• AR-Sen: Those nasty anti-Bill Halter Americans for Job Security ads just keep being an issue in the Arkansas Senate race, to the extent that the Halter camp just filed an FEC complaint against AJS. The content of the ads isn’t at issue, though, but rather that AJS spent $900K on the ads without disclosing its donors.
• PA-Sen, PA-Gov: Joe Sestak continues to hold a narrow lead over Arlen Specter in the daily Muhlenberg tracker that first opened up over the weeknd; today Sestak’s lead is up to 5, at 47-42. On the gubernatorial side, it’s Dan Onorato 35 41, Anthony Williams 15 8, Joe Hoeffel 8 6, and Jack Wagner 10 5. If there were serious doubts about the Muhlenberg poll (maybe based on the small daily sample size), that might be assuaged by Rasmussen, who also polled the primary on May 6 (Thursday) and found the exact same thing: Sestak leading Specter 47-42.
• CT-Gov: Ned Lamont is out with an internal poll via Garin Hart Yang, which has him in firm control of the Democratic gubernatorial primary. He leads former Stamford mayor Dan Malloy 53-18. There’s also one less minor candidate in the midst of the Lamont/Malloy fray; former state Rep. Juan Figueroa ended his bid after not getting out of the low single digits.
• GA-Gov: Here’s some interesting behind-the-scenes intrigue in the GOP primary that seems to have good ol’ interpersonal tension at its roots, as Rep. Tom Price (the current leader of the right-wing RSC) switched his endorsement from his former House colleague, Nathan Deal, to former SoS Karen Handel. Deal responded with a statement today that essentially questioned the Michigan-born Price’s southern cred.
• OR-Gov: Bill Bradbury is hitting the TV airwaves at the last minute, with Oregon’s primary in a week (kind of buried under the monumental Arkansas, Kentucky, and Pennsylvania elections). He’s leading off with his endorsement from ex-Gov. Barbara Roberts (which seems a little underwhelming if he has Al Gore and Howard Dean in his corner). Roberts probably is unknown to younger voters and unpopular with older voters, as she’s mostly known for proposing a sales tax, which is, quite simply, the one thing you don’t propose in Oregon. She also may have something of an axe to grind with John Kitzhaber, who basically pushed her out the door in 1994 after only one term.
• SC-Gov: The Club for Growth sure loves its lost causes; they weighed in in favor of state Rep. Nikki Haley in the Republican gubernatorial primary, who’s something of a minor player in a field that includes Lt. Gov. Andre Bauer and AG Henry McMaster but known for her anti-tax zealotry. Haley is a key ally of Mark Sanford, which isn’t exactly the electoral asset that it might have been a couple years ago.
• TN-Gov: Rep. John Duncan, the occasionally iconoclastic long-time GOPer in TN-02, offered an endorsement in the GOP gubernatorial primary. He gave his nod to his fellow Knoxvillean, mayor Bill Haslam, rather than to House colleague Zach Wamp.
• ID-01: Looks like Vaughn Ward, last seen trying to out-wacky the competition in the GOP field in the 1st on the issue of repealing the 17th Amendment, may have a Democrat problem in his past. He interned for a Democratic state legislator (Jim Hansen, now the state party chair) while in college in Boise in the early 90s, and much more recently, is listed as being part of Tim Kaine’s volunteer database from his 2005 campaign.
• KS-03: State Rep. Kevin Yoder (running to succeed retiring Dennis Moore) has conventionally been regarded as something of a “moderate” by Kansas Republican standards, but in a legislature where the battle lines are often Democrats + moderate Rs vs. conservative Rs, he seems to be on the conservative side in the state’s current budget impasse. Is he moving to the right for his primary, or was he just incorrectly identified from the outset?
• MI-01: Connie Saltonstall had a few good months there as the beneficiary of NOW and NARAL support when she decided to primary Rep. Bart Stupak. With his retirement, though, the interest seems to have dried up, and today she announced she’s getting out of the primary to replace Stupak. She still decided to lob a few grenades back at the establishment on her way out the door, though, accusing them of having anointed state Rep. Gary McDowell as Stupak’s successor and saying she can’t support him because of his anti-abortion views.
• PA-12: There have been concerns about Mark Critz’s warchest dwindling (supposedly down into the $70K range) as the clock ticks down toward the May 18 special election. However, word comes from his campaign that the most recent 48-hour report has him sitting on a much more comfortable $252K. Critz also benefits from an endorsement yesterday from the Tribune-Democrat, the newspaper in the district’s population center of Johnstown.
• TX-17: Could this actually be the year Chet Edwards’ luck runs out? He survived 1994 (albeit in a much friendlier district) and the 2004 DeLay-mander, but an internal poll from Republican rival Bill Flores shows Edwards in some serious trouble this time around. The poll from OnMessage Inc. has Flores leading 53-41, quite a change from August 2009 where a Flores poll gave Edwards a 44-36 lead. That’s all despite Edwards having very positive favorables (53/38); in a district where Obama’s favorables are 33/66, Edwards needs to work his usual magic, de-nationalize the race, and make it about the two candidates.
• WA-03: More establishment backing for Denny Heck in the Dem primary in the 3rd: Heck got the endorsement from Rep. Rick Larsen, who represents a similarly swingy rural/suburban district on the other side of the Seattle area.
• NY-St. Sen.: Here’s an opportunity for a pickup in the New York state Senate, if Democrats are actually willing to play some offense. Republican Tom Morahan is not expected to seek re-election in SD-38 in the Hudson Valley, a district that was won by Barack Obama 52-47. Assemblyman Kenneth Zebrowski is a potential Dem contender, but he’ll face off against a strong Republican: Rockland Co. Executive Scott Vanderhoef, most recently seen turning down entreaties to get into the GOP Senate primary to go against Kirsten Gillibrand.
• SEIU: The SEIU plans to spend freely in a number of gubernatorial races this year. They’ve set aside $4 million more for governor’s races; they plan on getting involved in Arizona, California, Connecticut, Illinois, New York, Ohio, and Florida. (Uh, New York? Are you sure that’s necessary?)
• Redistricting: The flow of money is about to rush into one more small area of the political battlefield. The FEC issued an advisory opinion that allows members of Congress to raise soft money for legal activities concerning redistricting. The FEC allowed members to raise funds for the National Democratic Redistricting Trust. This doesn’t affect a number of other redistricting-oriented groups in either party that aren’t focused on legal issues, though — like the Dems’ Foundation for the Future, which is set up as a 527.
• Passings: One of Alaska’s legendary politicians, Walter Hickel, died over the weekend at age 91. Hickel has one thing in common with Sarah Palin: he served half a term as the state’s Republican governor… although he left to become Richard Nixon’s Interior Secretary in 1968. He then encored with another term from 1990 to 1994, as a member of the Alaskan Independence Party.
http://politicsinminnesota.com…
Something tells me this won’t help her chances…
according to the new Rasmussen. Specter trails by 12% while Sestak trails by 2%.
Might that be about ensuring that the Working Families Party (which I assume will be cross-endorsing Cuomo) gets a good result?
a big deal at all but Hickel was actually 90 not 91.
As much as I appreciate Bill Bradbury and Barbara Roberts (who btw were at the same Portland Gay Mens Chorus concert as I and my wife a few weeks ago),
I thought it was hard to beat this ad http://www.youtube.com/watch?v…
But Kitzhaber has stopped running that ad.
It’s apparently due to a bit of a flap, a belief by some that the ad contains subtle references to Bradbury’s MS (he’s been active and living with the condition since ’82). http://blogs.wweek.com/news/20…
The ad does end with a shot of Kitzhaber’s jean-clad legs, behind a lectern with a campaign sign.
Even though I will vote for Bradbury, I’d be surprised to see him get over a third of the vote in this primary.
In any case, on the R side, Alvin Alley has started to run ads of his own, but he’s looking awfully establishment in them. It’s hard to see him beating Chris Dudley’s money on the R side.
But barring a gaffe, if Dudley wins the R nomination, this should be at least solid D.
How do you find them on the FEC webistE?
Not sure where your numbers are from; today’s Muhlenberg tracker has it as Onorato 35-15 over Tony Williams, not 41-8.
He leads by 14%, with Case and Hannabusa tied. Djou has 45% of the vote among the voters who have already voted. The pollster also said he expects Hannabusa to come in 2nd http://www.civilbeat.com/artic…
State Senator Julie Lassa will run for Obey’s seat:
http://www.weau.com/home/headl…
Dems still have a 72-50 edge in the MS state house.
http://www.wxvt.com/Global/sto…
AP put out an article on Republican Kansas SoS candidate and anti-immigrant whackjob (but purty and well-put-together whackjob) Kris Kobach:
http://www.google.com/hostedne…
Ugh. Please Kansans, do not put this guy in charge of the electoral process. Kobach’s likely opponent (provided he wins the primary) is Chris Biggs, the current (appointed) Democratic SoS.
Biggs’ site: http://www.biggsforkansas.com/
Kobach is yet another one of those Kansas crazies that’s been defeated by Dennis Moore (a solid 55-43% thwacking) trying to resurrect his career.
It really wouldn’t surprise me if this is the year Edwards finally falls. Even if he does manage to shout louder than the teabaggers and Fixed Noise constantly making the argument that “All Democrats= Obama agenda = socialcommunianarchoislamofascism” and make the race about the candidates, he’s still an incumbent in an R +17 district in an anti-incumbent year.
This is probably going to be a bad year for conservative Democrats in general. Even guys like Edwards, Skelton, Boyd, and Gene Taylor who usually win easily in their blood-red districts have a target on their backs this year. This year will be unusually bad for incumbents in general, but Blue Dogs have the toxicity of the right’s loathing of Obama to deal with in addition to their incumbency.
With the exception of a few wave-election flukes that we can’t hold (such as OH-01) and some less than stellar campaigners (such as OH-15), an unusually high number of losses will probably come from Blue Dogs this cycle. Which at least means that the DCCC no longer has to waste money propping them up so they’ll turn around and vote against the President’s entire agenda then loudly bitch about how Obama is somehow “undermining” them to any microphone that will pick them up, as Edwards and Marion Berry (even post-retirement, because he’s that much of a jackass) have done. The next Congress could actually have a reduced Democratic majority but be able to get more done thanks to the loss of enough Blue Dogs to render their caucus irrelevant but for the Broder-worshiping centrism fetish of the Democratic leadership.
Four Republican candidates are competing in the June 8 primary to face Dave Loebsack in this D+7 district, and Steve Rathje is the first to go up on tv. It looks like a pretty good GOP primary ad to me. Kind of surprised that the NRCC favorite Rob Gettemy didn’t beat him to it.
PPP differs a lot from R2K in terms of the 2011 Kentucky gubernatorial election.
http://www.publicpolicypolling…
Who is stronger- Oliverio or Mollohan?