SSP Updates 37 Race Ratings

With only two weeks remaining, it’s time for another round of updates to our Senate, Gubernatorial, and House ratings. With DCCC triage in full effect, giving us a clear picture of who’s on the very wrong side of the House firewall, you may notice that this is the first time we’ve added House incumbents to the “Lean Republican” column. (In an interesting bit of symmetry, FL-24 was also the first race in 2008 where we dropped an incumbent — Tom Feeney — to “Lean D,” also about two weeks prior to the election.)

  • DE-Sen: Lean D to Likely D
  • FL-Sen: Lean R to Likely R
  • OH-Sen: Lean R to Likely R
  • WI-Sen: Tossup to Lean R

  • IL-Gov: Lean R to Tossup
  • ME-Gov: Lean R to Tossup
  • NH-Gov: Likely D to Lean D
  • SC-Gov: Likely R to Lean R

  • AR-04: Safe D to Likely D
  • AZ-07: Safe D to Tossup
  • AZ-08: Lean D to Tossup
  • CA-11: Lean D to Tossup
  • CA-20: Likely D to Lean D
  • FL-24: Tossup to Lean R
  • GA-08: Lean D to Tossup
  • ID-01: Tossup to Lean D
  • IL-11: Tossup to Lean R
  • IL-17: Lean D to Tossup
  • IN-08: Lean R to Likely R
  • MA-04: Safe D to Likely D
  • MI-15: Safe D to Likely D
  • MN-08: Safe D to Likely D
  • MS-04: Likely D to Lean D
  • NC-08: Lean D to Tossup
  • NJ-12: Likely D to Lean D
  • NY-04: Safe D to Likely D
  • NY-22: Safe D to Likely D
  • OH-01: Tossup to Lean R
  • OH-06: Likely D to Lean D
  • OH-09: Likely D to Safe D
  • OH-13: Tossup to Lean D
  • OH-15: Tossup to Lean R
  • OR-04: Safe D to Likely D
  • PA-03: Tossup to Lean R
  • PA-07: Lean R to Tossup
  • TX-17: Tossup to Lean R
  • WA-08: Likely R to Lean R

28 of these changes favor Republicans; 9 races (DE-Sen, 3 of the 4 gubernatorial races, and 5 House races, including the Ohio implosion duo) have moved in the Democratic direction.

SSP Daily Digest: 10/18 (Morning Edition)

  • CO-Sen: In a debate on Meet the Press with Sen. Michael Bennet, GOPer Ken Buck said he thinks that being gay is a choice – and then followed up by saying, “I think that birth has an influence over it, like alcoholism and some other things, but I think that basically you have a choice.”
  • NH-Sen: This is not so helpful: Paul Hodes’s former pollster, Mountain West Research, just agreed to pay New Hampshire a $20K fine for failing to comply with state law regarding a negative message-testing poll they did on behalf of Hodes this past summer. The AP calls it “push polling,” but it quite clearly wasn’t, given the small number of respondents involved, and also the timing (push polling is something you do to mass numbers of people right before election day). It seems like Mountain West’s sin was failing to identify the poll’s sponsor (i.e., Hodes) on their calls.
  • PA-Sen: CQ says that the DSCC has spent $4.7 million in Pennsylvania to date (not include the $1.2 million they shelled out to help Arlen Specter), and Dems expect to spend $9 million before all is said and done, making it the biggest commitment in the nation. Thanks to independent groups, the NRSC has only spent about $600K here so far.
  • WV-Sen: This has already come up on the campaign trail (Joe Manchin’s mentioned it in ads, for instance), but now it’s official: John Raese’s wife has been formally purged from the West Virginia voting rolls – because she’s also registered to vote in Florida, where she lives. (Ooh! Voter fraud!) And while we’re on the topic, Raese probably wishes that Rush Limbaugh would shut his big fat mouth. This is how Big Pharma described the senate candidate while endorsing him on his show:
  • “Full disclosure, I happen to know John Raese. He is a part-time resident here in Palm Beach and he has a locker right across the, right across the bench from me at a prominent local club. I’ve never played golf with him, but I’ve met him.”

    As the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette’s Daniel Malloy says, “The image of Raese rubbing elbows with Rush at a swank Palm Beach country club is not one that the Raese campaign must welcome right now.”

  • AZ-07: I wonder what guys like Steve Driehaus have to think when they get told to walk the plank while veterans in much bluer districts who are victims only of their own self-inflicted wounds – oh, such as, I dunno, Raul Grijalva – get help airlifted in from above. Anyhow, the DCCC must clearly sense trouble in AZ’s 7th CD, since they’ve gone up on the air here with an ad hitting Ruth McClung for supporting a 23% national sales tax.
  • FL-22: You may have seen the news that GOPer Allen West has a disturbingly close relationship with a notorious gang of violent criminals known as the Outlaws Motorcycle Club. The best part now, though, is West’s denial that he has any affiliation with the group, in which he channels a sort of Bizarro Groucho Marx. The Outlaws, you see, “do not accept blacks, Jews or gays.” Phew!
  • NC-11: Big Dog alert! Bill Clinton is doing a rally for Heath Shuler in Asheville on Thursday.
  • NY-22: It may not be quite Paul LePage levels, but Maurice Hinchey probably wishes he hadn’t gotten so testy with a reporter who asked him questions about whether he had a financial interest in a local development project. On tape, you can see Hinchey tell William Kemble that he is “full of baloney” and to “shut up.” After the cameras stopped rolling, though, Hinchey apparently “made a beeline for Kemble and got in his face.” Crew for local station YNN said they “saw the congressman poke Kemble in the chest aggressively.”
  • TN-08: Though Ron Johnson’s received probably the most attention in recent months, I think Steve Fincher may be this cycle’s granddaddy for bailouts-for-me-but-not-for-thee Republicanism. As an agribusiness kingpin, he’s raked in millions in federal farm subsidies. Now it turns out that he also received a state grant just last year – and may have even violated the terms of that grant by selling the equipment it helped him buy too quickly.
  • TX-17: It looks like Bill Flores is going to win the Tommy Thompson Award for Crazy Beliefs Blamed on Bodily Functions. You may recall that Thompson (by far my favorite Republican candidate to run in the last GOP presidential primary) claimed that a full bladder caused him to say he favored allowing employers to fire gay employees during a debate in 2007. Now Flores wants backsies for telling an interviewer that he was not opposed to raising the Social Security retirement age… because he had a headache.
  • DCCC/NRCC: CQ says that so far, the NRCC has spent $31 million on independent expenditures this cycle, while the D-Trip has spent $22 mil.
  • Senate: Politico has a roundup of senate fundraising numbers.
  • SSP TV:

    • PA-Sen: It’s been a while, but at long last, we finally have another poop-themed ad, thanks to Joe Sestak
    • KY-Sen: I worship you, Aqua Buddha! (Apparently this ad has turned Rand Paul into a WATB)
    • GA-Gov: Roy Barnes hits Nathan Deal for once having tried to weaken the state’s rape shield law; the RGA uses a clip of Roy Barnes dismissing the deaths of two children in state custody: “Out of 20,000 children, you’re going to have children die every day.”
    • NY-Gov: Andrew Cuomo whacks Carl Paladino on abortion rights
    • CA-03: Karl Rove’s American Crossroads attacks Ami Bera for supporting “Obamacare”
    • CA-20: The DCCC says Republican Andy Vidak wants to cut federal funding for water projects (apparently a big issue in this district)
    • NY-04: Carolyn McCarthy’s first spot of the cycle touts her focus on job creation
    • OH-02: Dem Surya Yalamanchili says his ad cost him only $20 to make
    • TX-27: In a much-less-good-than-it-could-have-been ad, Rep. Solomon Ortiz features that goofy photo of Blake Farenthold in his pajamas with a scantily clad woman
    • VA-01: Dem Krystal Ball introduces herself with her first ad

    How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Polls

    The boys down at SSP Shipping & Receiving are, frankly, completely overwhelmed with the influx of incoming polling to report. That’s why we gotta dish ’em out with no added frills, bulk-style. Our latest dose:

    KY-Sen: Braun Research for cn|2 (10/4-6, likely voters, 8/30-9/1 in parens):

    Jack Conway (D): 40 (37)

    Rand Paul (R): 43 (42)

    Undecided: 17 (20)

    (MoE: ±3.5%)

    NC-Sen: High Point University (9/25-30, adults, no trend lines):

    Elaine Marshall (D): 31

    Richard Burr (R-inc): 45

    Mike Beitler (L): 4

    Undecided: 18

    (MoE: ±5%)

    WI-Sen: Fairbank Maslin for the DSCC (10/4-6, likely voters):

    Russ Feingold (D-inc): 48

    Ron Johnson (R): 49

    (MoE: ±4%)

    FL-Gov: Mason-Dixon (10/4-6, likely voters, 9/20-22 in parens):

    Alex Sink (D): 44 (47)

    Rick Scott (R): 40 (40)

    (MoE: ±4%)

    OH-Gov, OH-Sen: Suffolk University (10/4-6, likely voters, no trend lines):

    Ted Strickland (D-inc): 42

    John Kasich (R): 46

    Dennis Spisak (G): 4

    Ken Matesz (L): 2

    Undecided: 5

    Lee Fisher (D): 37

    Rob Portman (R): 47

    Michael Pryce (I): 4

    Undecided: 7

    (MoE: ±4.4%)

    ME-Gov, ME-01: Maine Center for Public Opinion for Pine Tree Politics (Gov | -01) (10/4-7, likely voters, no trend lines):

    Libby Mitchell (D): 29

    Paul LePage (R): 30

    Eliot Cutler (I): 11

    Shawn Moody (I): 5

    Kevin Scott (I): 2

    Undecided: 24

    (MoE: ±3.8%)

    Chellie Pingree (D-inc): 46

    Dean Scontras (R): 38

    Undecided: 16

    (MoE: ±5.3%)

    MI-Gov: EPIC MRA (10/3-7, likely voters, 9/11-12 in parens):

    Virg Bernero (D): 29 (29)

    Rick Snyder (R): 49 (53)

    (MoE: ±4%)

    CA-18: SurveyUSA for KFSN-TV (10/5-6, likely voters, no trend lines):

    Dennis Cardoza (D-inc): 50

    Mike Berryhill (R): 44

    Undecided: 6

    (MoE: ±4%)

    CA-18: J. Moore Methods for Dennis Cardoza (9/27-29, likely voters):

    Dennis Cardoza (D-inc): 53

    Mike Berryhill (R): 37

    (MoE: ±5%)

    ID-01: Moore Information for Raul Labrador (10/5-6, voter screen unspecified, 7/12-13 in parens):

    Walt Minnick (D-inc): 37 (37)

    Raul Labrador (R): 31 (27)

    Dave Olson (I): 6 (4)

    Mike Washburn (L): 6 (4)

    Undecided/None: 21 (28)

    (MoE: ±6%)

    IN-07: EPIC-MRA (10/1-3, likely voters):

    Andre Carson (D-inc): 50

    Marvin Scott (R): 33

    Dav Wilson (L): 6

    (MoE: ±4.9%)

    KS-04: SurveyUSA (10/6-7, likely voters, 9/14-15 in parens):

    Raj Goyle (D): 40 (40)

    Mike Pompeo (R): 53 (50)

    Shawn Smith (L): 3

    Susan Ducey (RP): 2 (4)

    Undecided: 3 (4)

    (MoE: ±4.3%)

    MI-15: Rossman Group/Team TelCom (10/4, voter screen unspecified):

    John Dingell (D-inc): 40

    Rob Steele (R): 44

    Undecided: 11

    (MoE: ±5.6%)

    NY-04: McLaughlin & Associates for Fran Becker (10/6, likely voters, 6/10 in parens):

    Carolyn McCarthy (D-inc): 46 (45)

    Fran Becker (R): 45 (25)

    Undecided: 9 (31)

    (MoE: ±5.6%)

    NY-19: Iona College for RNN-TV/Westchester County Association (10/6, voter screen unspecified):

    John Hall (D-inc): 42

    Nan Hayworth (R): 42

    Undecided: 18

    (MoE: ±3.5%)

    NY-25: McLaughlin & Associates for Ann Marie Buerkle (10/4-5, likely voters, 7/10 in parens):

    Dan Maffei (D-inc): 39 (46)

    Ann Marie Buerkle (R): 40 (39)

    Undecided: 21 (17)

    (MoE: ±4.9%)

    Take that last one with a grain of salt, though — note that directly before the head-to-head top line question, McLaughlin asked if voters would like to send an Obama-supporting Democrat to Congress or a Republican who would provide a “check and balance”.

    PA-03: Mercyhurst College (9/22-10/5, registered voters):

    Kathy Dahlkemper (D-inc): 37

    Mike Kelly (R): 44

    Undecided: 12

    (MoE: ±3.9%)

    SSP Daily Digest: 6/5

    NY-Sen-B: The speculation about a primary challenge had in the last month mostly shifted over from Rep. Carolyn McCarthy to Rep. Steve Israel and now Rep. Carolyn Maloney, but in case there was still any doubt, McCarthy made it official yesterday that she won’t be challenging Kirsten Gillibrand in the Senate primary. Is this another tea leaf that Maloney is, in fact, running? (McCarthy said she’d stand down if someone younger ran, and although it may not be what McCarthy had in mind, Maloney, at 60, is 4 years younger.) Maloney did confirm her phone chat with Joe Biden, but said he didn’t try to push her out of the race. Meanwhile, Gillibrand got two endorsements that are important in the African-American community: Al Sharpton and Rep. Greg Meeks. (All three are key David Paterson allies, so perhaps not too surprising.)

    NC-Sen: Elaine Marshall, who’s been Secretary of State since 1996, hasn’t been the subject of much Senate speculation. However, she just publicly expressed her interest (while saying that she’s not actively testing the waters). Marshall ran for Senate once before, finishing third in the 2002 Democratic primary behind Erskine Bowles and Dan Blue.

    CO-Gov: Bill Ritter may be facing a tough re-election bid, so the last thing he needs to be doing is turning friends into enemies… so it’s strange to see him so frequently ticking off labor, most recently the firefighters’ union by vetoing a bill that would have given them collective bargaining rights. And on top of that, he’s a terrorist sympathizer… at least according to Rep. Mike Coffman, who doesn’t like that Ritter blocked expansion of a local Army training site.

    OR-Gov: Although he’s been reluctant to show any interest in the race, don’t fully rule out Rep. Peter DeFazio yet. Hot on the heels of ex-Gov. John Kitzhaber having his coming-back-out party in front of the state movers-and-shakers at Portland’s City Club, now DeFazio will have his turn addressing them in two weeks. Hmmm… after several months worrying that neither DeFazio nor Kitzhaber would get into the race, now I’m left wondering what happens if both of them get in?

    VT-Gov: Democrats have seemed lukewarm about taking on Gov. Jim Douglas the last few cycles, but there seems to be more optimism this time, and it’s attracting more contenders. State Senator Susan Bartlett (who chairs Appropriations) announced her candidacy, joining ex-Lt. Gov. Doug Racine and possibly SoS Deb Markowitz. One item of note that Steve catches: Douglas, who’s been in office since Howard Dean’s 2002 retirement, hasn’t yet announced that he’s running for re-election. There may be a growing sense that the seat could be open.

    VA-St. House: Josh Grossman from Progressive Punch, guest blogging at 538, takes an interesting look at Democratic chances for flipping Virginia’s House of Delegates in the 2009 election (the last one prior to Virginia redistricting). It includes a nice chart ranking the swing districts according to 2008 presidential percentage… although it’s dismaying to see how many don’t have a Democratic candidate yet.

    WA-Wahkiakum County Clerk: A never-before-elected retired musician by the name of Krist Novoselic has filed to run for the position of county clerk in Wahkiakum County (approx. population 4,000) in the fall 2009 election. Although he’s been involved in Democratic Party politics as a committeman, he’s running as “prefers Grange Party” rather than as a Dem, probably because of his appreciation of the Grange, a populist movement from the turn of the previous century (or else he just misspelled “Grunge Party”).

    NY-Sen-B: Israel Set to Challenge Gillibrand?

    A couple of slightly differing reports. The NY Post says:

    Long Island Congressman Steve Israel will announce plans to challenge US Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand in next year’s Democratic primary as early as tomorrow, several sources said yesterday.

    The Suffolk County Democrat, who was first elected to Congress in 2000 and is a member of the Appropriations Committee, told several members of the state’s congressional delegation of his plans to challenge Gillibrand late Friday, congressional sources revealed.

    Glenn Thrush at the Politico says Israel will form an exploratory committee rather than launch a formal challenge. These days, that seems to be a distinction without a difference – I haven’t crunched any numbers, but it sure feels like many if not most prominent exploratory committees turn into the real thing. An Israel spokesman, though, is denying that there is any sort of announcement planned for this week.

    Supposedly, Carolyn Maloney will soon create an exploratory committee, too. I imagine if one or both of these folks get in, Carolyn McCarthy will bow out, citing her desire to see someone younger challenge Gillibrand (she’s older than both Maloney and Israel). But if either Israel or Maloney are to have any chance, I can’t imagine Gillibrand would be beatable in a three-way race. Someone’s gonna have to give.

    Meanwhile, Chuck Schumer, who was busy declaring the other day there would be no primary, is now supposedly backing off. David Paterson is also apparently staying out of things, though if I were Kirsten Gillibrand, I’m not sure I’d want him within a hundred yards of the campaign van. If anything, suggests a canny Maloney confidant, Gillibrand might be forced to support Paterson, since he is her recent patron, after all.

    Anyhow, open seat fans & worry-warts: Obama pounded McCain 56-43 in Israel’s suburban Long Island district (NY-02), but its PVI nonetheless fell to D+4 from D+8. Given how Long Island has turned over the last fifteen years, the Dems would have an advantage in any open seat race here. McCarthy’s NY-04, at D+6, would be fairly similar. Maloney’s NY-14, however, would be a mortal lock for the Dems (D+26).

    NY-Sen-B: McCarthy Vows to Challenge Gillibrand

    Full speed ahead:

    Rep. Carolyn McCarthy on Friday vowed to challenge Sen.-designate Kirsten Gillibrand in New York’s 2010 Democratic Senate primary, citing Gillibrand’s support from the National Rifle Association in past campaigns.

    McCarthy became active politically after her husband was killed when a gunman went on a shooting spree on a Long Island Railroad train in 1993, and has made gun control her signature issue since entering Congress in 1997. Her son was wounded in the shooting and still has health problems.

    “I certainly have never forgotten why I came into politics, so you can imagine how I felt when I heard that the next Senator from New York would be a person who got the endorsement of the NRA,” McCarthy said during an interview on MSNBC just minutes after Gillibrand was named to the Senate by New York Gov. David Paterson (D).

    McCarthy told the cable network that she had spoken to Paterson two weeks ago to air her objections to a possible Gillibrand appointment.

    “This is a personal issue to me,” McCarthy said. “It has nothing to do with politics. … I’m not out here to make trouble. … I had to speak up. I had to let the people know who their next Senator is going to be.”

    If McCarthy does indeed follow through with this, Paterson may come to regret opening this can of worms. Of course, it’s possible that any choice he made could have been subject to a primary challenge, but this one has the potential to be especially divisive. Oy.