Precinct Data Files for 34 States

Jeffmd and I have started working with Dave to bring election data to Dave’s Redistricting App. In the meantime, some folks (like Nico, doing Arizona) have delved into precinct-level data to add all-important political information to their redistricting projects.

Some states make this information readily available; others force you to collect it county-by-county. Below is a list of states which have complete statewide precinct files (graciously hosted by another Dave – Dave Leip of the indispensable Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections):

And, as always, you can find precinct data (that isn’t otherwise available on the web) for a whole bunch of individual counties at SSP’s Document Collection on Scribd. Hope you find these helpful!

OH-Gov: Strickland’s Numbers Plummet

Quinnipiac University (6/26-7/1, registered voters, 4/28-5/4 in parens):

Ted Strickland (D-inc): 42 (51)

John Kasich (R): 38 (32)

Undecided: 16 (16)

Ted Strickland (D-inc): 41 (48)

Mike DeWine (R): 40 (36)

Undecided: 15 (14)

(MoE: ±2.8%)

Something seriously ugly has happened here. Strickland’s approvals fell from 53-25 in May to just 42-37 now. It’s easy to say that it’s “the economy,” but the economy has been disastrous for a long time at this point. Quinnipiac offers almost nothing in the way of explanation (“Strickland’s extremely sharp drop-off in so short a time reflects growing public frustration”).

The only other outfit which has tested this race, PPP, has similar numbers for Strickland, but never showed the kind of steep topline drop we see here from Q. However, these lates nums do help resolve the OH-Gov mystery that Tom Jensen previously highlighted, and unfortunately for Dems, it looks like PPP is right (at least for now).

RaceTracker: OH-Gov

AK-Gov: Palin Resigning!

Blurb at the top of CNN’s website right now:

Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin is expected to announce that she will not seek a second term, a GOP source close to Palin says.

This is not a surprise – many folks (including myself) have been speculating about this possibility for a long while. What it means is that we’ll certainly have some damn good entertainment on the GOP presidential campaign trail – a welcome relief, given Mark Sanford’s implosion.

As for more Swing State-y matters, we now have to wonder if Dem Ethan Berkowitz will get into the race. The CQ piece cited in the linked post said that Berkowitz was “gearing up for another statewide race – against Gov. Sarah Palin, if she chooses to run for re-election.” So this may mean he won’t take the leap. And that would make sense – our best shot at this seat meant being able to run against the extremely damaged Palin. Now we have a Babs Cubin/John Doolittle/Duke Cunningham-type situation, where the toxic goods have vamoosed too soon.

The Swing State Project currently rates this as a Race to Watch. But if Dems fail to recruit a legitimate candidate, this race will likely drop off our watch list.

WHOA UPDATE (and edit to title): Just flipped on CNN, and they are saying that their affiliates in Alaska are saying Palin is going to resign in a month! WHOA!

LOCAL UPDATE: KTUU in Alaska is indeed confirming that she’ll leave office in a month. WTF? Scandal? Exhaustion? This would seem to irreparably damage her for a presidential run, no?

WHAT NOW? UPDATE: So according to the AK constitution:

If the governor-elect dies, resigns, or is disqualified, the lieutenant governor elected with him shall succeed to the office of governor for the full term.

The current LG is Sean Parnell, who super-narrowly lost in a primary last year against corrupt Rep. Don Young. Earlier in the year, Parnell talked up a possible rematch, but more recently seemed to back off those plans. Did he know something like this was coming?

ANOTHER UPDATE: Jed at Daily Kos is liveblogging her press conference. Even though any normal person would regard resigning mid-term as the end of one’s political career, Sarah Palin is anything but normal. She just said, “America is looking north to the future.” That lunatic actually thinks she’s running for president. Wow.

I CAN’T GET ENOUGH UPDATE: During her presser, Palin apprently said that the “decision has been in the works for a while.” So presumably Parnell was in the know here. Will Don Young live to ride another day?

RaceTracker: AK-Gov

SSP Daily Digest: 7/3

AK-Gov: George Stephanopoulos (on Twitter) thinks there might be some sort of announcement from Sarah Palin this afternoon, possibly that she won’t run for re-election as governor. This wouldn’t surprise me, and if so, not a bad time to bury the news.

MN-Sen: Al Franken is going to be sworn in on Tuesday. Just seeing this photo makes me excited.

MN-06: You know things are bad for Michele Bachmann when… well, every day is bad for her. But things are especially bad when members of her own party start telling her to STFU. “Boycotting the constitutionally mandated Census is illogical, illegal and not in the best interest of our country,” wrote Patrick McHenry, Lynn Westmoreland and John Mica, members of the subcommittee which oversees the census. And these guys are some pretty wingnutty mouthbreathers. Weapons-grade wingnut Jason Chaffetz (the only other GOPer on the same cmte) refused to sign the letter.

NH-Sen: Paul Hodes pulled in an improved 725K for the quarter – but I still think he can do better. Meanwhile, a piece of shit poll from UNH shows Kelly Ayotte “beating” Hodes 39-35. Why such harsh language? Because UNH continues its crappy track record of unacceptable samples – this time, they have it as 32R, 25D, even though there are more registered Democrats than Republicans in the state of New Hampshire. Pathetic. And in other news, former Gov. Stephen Merrill (R), who served in the mid-90s right before Jeanne Shaheen, has declined to run for the open Senate seat.

PA-07: Republican businessman Steven Welch has made it official – he will run for the 7th CD seat, which may or may not be open, depending upon what Rep. Joe Sestak does. I can’t understand why Welch would pick a holiday weekend to launch his campaign, though. (Thanks, Pan.)

TX-Gov/AG: Former Travis County DA Ronnie Earle – best known these days as the guy who indicted Tom DeLay – just filed papers to run for statewide office. He hasn’t yet said whether he’ll seek the governor’s mansion (which would put him on a collision course will fellow Dem Tom Schieffer) or the Attorney General’s job. Either way, Earle can start raising money now.

VA-05: A Virginia TV station is refusing to air an NRCC ad against Tom Perriello. While the station has remained mum about its reasons, Factcheck.org slammed the ad for its inaccuracies about the Waxman-Markey climate change bill. TV & radio stations are open to legal liability when they run third-party ads (they are immune when running candidate ads), so the only reason to nix a spot is because your lawyers tell you to. Nice to see the NRCC fumbling out of the gate. Perriello, meanwhile, is offering a feisty defense of his vote.

Ads: A coalition of liberal groups is airing “thank you” ads in seventeen congressional districts, which include some potentially vulnerable Dems who voted for the climate change bill. The list: B. Markey, Boyd, Grayson, Kosmas, Hill, Halvorson, Chandler, Kratovil, Peters, Schauer, Hodes, Maffei, Kilroy, Space, Perriello, Giffords & Kagen.

NH-Sen: Gov. Lynch Says Ayotte Pledged to Serve Full Term as AG

As Dean says, this is huge:

Before Democratic Gov. John Lynch re-appointed Republican Kelly Ayotte to a full second term as state Attorney General he had an understanding that she would serve the entire term, the governor’s spokesman says. …

But now Lynch’s camp in joining the fray suggesting that if she does run she is going back on a promise she made just in April to complete the term through 2013.

“It was the Governor’s expectation in reappointing Kelly Ayotte that she would serve her full term,” said Lynch spokesman Colin Manning. “At the time of her appointment she told the Governor that was her intention.”

Remember, before Judd Gregg pulled the plug on his nomination to run the Commerce Dept., John Lynch planned to appoint Gregg’s equally conservative chief-of-staff as his replacement. So Lynch is not a guy known for sticking his neck out on behalf of partisan causes. Again citing Dean, this must mean that Dems are pretty concerned about an Ayotte run.

Now we wait for her response. If she doesn’t bail, this is going to be an ugly albatross for her for the next sixteen months. And I’d also expect it might encourage Charlie Bass even further.

WY-Gov: When Would Freudenthal Have to File Suit to Overturn Term Limits?

Back in February, we learned about an intriguing possibility in the Wyoming governor’s race – incumbent Dem Dave Freudenthal might seek to overturn the state’s term-limit law, which would otherwise turn him out of office next year. How could he do this?

It turns out that back in 2004, Wyoming’s Supreme Court struck down term limits that applied to state legislators. The court ruled that such limits could only be imposed by changing the state’s constitution, not (as voters had attempted) via ballot initiative. Even though the same law covered both legislators and statewide officeholders (including the governor’s office), for procedural reasons, the court limited its ruling to just the state lege. The court’s explanation tells us quite a lot, though:

The parties have not addressed this issue, but we note that the constitutionality of a statute may only be questioned by a party whose rights are affected thereby. Likewise, a party cannot assert that a statute is unconstitutional as to other persons or classes of persons. These precepts suggest that the appellant legislators cannot raise the question of the constitutionality of the term limit law as it affects the qualifications for governor… and for secretary of state, auditor, treasurer, and superintendent of public instruction…..  Furthermore, the appellant voters have not alleged an inability to vote for particular candidates for the executive branch offices. Accordingly, we will limit our holding to those constitutional provisions involving legislative qualifications. (Citations removed.)

In other words, because no one had properly raised the gubernatorial issue, the court could not rule on it. But it sure sounds like they would have nuked gov term limits if only they could have. On the merits (ie, instituting term limits via ballot initiative vs. constitutional amendment), there just isn’t any daylight between state legislative jobs and the governor’s mansion.

It’s rare to see something like this in the legal world, but if Freudenthal raised a challenge, it’s almost impossible to see how gubernatorial term limits could survive. The real issues, then, are “will he?” and “when does he have to file suit?” As to the first question, a spokesman left the door wide open several months ago, and I haven’t heard anything since.

And as far as timing goes, Freudenthal can afford to wait. The legislative term limits suit was filed in January of 2004 in district court (which sided with the plaintiffs), and was then appealed directly to the state supreme court, which ruled in May (upholding the lower court). It was a close shave because Wyoming’s filing deadline was just a few weeks later, so Freudenthal probably wouldn’t want to wait that long. On the flipside, as I suggest above, this case has basically already been argued and all but decided. It could probably get resolved in even less time than the original four-month-long suit.

So Freudenthal could probably wait another half year, maybe even longer. But personally, I think he should declare his intentions sooner rather than later, and if he decides to challenge the law, do it right away. While our chances of holding on to the governor’s mansion would be slim without him running again, the uncertainty and delay will only make an already difficult challenge even harder for Democrats.

Gubernatorial Cattle Call (July ’09)

We’ve never done one of these before – a gubernatorial cattle call. There just weren’t enough races last cycle. But this time, we’ve got a ton, and a very unsettled landscape given the huge number of open seats.

In case you haven’t done one of these before, rank the gov seats that are up in 2009 & 2010 in order of likelihood of flipping. (So this includes New Jersey and Virginia.) The traditional SSP way is to include seats held by both parties in a single list (separate lists make comparisons harder). Go as far down the list as you like. If you need some food for thought, check out Swing State’s gubernatorial race ratings. Have fun!

FL-Gov/FL-Sen: Mo’ Polls

Mason-Dixon (PDF) for Ron Sachs Communications (6/24-26, registered voters for general, likely voters for primaries, 5/14-18 in parens):

Alex Sink (D): 49

Michael Arth (D): 4

Undecided: 47

Bill McCollum (R): 53

Paula Dockery (R): 4

Undecided: 43

(MoE: ±6%)

Alex Sink (D): 35 (34)

Bill McCollum (R): 41 (40)

Undecided: 24 (26)

Alex Sink (D): 43

Paula Dockery (R): 18

Undecided: 39

(MoE: ±4%)

Ordinarily I wouldn’t be too surprised to see a random state legislator doing so poorly, but a Strategic Vision (R) poll showed vastly better numbers for state Sen. Paula Dockery. It’s worth noting that the Ron Sachs PDF calls her “Paula Dockey” at least once. If interviewers used the wrong name, that could partly explain the differing results. (Reminds me of the story SUSA founder Jay Leve tells of once being surveyed about “Bill Parcells” – turns out the interviewer meant NJ Rep. Bill Pascrell.) The Washington Independent, by the way, describes Michael Arth as an “artist, developer, [and] activist.”

M-D also tested various primaries for some downballot statewide races – AG (D & R), CFO (R), and Ag. Comm’r (R). All of those contests have, as you’d expect, very high undecideds and no candidate pulling higher than the teens, but the numbers may be of interest to serious Florida afficionados.

In other Florida news, the Club for Growth tested the waters for their newest pretty boy. Basswood Research (R) for the CFG (6/13-14, likely voters, no trendlines):

Charlie Crist (R): 51

Marco Rubio (R): 21

(MoE: ±4%)

Nothing new here, but at least the CFG is considering the race on behalf of Ru-ru-rubio. According to Roll Call, their ED “said the club has not yet made any decision about who it would endorse and has no time frame for when that decision might come. He did acknowledge that the club generally gets involved in races earlier rather than later.” Earlier, please!

FL-Sen: Crist Cruising; Meek Over Brown

Mason Dixon (PDF) for Ron Sachs Communications (6/24-26, registered voters for general, likely voters for primaries, 5/14-18 in parens):

Charlie Crist (R): 51 (53_

Marco Rubio (R): 23 (18)

Undecided: 26 (29)

Kendrick Meek (D): 27

Corrine Brown (D): 12

Undecided: 61

(MoE: ±6%)

Charlie Crist (R): 48 (55)

Kendrick Meek (D): 26 (24)

Undecided: 26 (21)

Charlie Crist (R): 55

Corrine Brown (D): 24

Undecided: 21

(MoE: ±4%)

Not really sure what to say about these numbers, given how similar they are to those from other pollsters. Taegan Goddard notes: “Among Republican voters who recognize both candidates, Crist barely edges Rubio, 33% to 31%.” That’s good news for Rubio, though the margin of error among this tiny sub-sample (which can’t number more than about 150, given the internals) would be at least 8%. Still, Florida’s late primary is over a year away, giving Rubio plenty of time.

Here’s some food for thought: Would Charlie Crist have a better chance at winning this Senate seat if he ran as an independent – or switched to the Democrats?