SSP Daily Digest: 8/27 (Evening Edition)

FL-Sen: Well, so much for the secret ballot. The Palm Beach Post deduced that Jeff Greene voted for himself… inasmuch as his vote was the only vote for himself in his entire precinct. It was a 2-to-1 vote (literally… Kendrick Meek got 2). Even his wife didn’t vote for him, although that’s because she isn’t registered to vote in the county. (Marco Rubio got 26 votes in the same precinct.) Meanwhile, Charlie Crist seems to have lost some of his footing after a convincing Meek victory in the Dem primary; he flip-flopped on health care reform in the space of one day, saying in a TV interview that he would have voted for health care reform, then, after the Rubio camp started flagging that, saying later in the day that he actually wouldn’t have voted for it. I get that he wants to appeal to both Dems and moderate GOPers, but he has to be less transparent than that.

IL-Sen: Bad news for Alexi Giannoulias: the Constitution Party slate just got struck from the ballot, so Randy Stufflebeam won’t be there to siphon right-wing votes from Mark Kirk. Libertarian candidate Mark Labno will be on the ballot, though, as a Kirk alternative (as will Green LeAlan Jones).

IN-Sen: This is sort of pushing the outer limit of when it’s a good idea to release an internal, but it looks like the Brad Ellsworth camp needed to let people know that he’s still in this race. His own poll, via Garin Hart Yang, finds him trailing Dan Coats 49-38. The race is closer among those who actually know Ellsworth, but his six-week-long ad buy is about to end, so his name rec problems may persist.

KY-Sen: Jack Conway is joining Elaine Marshall on the Alan Simpson-pile-on, seconding calls for the firing of Simpson from the Social Security commission in the wake of his “milk cow” comments. Meanwhile, Rand Paul has apparently brushed up on his elementary math skills recently, as he’s now backtracking on previous pledges to erase the nation’s federal budget deficit in one year.

MO-Sen, MO-04: Although this poll from Missouri State University (on behalf of TV station KY3) looks good for Robin Carnahan, it’s got some methodological issues that we just aren’t comfortable with. It was taken over the period of Aug. 7-22, is of registered (not likely) voters, and it also wound up with a sample that was 63% female, although they say they weighted for various demographic factors. At any rate, it shows the race a dead heat, with Roy Blunt leading Robin Carnahan 49-48. It also took looks at three House races in the Show Me State, although with MoEs in the 7% ballpark. In the 4th, Ike Skelton has a 47-35 lead over Vicki Hartzler. Two GOP-held seats look to be pretty uneventful: in the open 7th, Billy Long leads Scott Eckersley 51-23, and in the 8th, Jo Ann Emerson leads fundraising maven Tommy Sowers 64-17.

WI-Sen: Seems like it was just this morning we were discussing the second instance of Ron Johnson’s flagrant hypocrisy when it comes to railing against government involvement in the market, except when it comes to government aid for his own business… and now we’re up to a third instance before the day’s even out. On Wednesday it came out that in 1985 he’d gotten $2.5 million in government loans to expand his plastics business, and now it’s come out that in 1983, two years earlier, he’d gotten a separate $1.5 million loan for a $4 mil total.

NM-Gov: The DGA is out with a new ad against Susana Martinez in the gubernatorial race, hitting her for $350K in bonuses handed out in her prosecutor’s office. NWOTSOTB, but we’re told it’s a statewide saturation buy.

VT-Gov: The final count from the SoS office in the Dem gubernatorial primary seemed to get finished ahead of schedule, as numbers today gave Peter Shumlin a 197-vote win over Doug Racine. Racine said that he would go ahead and request a recount; state law provides for a taxpayer-funded recount for a candidate trailing by less than 2% (seems like a pretty generous recount policy compared with most states). In keeping with the primary’s very civil tone, both candidates continued to praise each other and say they understood the recount choices.

CO-07: Republican pollster Magellan (which put out an internal for Scott Tipton in CO-03 last week) is out with a poll in the 7th as well now, although this appears to be on their own, not as an internal for Ryan Frazier. At any rate, their poll gives a 40-39 lead to Republican Frazier, over incumbent Dem Ed Perlmutter. (10% opt for “some other candidate.”)

MS-04: Thanks to Haley Barbour, the previously low-dollar campaign of state Rep. Steven Palazzo just kicked into higher gear (or into gear, period). Barbour held a fundraiser for Palazzo that raised $177K, which will help his uphill campaign against Democratic Rep. Gene Taylor.

SC-05: Another POS poll in the 5th on behalf of GOP state Sen. Mick Mulvaney has him making up ground on Rep. John Spratt; the two are now tied at 46-46. Spratt led by 2 in a previous POS poll in May. Spratt retorted to CQ that in his own polling he was ahead with “breathing room,” but declined to provide specific numbers.

Ads: Other ads for your consideration today include not one but two new ads from Roy Barnes, going negative against Nathan Deal (on the ethics issue, but also general Washington-bashing). In OH-Gov, Ted Strickland is also out with a double-shot of ads, hitting John Kasich for his free-trading past. Chet Edwards is out with an anti-Bill Flores ad in TX-17 accusing Flores of lying about having voted for GOPer Rob Curnock in 2008 (he didn’t vote at all that day), while the Club for Growth is out with a PA-Sen ad that calls Joe Sestak “liberal” several hundred times in the space of 30 seconds.

Rasmussen:

AZ-Sen: Rodney Glassman (D) 31%, John McCain (R-inc) 53%

FL-Gov: Alex Sink (D) 36%, Rick Scott (R) 41%, Bud Chiles (I) 8%

NM-Gov: Diane Denish (D) 43%, Susana Martinez (R) 48%

SC-Gov: Vincent Sheheen (D) 36%, Nikki Haley (R) 52%

WI-Gov: Tom Barrett (D) 44%, Scott Walker (R) 47%

WI-Gov: Tom Barrett (D) 44%, Mark Neumann (R) 48%

73 thoughts on “SSP Daily Digest: 8/27 (Evening Edition)”

  1. over his party switch… but it’s truly inconceivable to me that anyone would vote for Charlie Crist on his own merits (i.e. aside from a strategic vote to deny Rubio the seat).

    Obviously, most politicians are out for their own interests, but Crist’s attempts at triangulation are absurd. How can anybody, on either side, possibly trust him to vote the way he says he will?

    At least Rubio and Meek actually seem to have coherent ideologies. They both believe that the policy positions they advocate are the right thing to do for the country. Crist’s only concern are how his policy positions will translate into votes — how can anyone be so unscrupulous as to bash the bill as “government health care,” advocate in no uncertain terms for its repeal, and then turn around and suggest they would have voted for it?

    Sorry, but Charlie Crist embodies everything that’s wrong with politics.

  2. From what I can tell, the MO-SEN and house polls are also of registered voters, not likely voters like you’d typically see this late in a cycle.

  3. on the American Action Forum polls SSP posted about yesterday? I looked up the actual voter turnout numbers from Iowa in 2006, and the IA-03 poll demographics are way off.

    I would like to hear from state bloggers covering some of the other races polled to find out if the Republican polls also undersampled women and voters under 35 while oversampling groups more favorable to GOP candidates.

  4. DCCC: IRS Should Investigate Americans for Prosperity Foundation

    The DCCC today requested an Internal Revenue Service (IRS) investigation into Americans for Prosperity Foundation’s tax exempt status.  The Americans for Prosperity Foundation’s attack ads are being run in coordination with the attack ads from Americans for Prosperity, which has made Americans for Prosperity Foundation a de facto political “action group,” violating its tax exempt status.

    “The DCCC is asking the IRS to hold the Americans for Prosperity Foundation accountable for its illegal election ads that are being used to mislead voters,” said DCCC spokesperson Jennifer Crider.  “Americans for Prosperity Foundation is trying to avoid paying taxes by claiming to be tax exempt, while running campaign ads that benefit a Republican candidate and the NRCC.”

    Americans for Prosperity is funded by Charles and David Koch.  Charles Lewis, the founder of the Center for Public Integrity, a nonpartisan watchdog group, said of the Kochs, “They have a pattern of lawbreaking, political manipulation, and obfuscation. I’ve been in Washington since Watergate, and I’ve never seen anything like it.”  [New Yorker, 08/30/10]

  5. The Boswell campaign scheduled a press conference on Monday “to announce a new endorsement from a notable local Republican.” I have no clue who this might be.  

  6. Palazzo’s campaign has been in gear, trust me. The district is blanketed with Palazzo signs. I’ve seen Palazzo bumper stickers in New Orleans.  

  7. This happens quite a lot. Many years ago I was working as an election inspector in NYC during the primaries. I was stationed in an overwhelmingly Dem district and in 1 ED there was only 1 vote in the Republican primary so everyone knew exactly who that guy voted for.

    I always thought it unfair and somehow undemocratic for people to able to know who you voted for.

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