KS-Sen, SD-Sen, IA-Sen: Midwest Roundup

Rasmussen (7/14, likely voters) (6/11 in parentheses):

Jim Slattery (D): 30 (39)

Pat Roberts (R-inc.): 57 (48)

(MoE: ±4.5%)

Rasmussen (7/9, likely voters) (6/10 in parentheses):

Tim Johnson (D-inc.): 60 (60)

Joel Dykstra (R): 35 (34)

(MoE: ±4%)

Rasmussen (7/10, likely voters) (6/10 in parentheses):

Tom Harkin (D-inc.): 52 (53)

Christopher Reed (R): 36 (37)

(MoE: ±4%)

Rasmussen unleashed a torrent of midwest Senate polls yesterday and today. Kansas is the only eye-opener here. After their previous poll showed ex-Rep. Jim Slattery showing surprising strength against three-term Sen. Pat Roberts (and Roberts in the danger zone below 50%), things gravitated back toward more typical second-tier numbers this month.

Democratic Senators Johnson and Harkin both seem entirely safe. In fact, the big surprise is that Johnson, who, until New Jersey became interesting, was usually slotted in as the GOP’s second-best pickup opportunity after Landrieu (more a statement on their paltry chances than on actual likelihood of flipping the seat), is safer than Harkin. (Although I’m not sure Harkin has ever broken 60% in a Senate race, so maybe it’s not that surprising.)

NC-Gov, NC-Sen: Dole Up Big, Perdue Up Little

SurveyUSA (7/12-14, likely voters) (5/20 in parentheses):

Kay Hagan (D): 42 (46)

Elizabeth Dole (R-inc.): 54 (50)

(MoE: ±3.8%)

More proof that Dole’s big ad buy had a short-term sugar-shock effect on the race. Dole made up the biggest ground among voters with income under $50,000, going from 14% down to a tie. Any plans for Hagan to hit the airwaves, you might be wondering? Why, yes… the DSCC just announced today that they’ve reserved $6 million of airtime against Dole, starting in mid-September. With Hagan having a good fundraising quarter, she can weigh in with her own money earlier as well.

SurveyUSA (7/12-14, likely voters) (5/20 in parentheses):

Bev Perdue (D): 47 (52)

Pat McCrory (R): 46 (45)

(MoE: ±3.8%)

North Carolina continues to have the nation’s tightest governor’s race, as the same sample gives only a tiny edge to Lt. Gov. Bev Perdue. As might be expected, McCrory is up big in the western half of the state (including Charlotte, where he’s mayor); Perdue is up big in the eastern half.

[UPDATE on 7/17: Well, it’s one day later, and Rasmussen just released a poll that almost completely matches SurveyUSA, so we can feel pretty confident about the state of the race right now.

Rasmussen (7/15, likely voters) (6/10, 5/8 in parentheses):

Kay Hagan (D): 41 (39, 48)

Elizabeth Dole (R-inc.): 53 (53, 47)

(MoE: ±4.5%)

NJ-07: GOP Internal Poll Has Lance Up

National Research Inc. for Leonard Lance (6/24-25, likely voters):

Linda Stender (D): 35

Leonard Lance (R): 42

(MoE: ±5.6%)

This is an internal poll by a GOP pollster, the kind that only gets released if it has ridiculously showy results for the candidate who commissioned it, so take it with the requisite bucket of salt. But I haven’t seen any polling of the open seat in NJ-07 before (or any hot northeast House races, come to think of it), so I thought I’d put it out there.

The poll shows both candidates little-known, with state senator Lance with a 20% favorable and 11% unfavorable rating, and Stender in a puzzling pickle, with unfavorables (29%) greater than her favorables (20%). Stender has a huge edge in cash on hand, though (more than $1 million), so possibly look for an ad blitz to try and ‘fix’ that soon.

AK-AL: Big Ad Buy From Club for Growth

Hot on the heels of the news that Don Young was outraised in Q2 by both primary opponent Sean Parnell and likely general election opponent Ethan Berkowitz is one more thing Young’s gotta worry about: the Club for Growth just made a $100,000 TV ad buy targeting him. (And in Alaska’s cheapo media market, $100,000 goes a long, long way.)

The 15-second ads hit Alaska’s avuncular, blustery, corrupt GOP representative over seemingly out-of-context comments in favor of a higher gas tax.

“I’d suggest we raise the taxes to a dollar a gallon,” Young says in a clip in one of the ads. “That makes you put your money where your mouth is.”

The Club for Growth has endorsed Parnell over Young’s addiction to pork. Unfortunately (for our pickup chances), while polls show Young losing to Berkowitz, they show the ostensibly ‘clean’ Parnell beating Berkowitz, and CFG’s moneybomb makes its likelier than Parnell wins the Aug. 26 primary. As I’ve said before, it’s a case of “Vote for the crook, it’s important!”

OR-Sen: Merkley Takes the Lead

Rasmussen (7/15, likely voters) (6/11 in parentheses):

Jeff Merkley (D): 43 (38)

Gordon Smith (R-inc.): 41 (47)

(MoE: ±4.5%)

I was not expecting this, at least not so soon, but now we have a public poll that shows Jeff Merkley with a very small lead over Gordon Smith in the Oregon Senate race. (Rasmussen also now gives alternate results with ‘leaners’ pushed: if so, the race is tied at 46/46.)

Smith’s favorability numbers have also dropped since the last poll. Last time, 58% of voters viewed him either very or somewhat favorably; this month it’s 53%. Coupled with a re-elect number well below 50%, and with only a 3% edge among men, that all spells trouble for Gordo. Maybe all the lashing himself to the mast of the Good Ship Obama isn’t helping him much.

LA-Sen: Narrow Advantage for Landrieu

Rasmussen (7/9, likely voters) (5/28 in parentheses):

Mary Landrieu (D-inc.): 49 (47)

John Kennedy (R): 44 (44)

(MoE: ±4.5%)

Mary Landrieu is holding steady against John N. Kennedy, although not outside the margin of error. (Rasmussen has started giving ‘alternate’ results if leaners are pushed, which gives her a slightly better-looking 51/45.) This despite the huge momentum that Kennedy got from his campaign kick-off event.

Bear in mind that this is the same sample that gave John McCain such a huge lead over Barack Obama, 54-34. This may be an overly Republican sample, or it may simply indicate a lot of ticket-splitting: only 67% of McCain’s voters say they’ll vote for Kennedy as well. (This reflects Landrieu’s conservative profile, as well as the symbolic power of the Landrieu dynasty and the porousness of political party boundaries in Louisiana).

Last year, following the governor’s race in Louisiana, I did an experiment where I applied the parish-by-parish percentages in the 2002 senate race to the parish-by-parish turnout numbers (which reflect post-Katrina demographics) in the 2007 gubernatorial election. Bottom line: Landrieu won, although it was close (about 50.5 to 49.5). The Louisiana demographics have changed, certainly, but not to the extent that it’s fatal for Landrieu, since a) a lot of white people left Louisiana, too (there was catastrophic storm damage in white areas like St. Bernard Parish too, which nearly emptied out), and b) a lot of African-Americans from New Orleans moved to Baton Rouge, Shreveport, or Lafayette.

Finally, another consideration is that people are returning to New Orleans at a fast clip. The Census Bureau just announced that New Orleans was the fastest-growing (by percentage) large city in the country in the period from July 2006-July 2007, gaining almost 30,000 people, or about 14%. It’s still less than 60% of its size pre-Katrina, but the people are returning (although there’s no way to measure whether the returnees are coming back from Houston and Atlanta, or from Baton Rouge and Shreveport, which would be less of an advantage).

H/t Safi.

MO-Gov: Nixon Still Up Big

Missouri continues to be the Democrats’ best chance at picking up a governor’s seat in 2008, as four-term Attorney General Jay Nixon has a substantial edge over both likely GOP nominees. Research 2000 offers up slightly better numbers than last week’s Rasmussen and PPP polls.

Research 2000 (7/7-7/10, likely voters):

Jay Nixon (D): 52

Kenny Hulshof (R): 35

(MoE: ±3.5%)

Jay Nixon (D): 53

Sarah Steelman (R): 34

Nixon also has a high 56% favorable rating, with 38% unfavorable and only 6% no opinions. (This contrasts with outgoing GOP governor Matt Blunt, with 42%/54% favorable/unfavorable.)

In the Republican primary, it looks like Rep. Hulshof (from MO-09) has a better shot than Steelman, the state treasurer. (27% remain undecided for the fast-approaching Aug. 5 primary, though.) Both Hulshof and Steelman are giving up their current jobs to run for this seat, creating a situation like NM-Sen where we can potentially clean house in three GOP seats in one fell swoop.

Kenny Hulshof (R): 32

Sarah Steelman (R): 24

Scott Long (R): 12

Jen Sievers (R): 5

GOP Slowly Dwindling Into the Southern Party

An interesting new article from NCEC (the National Committee for an Effective Congress) shows just how far the GOP has fallen from its late-90s glory days. They’re by no means the first to observe that the Republicans have increasingly painted themselves into a corner in the deep south with their divisive rhetoric and embrace of the religious right, but they put it into pretty stark relief with some excellent charts and maps.

I won’t reproduce their charts (please check out the link), but the takeaway is that fully 41% of the Republicans’ seats are now in the South. If the different states were stocks, the Dems would be seen as having relatively balanced portfolio, while the GOP has put most of its eggs in the southern basket, holding very little of the northeast or west anymore.

The outcome of elections since 1996 has exposed a far larger problem for Republicans, than Democrats faced in the South. More than 46% of Republican House seats emanate from southern and border states, possessing only 28% of House seats nationally.

Republicans now control only 25.9% of congressional districts in the East, which translates into a 41-seat deficit. At their nadir, Democrats still held more than 40% of all seats in southern and border states.

The article predicts this will be a long-term hole for the GOP, not just based on regional trends but also the strength of Democratic incumbents, pointing out in all the years following 1994, only three Democratic incumbents lost in non-redistricting-affected races. Update: Although by Swing State Project’s own calculations, that number should be seven.

This article focused on the current composition of Congress, and left me with a few more questions: where have we been, over the last couple decades, and where might we go? To wit, here’s how the regionalized breakdown of the House has evolved since 1992:

Congress Midwest Northeast South West
110th (2006) 50 D

50 R
68 D

24 R
61 D

84 R
57 D

41 R
109th (2004) 40 D

60 R
56 D

35 R

1 I
53 D

92 R
53 D

45 R
108th (2002) 39 D

61 R
55 D

36 R

1 I
60 D

85 R
52 D

46 R
107th (2000) 48 D

57 R
57 D

39 R

1 I
56 D

83 R

1 I
50 D

43 R
106th (1998) 51 D

54 R
59 D

37 R

1 I
58 D

82 R
44 D

49 R
105th (1996) 50 D

55 R
57 D

39 R

1 I
58 D

82 R
41 D

52 R
104th (1994) 46 D

59 R
51 D

45 R

1 I
62 D

78 R
39 D

54 R
103rd (1992) 61 D

44 R
54 D

42 R

1 I
88 D

52 R
55 D

38 R

[Note: I’m classifying my regions a little differently than the NCEC article (which uses 5 regions), consistent with how I’ve done regions before, i.e. I use the standard Census Bureau 4-region configuration, with one change: I include Maryland and Delaware as Northeast. Don’t forget that redistricting occurred between the 107th and 108th Congresses, in case you’re tinkering with these numbers and getting screwy results.]

As you can see, most of the last 14 years was a slow recovery from the 1994 debacle (where our losses were distributed pretty evenly across the country), followed by making up most of the rest of the loss in one feel swoop in 2006. Look at where the regional differences between now and 1992 (the last Democratic majority) are, though: the composition in the West didn’t change that much, and we’re down a bit in the Midwest from where we were, although things are even there now. We used to have a big majority in the South, which has turned into a deficit for us. And while the GOP used to be nearly even with us in the Northeast, they’ve been reduced to bit players there. (Which turns out to be a good trade-off, if you remember my piece on the “pivot point” from a few weeks ago: more Northeastern Dems and fewer Southern Dems means a more progressive Dem caucus, on average, than where we were during in Clinton’s first term.

Now let’s look at where we might be next year, using the same pessimistic/average/optimistic predictions that I’ve used before (pessimistic = 13 pickups, of SSP‘s tossups and lean Ds, average = 26 pickups, including lean Rs, wildly optimistic = 56 pickups, including likely Rs).

Congress Midwest Northeast South West
111th pessimistic 54 D

46 R
73 D

19 R
62 D

83 R
60 D

38 R
111th average 60 D

40 R
75 D

17 R
64 D

81 R
63 D

35 R
111th optimistic 66 D

34 R
78 D

14 R
77 D

68 R
71 D

27 R

The “average” scenario takes the total number of Dems back up to where they were in the House in 1992, but the regional balance will have totally changed. All three of these scenarios show an acceleration of the trend we’ve seen so far, though: the intensification of the Northeast as a Dem stronghold, and the marginalization of the GOP in the South (where, under the “optimistic” scenario, the GOP is left with almost 48% of its seats only in the South).

WA-Gov: Holding Steady

Rasmussen (7/9, likely voters) (6/9 in parentheses):

Chris Gregoire (D-inc): 49 (50)

Dino Rossi (R): 43 (43)

(MoE: ±4.5%)

This strikes me as the most heavily polled governor’s race in the nation, but I’m really starting to wonder why. The numbers are remarkably stable from poll to poll, not just with Rasmussen but with SurveyUSA and Elway as well. Each poll has a slightly different snapshot, probably based on how they weight their samples, but the snapshot is very similar each month. People have had their minds made up about this one since 2004.

VP Vacancy Speculation

I may be getting way ahead of myself here. This kind of thing may be more appropriate when we actually have vice-presidential nominees. But if there’s one thing we like to do in the blogosphere, it’s speculate. So, with that, here are the questions for you guys to argue over this weekend: who’s going to be the next vice-president, and (more importantly, from SSP’s perspective) who gets to take over the vacancy left behind by the new VP?

This was prompted in large part by Chris Dodd‘s admission that he’s being vetted for VP, followed by a lot of people’s subsequent realization that “Hey, wait a minute… Connecticut has a Republican governor, who would appoint his replacement…” Trouble is, who does Jodi Rell appoint? Does she bow to the state’s Democratic lean and appoint a Democrat? Does she appoint Chris Shays (and, if he even wins in 2008, thus open up his seat for a likely Dem win in a special election)? Does she appoint one of the other loser ex-Reps (like Nancy Johnson… assuming she remembered to maintain a Connecticut domicile)? Does she appoint herself, knowing that she’s the only popular Republican in the state and thus the best shot for holding onto the seat beyond 2010?

That’s only one big example of the can of worms that each potential VP scenario creates. Let’s look at some more scenarios (possible VPs are listed in terms of likelihood, according to today’s InTrade “bid” numbers, which are the middle column); in each case, I’ve listed who the replacement (or replacement picker) will be. Let’s start with the Democrats:

Hillary Clinton 15.4 Appointment by David Paterson (D)
Kathleen Sebelius 14.0 Lt. Gov. Mark Parkinson (D)
Evan Bayh 8.0 Appointment by ??? (lean R)
Jack Reed 7.9 Appointment by Don Carcieri (R)
Tim Kaine 7.8 Lt. Gov. Bill Bolling (R)
Chuck Hagel 7.2 No vacancy created
Joe Biden 7.0 Appointment by ??? (safe D)
Claire McCaskill 6.5 Appointment by ??? (lean D)
Bill Richardson 6.5 Lt. Gov. Diane Denish (D)
Ed Rendell 5.0 Lt. Gov. Catherine Baker Knoll (D)

The biggest question mark here is probably Bayh, as his replacement would be appointed by either Mitch Daniels or Jill Long Thompson, depending on how IN-Gov shakes out. One more reason not to make him the VP, as far as I’m concerned, somewhat further down the list from a) he’s too conservative and b) he’s soul-paralyzingly boring.

We’ve already tackled the replacing-Clinton question in a diary last year, although things may have changed a bit since then. (The most common prediction: that Eliot Spitzer would appoint David Paterson to be the next Senator from NY. Funny how things work out sometimes.)

And now the GOP:

Willard “Mitt” Romney 25.3 No vacancy created
Tim Pawlenty 14.0 Lt. Gov. Carol Molnau (R)
Sarah Palin 12.0 Lt. Gov. Sean Parnell (R)
Mike Huckabee 11.1 No vacancy created
Charlie Crist 8.1 Lt. Gov. Jeff Kottkamp (R)
Carly Fiorina 7.0 No vacancy created
Rob Portman 7.0 No vacancy created
Eric Cantor 6.0 Special election
Mark Sanford 6.0 Lt. Gov. Andre Bauer (R)
John Thune 6.0 Appointment by Mike Rounds (R)

The real weirdness here is in Alaska. Suppose Sarah Palin becomes the new VP… but then also suppose that Sean Parnell becomes the new Representative in AK-AL. I can’t confirm that the Senate President is third in line (the state constitution doesn’t go into that), but if that’s the case, then Lyda Green (R) is the current Senate President… although I don’t know if she’ll be the President next session, as her status as President depends on crossover votes from the Democrats in the Senate. [Update from the comments: Apparently Attorney General Talis Colberg is third in line.]

Well, I’ll turn it over to the SSP readers: which of these scenarios seems likely, and in the Senate scenarios, whom do you see getting picked to fill the vacancy?