen: It looks like that unexpected Sarah Palin endorsement may have put Joe Miller on the map, in his challenge from the right to Lisa Murkowksi in the GOP Senate primary. Now he’s gotten the backing of the Tea Party Express. Of course, it remains to be seen whether the libertarian-minded teabagger message has much resonance in Alaska; remember, at the end of the day, Alaska Republicans like their federal goodies a lot (hence the staying power of Ted Stevens and Don Young).

IL-Sen: Could a factual dispute over Mark Kirk claims that he taught at a nursery school actually succeed in taking him down yet another peg? Kirk mentioned in a 2006 speech that he’d been a teacher, worrying about what kid might bring a gun to class. After questions arose as to whether Kirk had ever actually taught, his campaign clarified that it was a reference to his time working for one semester at a nursery school in Ithaca, New York. If even the preschool-age children of Cornell professors are taking guns to class, we’re in a lot more trouble than I’d thought. There’s also one other weird Illinois item out today: the 7th Circuit just ruled that there needs to be a special election to fill Barack Obama’s seat, after all. That’s about a year too late to be relevant, considering that Roland Burris’s tenure is almost over. But it may yet result in a special election coinciding with the November general election, which would presumably mean that Alexi Giannoulias or Kirk would get to serve in the lame-duck session and get a smidge more all-important seniority. [UDPATE: Actually, because there’s no “irreparable harm,” the 7th Circuit didn’t order a special election even though they said there probably should have been one; instead, they sent the case back down to the district court.]

SC-Sen: Guess who’s back all of a sudden, now that there’s a gaping hole where a competent candidate should be in South Carolina? Supporters of Linda Ketner, who last year declined a re-run in SC-01 (where she’d run well in 2008), are floating her name for a Senate run. Since it doesn’t look like Alvin Greene is getting off the Democratic ballot line (after the state election commission today said they aren’t getting involved), the deep-pocketed Ketner would need to run as an independent instead. Ketner, herself, hasn’t said anything about a bid though.

CA-Gov: Why walk back to the center after winning your primary, when you can make one frantic, implausible leap instead? After getting pulled to the right by Steve Poizner in the primary, now Meg Whitman is saying “No, no, I love immigrants,” in a Spanish-language TV ad that’ll debut during today’s Mexico/France World Cup game. She says she opposed Arizona’s new immigration law and opposed Califorina’s 1994 Prop 187, too.

FL-Gov: Indie candidate Bud Chiles isn’t getting the warmest of welcomes in his newly-launched bid; news reports are surfacing of his involvement in a real estate development flop in a small Panhandle town. Chiles is a defendant in seven different lawsuits, either foreclosure suits or suits over leases of construction equipment. Whether or not that sticks, though, there’s also an institutional disparity showing up in how state Dems are viewing him, versus how they’re viewing Charlie Crist’s independent candidacy: Palm Beach Co. Commissioner Burt Aaronson has gone public in wanting Chiles to get out the gubernatorial race while being fine with Crist staying in the Senate race.

ME-Gov: This morning we linked to an article musing that moderate Maine Republicans might defect to the independent candidacy of Eliot Cutler, rather support the hard-right Paul LePage. Unfortunately, visions of cat fud dancing in our heads were dashed by a unity rally today where all six losing GOP candidates, even the decidedly moderate state Sen. Peter Mills, endorsed LePage.

MI-Gov: There’s one more poll of the gubernatorial primaries in Michigan, this time for Inside Michigan Politics. On the GOP side, they find Peter Hoekstra leading at 21, followed by Rick Snyder at 15, Mike Cox and Mike Bouchard with 10 each, and Tom George at 1. The Democratic primary has Andy Dillon at 14 and Virg Bernero at 10, with a whopping 76% undecided.

MN-Gov: The AFL-CIO has decided to follow the lead of the SEIU, and not make an endorsement in the Democratic primary, where a variety of labor-friendly candidates are competing.

NH-01: I wonder if this is just personal animosity at work, or if there’s a larger story here? Manchester mayor Ted Gatsas endorsed in the GOP primary in the 1st, and rather than endorse his immediate mayoral predecessor (and presumed frontrunner) Frank Guinta, he backed Sean Mahoney instead.

NY-20: Here’s some good news for Rep. Scott Murphy, who between strong fundraising and third-tier opposition, is already having a pretty good electoral cycle: he’s been endorsed for the Independence Party’s ballot line this year. It’s sharp contrast to neighboring Rep. Mike Arcuri, whose all-cycle-long woes just got added-to by the IP endorsement going to GOP opponent Richard Hanna.

OH-13: According to the Fix, Tom Ganley is out with an internal poll from POS that gives him a 3-point lead (44-41) over Rep. Betty Sutton. I’m wondering about the date on the poll, though (which they don’t discuss), as there were rumblings all the way back in mid-February, when Ganley switched over from the Senate race where he was flailing in the GOP primary to the 13th, that Ganley had an internal poll giving him a 3-point lead (although that was the only detail given). Or, maybe he’s just polling verrrrrry consistently.

SC-04: Big-time tension down at Bob Jones University! The school’s arts and sciences dean endorsed GOP primary challenger Trey Gowdy several months ago, but now the school’s former chancellor (and grandson of its founder) Bob Jones III has come out in support of incumbent Bob Inglis instead.

AL-Ag Comm.: He might have lost the primary, but he won the media war, becoming a minor celebrity along the way thanks to his bizarre ad going viral. And now he’s back: third-place finisher Dale Peterson is endorsing John McMillan, and appearing in an ad where he not only touts McMillan but tells “that dummy” (presumably Dorman Grace) to go back to his chicken farm, and, for good measure, fires a shotgun at a no-good political-sign rustler.

Louisiana: After a few years of doing it more or less normally, Louisiana is going back to its unique system of jungle primary and runoff for its federal-level races, starting in 2012. Supporters of the switch back say it’ll save money by not requiring separate primaries. (H/t Johnny Longtorso.)

Polltopia: Today’s must read, if you haven’t seen it already, is a lengthy profile of Scott Rasmussen in the Washington Post. While it has some backstory on Rasmussen’s pre-polling days, the real meat here is a good rundown of what polling experts think Rasmussen may be doing wrong, and some interesting speculation on the future direction of the polling business.

90 thoughts on “SSP Daily Digest: 6/17 (Afternoon Edition)”

  1. Lautenberg’s approval rating is 40-47, and Menendez’s is 38-43. What has Lautenberg done to be more unpopular? You would think with his sickness, people would like him more?  

  2. That one hits a little too close to home for me, literally, seeing as this is my home district.  

    Folks, if Betty Sutton, who was seen as unassailable before Ganley and his moneybags showed up, ends up losing, you can forget about keeping the House.  In fact, you can start talking about losses in 50+, maybe even 60+ category.  Virtually every swing seat in the country will flip before this district will, and all those conservadems from R+ districts, well you can kiss them goodbye too if we’re dropping strongly D districts with popular incumbents.

  3. Ok a little in the weeds but Republican state senator Paul Koering was recently seen having dinner with a porn star. Koering is a pretty reasonable guy as Republicans go but this along with the fact he is openly gay has got to drive to drive the Fundies in his party nuts.

    http://www.startribune.com/lif

  4. Why did Ketner decide not to run again in SC-01?  Especially since it’s now an open seat.

    If Ketner turns down the draft campaign for Senator, maybe she could run as an indy in SC-01 after all, as that race has Ben Frasier as the Dem nominee.  He’s the 1-18 election loser who’s also suspected of being a plant.

  5. Here’s the 7th Cir opinion.  While Judge Wood’s decision agrees that under the law, there probably should’ve been a special election scheduled for E-Day as well, there was no need for an injunction ordering one because the plaintiffs failed to prove irreparable harm, and this gets booted back to the district court to see if they agree with the 7th Cir that plaintiffs actually succeed on the merits. See pp 39-40:

    It is not enough for the plaintiffs to show a likelihood of success on the merits. Critically, they must also show why they will suffer irreparable harm if the preliminary injunction they want does not issue. …It is there that their case founders. When they decided to abandon their argument that the special election had to occur as soon as practicable, they effectively disclaimed any urgency in the matter that might justify preliminary injunctive relief. Confronted at oral argument, they were unable to suggest any irreparable harm that they were seeking to avoid. In their reply brief, the plaintiffs address harm in a cursory fashion, which really just reiterates their merits argument. We have made clear in the past that “[i]t is not the obligation of this court to research and construct legal arguments open to parties, especially when they are represented by counsel,” and we have warned that “perfunctory and undeveloped arguments, and arguments that are unsupported by pertinent authority, are waived.” The fact that the plaintiffs leave us essentially in the dark about the irreparable harm that they confront makes it impossible for us to conclude that the district court abused its discretion when it denied the preliminary injunction.

    There is still time for the governor to issue a writ of election that will call for an election on the date established by Illinois law and that will make it clear to the voters that they are selecting a replacement for Senator Obama. The district court can easily reach and resolve the merits of this request before any of the harm that the plaintiffs forecast comes to pass. Moreover,  circumstances change: Governor Quinn might issue a writ of election tomorrow, or next week. We detect no irreparable injury that will be avoided through preliminary relief.

  6. Barton would become chairman of the Energy Committee if the GOP takes over the House.  Any chance that the Dems can use his apology and the Barton’s position in an ad in swing districts?

  7. On June 7, I posted a diary called The politics of rescuing state governments or letting them go to hell

    Now that the Republicans in the Senate plus Lieberman and Nelson (NE), with Byrd absent, have in fact screwed the unemployed and strapped state governments facing budgetary emergencies, should we all revise downward our estimates of the vote totals for incumbents throughout the country, generally – which unfortunately means the Democrats, most of whom voted for this rescue package, will get it on the chin just for being members of an ineffectual governing majority?

    And may I pause to mention the absurdity of the enraging fact that not a single Republican in the Senate gives a fuck about the poor and unemployed and that a 56-40 vote means a provision has failed in the Senate, nowadays, when every fucking thing is filibustered?

    By enabling the most callous, undependable members of the Democratic Caucus in using the deficit as an excuse to screw people during an economic downturn, President Obama has also screwed himself and the chances of all Congressional Democrats in competitive races. There is a time for paying down the debt, and there is a time for deficit spending. It shouldn’t take a wild guess to figure out what time it is now, and opinion polls are perfectly clear that people don’t like deficits (I hate them, too) but care much more about jobs.

    I think the public is going to be handing out a lot of “fuck yous” at the ballot box in November.

  8. Anyone got any idea on the likelyhood that Murkowski might actually be overtaken by 8/24?  Is Miller raising money?  I guess DeMint will stay out of it since she is an incumbent.  Redstate is behind Miller though.

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