could a tight win in ma-05 be a good thing?

Tomorrow, as we all know, voters in Massachusetts fifth district will vote en masse (10% if that) in the special election to replace Marty Meehan.  Despite the overwhelmingly liberal lean of the district, many have become worried due to the lackluster campaign of Niki Tsongas.  Despite the strong personal story of Jim Ogonowski, and Tsongas’ poor campaign, I strongly doubt she’ll lose simply because it’s Massachusetts.  I could easily be wrong of course, that’s just my thought. 

  To the point however, should she win by a hair, (by which I’d classify by less than five percent) this might prompt Ogonowski to challenge john Kerry in the senate race.  Hackett almost beat Schmidt, then tried to challenge dewine and I think the same could happen here.  The biggest reason for this is that the Massachusetts republicans have a practically nonexistent bench.  Hackett was forced out for the 06 senate race, but the Ohio dems had an okay bench back then, no where as good as it is now, but not as bad the Massachusetts republicans.  If Ogonowski is drafted to challenge Kerry, the NRSC may be tempted to throw away millions into a race ultimately they can’t win without a massive anti-democratic/anti-incumbent mood.  Millions wasted there is millions that can’t be spent in Alaska, Nebraska ect etc.  a close race won’t look good on paper, but somehow I doubt it’ll be remembered in November.  So tomorrow, let’s hope for a victory, just one small enough for them to get Ogonowski to jump into the senate race.

17 thoughts on “could a tight win in ma-05 be a good thing?”

  1. Republicans are only going to spend money to protect incumbents.  They don’t have enough for anything else. 

  2. I don’t think that even John Ensign or Liddy Dole would be stupid enough to dump money into Massachusetts, then again you never know…

  3. similarities, but a lot of differences. Dewine had very poor approval ratings, Kerry’s while not great are fine. Even then the makings of a democratic wave began to form and finally Ohio was a swing state where the state GOP was very unpopular. None of those things apply to Massachusetts

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