TN-09: Just What We Needed

It looks like former Memphis Mayor Willie Herenton is playing with an entire deck full of race cards:

“To know Steve Cohen is to know that he really does not think very much of African-Americans,” Mr. Herenton said in a recent radio interview on KWAM. “He’s played the black community well.”

Lovely – just what we need. But wait, there’s more:

“This seat was set aside for people who look like me,” said Mr. Herenton’s campaign manager, Sidney Chism, a black county commissioner. “It wasn’t set aside for a Jew or a Christian. It was set aside so that blacks could have representation.”

Have these guys even listened to themselves? I’m just glad no one seriously tried to make the mirror-image of this argument with regard to Obama last year.

Anyhow, the Times glosses over this, but Nikki Tinker tried the same bullshit last time and got utterly pasted. Sure, Herenton is much better-known, but Tinker had the endorsement of EMILY’s List (to their everlasting shame) and spent half a million bucks. With any luck, Herenton will meet the same fate.

IL-Gov: Quinn Has Wide Primary Lead In Own Poll

Anzalone-Liszt for Pat Quinn (8/18-26, likely voters, no trendlines):

Pat Quinn (D-inc): 54

Dan Hynes (D): 26

Undecided: 20

(MoE: ±3.6%)

Hynes, the state Comptroller, apparently had hoped to run for AG, but Lisa Madigan decided to stay put, foreclosing that option. So instead of going for the open Senate seat, he decided to take on an incumbent governor. Hynes currently has a bigger warchest than Quinn (around $3.5m to <$1m), and supposedly thinks he can gain the backing of the Daley machine. But Quinn is no David Paterson – despite a bruising few months spent fighting with the state legislature, he has 72% favorables and a 68% job approval (Hynes is at 56% & 61%, respectively). That makes him the rare sitting governor whose constituents don’t, it seems, hate his guts. (UPDATE: At least as far as Dem primary voters are concerned, as sulthernao points out.)

Illinois has the earliest primary in the nation, Feb. 2, 2010 – just five months away. Hynes might be able to gain more traction thanks to his financial advantage, and Quinn’s ratings are not invulnerable (just think “jobless recovery”). But Hynes, so far as I know, hasn’t released a poll to counter this one. I’ll be very curious to see if he does.

The full memo is available below the fold.

NYC Primary Thread

New York City has a big primary coming up in a week. Two key city-wide races, and a very important borough-wide race in Manhattan, are all on the ballot, and they’re all open seats. There’s little chance of a Republican winning any of these races, so the primary is what counts.

The major races & candidates are:

Public Advocate (ombudsman, first-in-line to succeed mayor)

• Bill de Blasio

• Eric Gioia

• Mark Green

• Norman Siegel

Comptroller

• Melinda Katz

• John Liu

• David Weprin

• David Yassky

Manhattan District Attorney

• Richard Aborn

• Leslie Crocker Snyder

• Cyrus Vance

Green (who was Public Advocate in the 1990s) probably has the edge in that race just thanks to his name recognition, though he certainly doesn’t have it in the bag – and if he fails to get 40% in the first round, the race will move to a Sept. 29th runoff. The Comptroller and DA races are totally wide open, though there is no runoff in the DA contest since that’s a county-level race, rather than a city race.

I still haven’t made up my mind about who I’m voting for, so I’m very interested to hear the community’s thoughts, especially those living in the city. Who are your favorites?

MA-Sen: Joe Kennedy Won’t Run

From the AP:

Former Rep. Joseph P. Kennedy II, the eldest son of Robert F. Kennedy, announced Monday he would not run for the U.S. Senate seat held for nearly 50 years by his late uncle, Edward M. Kennedy. …

The decision is expected to widen the field of announced candidates for Kennedy’s seat. It became vacant Aug. 25, when the senator died of brain cancer at age 77.

Three veteran Massachusetts congressmen – Reps. Michael Capuano, Edward J. Markey and John Tierney – have said they are considering campaigns but would not run against a member of the Kennedy family. The senator’s widow, Vicki, had previously ruled out a campaign.

Now the floodgates will likely open. I just hope Marty Meehan decides to stay put. On the other side of the aisle, former Lt. Gov. and 2006 Republican gubernatorial nominee Kerry Healey has also said she won’t run.

(More from safi in the diaries.)

Little-Noticed Federal Law Could Push Late Primaries Earlier

A little-noticed provision slipped into a pending Department of Defense spending bill by Chuck Schumer might have the effect of forcing states with September primaries to hold them earlier:

The provision requires that absentee ballots be mailed out to potential overseas voters at least 45 days before the general election. Although the provision’s inclusion in a Defense bill is justified by its impact on armed forces members serving overseas, it will affect all overseas voters.

The piece’s author, Eric Black, explains the effect it would have in Minnesota:

The 45-day deadline for mailing the ballots would technically fall after Minesota’s traditional primary date, but [Secretary of State Mark] Ritchie said there would not be enough time to certify the results of a primary election and get ballots printed to meet the deadline.

But Minnesota isn’t the only state with a late primary. In 2008, ten other states had primaries in September: AZ, NH, WI, VT, RI, DE, NY, MA, HI & LA. Meanwhile, FL, AK, WY & WA all had primaries in the second half of August. In other words, this provision could wind up affecting quite a few states. While Black says that MN would likely move its primary to August, others might move them even earlier.

Personally, I’ve always hated late primaries – they only serve as an incumbent protection racket. In my own state of New York, winners of contested primaries have less than two months to turn around and face an entrenched incumbent. Chuck Schumer, in fact, knows this all too well – in 1998, he had a hard-fought nominating contest against Mark Green and Geraldine Ferraro, and then managed to pull off a big upset against Al D’Amato just six weeks later. Of course, now that the shoe is on the other foot, a late primary only helps Schumer… so maybe this wasn’t even on his mind (or maybe he just thinks it’s a good idea anyway).

I’d like to see all of these states consider moving their primaries to June or thereabouts. Not only would that be the democratic thing to do, there’s always a concern about recounts. Indeed, one of the states with late primaries, Alaska, had a lengthy recount last year. Of course, as Black notes, if you have a Franken-style recount in a primary, you’re probably in trouble for the general no matter what. But at least a June election would give everyone more time. Anyhow, I’ll be very curious to see how states react to this, especially since it appears that a lot of folks don’t know this is coming down the pike.

IA-HD90 Open Thread

11:06PM: It’s over – Hanson wins! Congratulations! Final tally: 3,932 to 3,825. Burgmeier actually carried Wapello by four votes, but it wasn’t enough. Anyhow, this is great news… for John McCain!

10:55PM: Pass the dutchie ‘pon the lef’ han’ side… looks like our friends at the Wapello County Board of Elections are taking a bit of a ganja break.

10:38PM: The first two precincts in Wapello have come in, and they are looking good for Hanson – he leads there 339-178. Burgmeier would need to carry those last six precincts by an 18-point margin to eke out a win.

10:34PM: All of the outstanding precincts are in Wapello Co., which Obama won with 55% of the vote last fall.

10:33PM: Much closer now – 20 of 28 precincts, and Hanson’s lead is just 3,335 to 3,224.

10:22PM: Polls are closed in Iowa, and with a quarter of precincts reporting (all from Jefferson Co.), Dem Carl Hanson has a lead of 2,050 to 1,441.


James provided some background on both of tonight’s special elections in this earlier post. Polls close in Iowa at 10pm Eastern time, and in California at 11pm. UPDATE: Via folks in comments, Gov. Schwarzenegger has ordered that results be held until 10pm Pacific (1am Eastern) so that firefighters from the district who are fighting fires in Southern California can have extra time to vote.

Results: IA SoS | CA SoS

If you have other results links, please post `em in comments. Also, as always, you can use this thread to make predictions.

CO-Sen: Bennet Numbers Not Strong, But Little Changed from April

Public Policy Polling (PDF) (registered voters, 8/14-16, 4/17-19 in parens):

Michael Bennet (D-inc): 39 (42)

Bob Beauprez (R): 42 (43)

Undecided: 19 (16)

Michael Bennet (D-inc): 38 (39)

Ryan Frazier (R): 33 (35)

Undecided: 30 (26)

Michael Bennet (D-inc): 39 (40)

Ken Buck (R): 35 (34)

Undecided: 26 (26)

(MoE: ±3.2%)

Tom Jensen:

Michael Bennet’s approval rating is just as bad as it was when we polled Colorado in April but voters in the state don’t like any of his possible Republican opponents either, leaving this Senate contest pretty wide open.

38% of voters in the state disapprove of Bennet’s job performance so far with 31% approving. Those numbers are roughly equal to our previous survey which found the numbers at 41% disapproval to 34% approval. There are two primary reasons for Bennet’s net negative ratings. The first is that Republicans disapprove (62%) of him more than Democrats approve of him (57%). The second is that he’s getting unfavorable reviews from independents, 36% of whom disapprove of him compared to 29% approving. …

Potential Republican opponents Bob Beauprez, Ryan Frazier, and Ken Buck all get overall negative reviews from voters in the state as well. 40% have an unfavorable opinion of Beauprez to 30% with a positive one. For Frazier it’s 19% negative and 11% favorable and for Buck the numbers are 18% unfavorable and 17% favorable.

Though he calls the race “wide open,” Jensen also thinks Bennet would only lose to Beauprez in a 1994-style meltdown. Still, it’s depressing to even be thinking in those terms, and it’s dispiriting to see Bennet locked in at about 40% regardless of his opponent. (In case you were wondering, Frazier is an Aurora City Councilman and Buck is the Weld County District Attorney. Both jurisdictions are in the quarter-million range in terms of population.)

PPP will have more Colorado numbers over the course of the week, including GOP primary numbers for both the Senate and gubernatorial races, as well as Obama approvals.

SSP currently rates this race as Lean Dem.

RaceTracker Wiki: CO-Sen