TX-23: Election Day Open Thread

UPDATE (David): My back-of-the-envelope figures say that Bonilla would need almost 54% of the outstanding vote in order to eke out a win. Doable, but looking increasingly difficult. Meanwhile, Karl says that Ciro is up to 58% in Bexar now.

UPDATE (David): Polls close at 7pm Central/8pm Eastern. And Karl informs me that he’ll be live-blogging the results at Burnt Orange. You can also get results at the TX SoS and the Bexar Co. Elections Dept..

UPDATE (James L.): As mentioned, KT at BurntOrange is all over the results tonight.  A couple of key posts to track as you refresh the TX SoS page include KT’s breakdown of county results for the Nov. 7th election, tallying aggregate Democratic votes to total Bonilla votes.  KT has taken it a step further by tracking the vote tallies as they’ve come in, and comparing the results to 11/7.  So far, not bad–especially in the heavily populated Bexar County.


Four days, two elections. Tuesday is the run-off between Dem Ciro Rodriguez and Republican incumbent Henry Bonilla. The only poll of the race showed Bonilla with a seven-point lead, but the DCCC has spent close to a million dollars here, which suggests they know something.

I’m not sure what sites to recommend to follow the results, though I imagine that MySanAntonio.com will carry them. (If you have any suggestions, let us know in comments.) And for commentary and analysis,  the Burnt Orange Report is your place to be.

Update (James L.): As noted in the comments, if you have the time tomorrow to do some last-minute phonebanking for Ciro, please do so.  If you want more of an indication that the CW surrounding this distict–that Bonilla is unbeatable, especially by a badly underfunded Rodriguez–has been turned on its head, check out this testimony by converted skeptic Jaime Castillo of the San Antonio Express-News:

Momentum is a fickle thing in politics.

But it has become clear down the stretch of the Congressional District 23 race that one candidate – Ciro Rodriguez – has some mojo, and one – Henry Bonilla – is trying to get some back.

Let me be clear before the guys in white lab coats show up in my office: Momentum doesn’t necessarily mean that Rodriguez will pull a stunning upset Tuesday.

But it does mean that a race many thought Congressman Bonilla would win 56 percent to 44 percent several weeks ago is going to be much closer than that.

The signs of a tight horserace are now too many to discount.

They include:

Bonilla’s late decision to not only go negative in TV and radio ads, but to go with over-the-top spots that paint Rodriguez as having terrorist ties;

The continued involvement of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee with personnel, polls and expensive ads on behalf of Rodriguez;

Bonilla’s decision not to ignore, but to run a response to a critical DCCC spot that says Bonilla voted eight times to give himself a raise (The Bonilla ad says Rodriguez voted four times for congressional pay hikes);

And, finally, President Clinton’s swing through San Antonio on Sunday on behalf of Rodriguez.

Unless this race is close, none of those things happen.

Bonilla wouldn’t go negative. The national Democrats wouldn’t stick around. And Clinton would certainly have something better to do on the Sabbath than stump for a lost cause in San Antonio.

(Hat-tip to BOR.)

A Graphic Anatomy of Victory: Indiana (w/maps)

This is the sixth in a series of diaries depicting the Democratic victory in this year’s midterm elections.

Already covered have been New England, NY, NJ, MD, and DE, PA, and Ohio.

Today’s diary will focus on my Indiana, my home state, and will be a bit larger than usual for that reason.  As always first up are the seat control maps.

2004

2006

Of the  1,641,726 votes cast in the 2006 US House races in Indiana, 798,322 votes (48.5%) were cast for Democratic candidates, while  821,661 votes (50%) were cast for Republicans.  Statwide this represents a 7.3% shift to Democrats from the 2004 US House vote. Democrats went from holding 2 seats (22.2%) with 41.3% of the vote in 2004, to holding 5 seats (55.5%) with 48.5% of the vote in 2006. Compared this to Ohio where Democrats took 52.4% of the vote yet won only 38.9% of the state’s congressional seats.  The key difference is who controlled state government in 2001.  

In Indiana Democrats drew the maps, while in Ohio Republicans where the ones who drew the lines. The sad truth is if Democrats hadn’t been packed into the IN-08 in anticipation of creating a super safe seat for a prominent Democrat who never ran, we probably could have taken another seat by drawing districts that packed Republicans into super Republican seats in the Indianapolis suburbs.

Voter Turnout by County, Indiana 2006 General

This map shows deviation from the statewide turnout at 37%
The darkest shade of red indicates a turnout of 10% or more below the state average, medium red 10%-5%, pink less than 5% below, light blue less than 5% above, medium blue less than 10% above, dark blue more than 10% over the state average.

As the map shows turnout was strongest in the IN-08 and IN-02 where Democrats defeated Repubican incumbents, and weakest in Lake County, a Democractic stronghold, and Marion county where Julia Carson was faced blowback from revealing her opponent’s police record for domestic abuse and voting machine problems that led to some precincts not opening for several hours.  Given the nature of the economy in Indianapolis, voters were most likely disnefranchised because they were unable to vote before their 8-9 AM start time at work.  This may have contributed to the extremely narrow defeat (7 votes, pending recount) of incumbent Democratic State Representative Ed Mahern to an up start Republican challenger in HD-97 on Indianapolis’s south side.  Especially ironic is that Mahern is the man who was in charge of drawing the Congressional and state House maps in 2001.  He did a good job, and even more so the nameless staffer who made our victory in 2006 possible with good maps.

Looking at our 3 victories in Indiana we see that for Congressional races, the Hoosier state is a swing state.

In the IN-02, Democrat Joe Donelly defeated Republican incument Chris Chocola by 15,213 votes (7.9%), a 9.4 % improvement over the share of the vote Donelly took in 2004.

In the IN-08, Democrat Brad Ellsworth, former Vanderbugh county (Evansville) sherriff, blew away Republican incument John Hostetler winning by 45,593 votes (21.4%), a 16.1% improvement over the share the 2004 Democratic candidate took.  The next time Hostettler gets the bright idea to take a gun onto a plane, I suppose he’ll get a gloved hand up his ass like the rest of us would if we were that fucking arrogant.

In the IN-09, Baron Hill is the once again Democratic representative, taking back his seat from Republican incumbent Mike Sodrel with a 9,734 vote margin (4.4%), a 1% improvement over his performance in 2004.  You can thank the Libertarian party for this one.  If not for the 9954 votes taken by the Libertarian candidate, Hill would almost certainly have lost.  This is why we need to focus less on pretending that Democrats are Libertarians, and recognize them for what they are.  Useful idiots.  I’m all for supporting Libertarian candidates running against Republican incumbents, because when the hard truth is revealed and Republican voters realize their candidates are arrogant and incompetent the Libertarians will be there to give them a way to vote without giving the Republican a vote.  Useful idiots, enough said.

The following map shows Democratic 2006 gains over their 2004 Democratic performance in the district (in % terms), improvements of less than 5% will be displayed in light blue, under 10% in the darker blue, and over 10% in the darkest blue.  Republican gains will be shown in the same manner, with the light red signifying a gain of less than 5% and so on.

Looking more closely at the margin of victory in 2006 races,      Democratic defends and pickup opportunities emerge, the following map displays the margin of victory in 2006 races.  The deepest blue represents and Democratic margin of victory over 10%, the medium color represent more than 5%, while the lightest blue indicates that the Democratic candidate won by less than 5%.  Corresponding measures of Republican victory margins display progressively darker shades of red at the same intervals.

What emerges is a map to guide our 2008 strategy. In this series I have created a race tier system that is I will explain in the next few sentences. Tier 0 races are those where the Democratic candidate won by a margin of less than 5%, the presumption being that incumbency grants an advantage of 5-10% that with the fundraising advantage that comes with holding office should be sufficient for these candidates to defend their seats without funding from the party.  The assumption that incumbency gives a 5-10% advantage drives the classification of the pickup categories.  Tier 1 races are those where the incumbent won by less than 5% in 2006, while tier 2 races are those where Republicans won by less than 10%.  It’s really quite simple.

Tier 0

Race      D%      R%     Margin    2006 D Cand.

IN-09     50.0    45.5   4.4       Baron Hill

Tier 1

Race      D%      R%     Margin    2006 D Cand.

No races meet the criteria for this tier.

Tier 2

Race      D%      R%     Margin    2006 D Cand.

IN-03     45.7    54.3    8.6      Dr. Tom Hayhurst    

Before I close for the day, I’d like to give you a peek into some deeper measures that take alot of time and effort to calculate.  First, I’d like to dispel a Kossack myth.  

Presidential Vote≠Party Vote

This has to be the single worst myth I see circulating here, and it’s incredibly destructive because it fuels a mentality that we can’t compete in districts that voted for President Bush.  Ignoring that many indepedent voters who go for local Democrats are turned off when the Democratic party gives them the scion of an elite East Coast family that doesn’t know to carry his own fucking bird out of the forest but does windsurf.

Beyond that there’s a deeper phenomena at work here.  The Presidential race is the single most salient race in the the US, most voters have at least some clue to the positions of the candidate and th principal determinant of vote choice is the person and not the party.  Because voters are given lots of free inforation about the candidates that they can’t help but come into contact with they know who they are voting for (or against).  Downticket most voters have no friggin clue what the the state auditor does, let alone what the relevant positions are.  The have no idea who they are voting for, they use the party id to decide.  This is why this is the most relevant measure of base partisanship, and why the Cook Report PVI is deeply flawed.  This tells us how voters will vote if they know nothing about the candidates other than their names, which many voters do well into October.

I’ve constructed a measure of base partisanship using 2006 Indiana election data at the county level.  The measure, 3DMEAN, is the mean of the Democratic % in the Auditor, Secretary of State, and Treasurer races.  The state as a whole has a base Democratic parisanship of 47%.  To keep things simple I’ve used the same color coding I used on the margin maps. The darkest shade of red indicates a Democratic base partisanship of less than 40%, medium red 40-45%, pink 45-50%, light blue 50-55%, medium blue 55-60%, dark blue more than 60%.

Top 5 Democratic Counties

CTY          County Seat    3DMEAN

Lake         Crown Point           67%
Vermillion   Newport        67%
Perry        Tell City      66%
Sullivan     Sullivan       63%
Scott        Scottsburg     61%

Bottom 5 Democratic Counties

CTY          County Seat    3DMEAN

Boone        Lebanon        28%
Hamilton     Noblesvilee    28%
Kosciusko    Warsaw         30%
Hancock      Greenfield     32%
Montgomery   Crawfordsville 34%

From this two major phenomena emerge.  Much to the suprise of non-Hoosier, the Democratic credentials of rural Southern Indiana emerge, while the ring of death that surrounds Indianapolis and consumed Fort Wayne attacs the idea that Democrats can compete in the suburbs but not in rural America.  Another big suprise for many people is just how much Democratic strength there is in the IN-06 where two light blue counties (Madison/Anderson and Delaware/Muncie represent around half the registered voters in the district.  And unlike the deep red in other areas, the other counties of the IN-06 lean GOP by less than 5%.  However, Democratic candidates have consisently underperformed here as a result of low name recognition and low funding.

Below is a map detailing the deviation between Congressional vote percentages and the 3DMEAN, showing the degree to which the Democratic Congressional candidate under or overperformed the county base Democratic partisanship.  Dark red is -10% or more, medium red -5% to-10%, light red 0 to -5%, light blue to +5%, medium blue +5 to +10%, and dark blue +10% or more.

Democrats overperformed in most of the districts we won as well as the IN-03, and IN-04, while they underperformed in the IN-05, IN-06, and IN-09.  Underperformance in the IN-05, and IN-06 can be discounted by noting that Democratic challenegers were extremely poorly funded in these areas.  In the IN-06 Barry Welsh was outspent more than 20 to 1 by Mike Pence.  What is truly disspointing is the piss poor performance of Baron Hill in the IN-09 where he underperformed in almost all of the counties.  2006 was an anti-incumbent wave in Indiana, and it nearly cost Julia Carson and Baron Hill their elections.  Hill represented his district for 6 years before being defeated in 2004.  Hill’s problem is that even after spending more than a million dollars he can’t get Democrats to vote for him. For this reason it’s entirely plausible than Hill will need to be kept alive by the party in 2008.

On a happier note, I want to point out that in contrast to being a surge that we can’t match in 2008, the divergence between Democratic partisanship and performance measures in the IN-06, and the close election this year in the IN-03 show that we have room to grow.  During the early 1990s both areas were represented by Democrats Phil Sharp, and Jill Long, respectively.  What we’ve done is 2006 in Indiana is take us back to the place we were in 2000, if we keep pressing we can go back to where we were in 1992.

And finally the running totals for the series.

Tier 0

CT-02, NY-19, NH-1, IN-09

Tier 1

CT-04, NJ-07, NY-25, NY-26, NY-29, OH-2, OH-15, PA-06,

Tier 2

OH-01, PA-15, IN-03

States Covered

CT, IN, MA, MD,ME, NH, NJ, NY, OH,PA, RI, VT

TX-23: Clinton And Cisneros Campaign for Ciro Rodriguez

Former President Bill Clinton, former HUD Secretary Henry Cisneros, and and Rep. Charlie Gonzalez campaigned Sunday for TX-23 nominee Ciro Rodriguez. Clinton’s appearance at the GOTV rally for Tuesday’s special election attracted a large crowd of screaming supporters.

http://bluesunbelt.c…

[Links to videos on YouTube of Clinton and Cisneros speeches]

LA-02: The Re-Election of Jefferson Was Predictable

Today we know that Karen Carter, by all accounts a good candidate, lost against ‘nearly indicted’ Congressman Jefferson.  And throughout the Blogsphere people with no experience in Louisana politics are stunned.

‘How could a man with $90,000 in his freezer, with staffers who have plead guilty still get elected?” Personally, I thought he would win all along. That prediction was based on my experience in LA-1.

Louisiana, based on my consulting with Stacey Tallitsch, a defeated candidate for LA-1 and a terribly good man, is the most unusual political place in America. One simple statistic will bear out my comment:

  After seeing their brothers and sisters die in Katrina and Rita,
  After seeing their city nearly destroyed,
  After the maladministration of help at State as well as Federal levels… 

In the election of 2006 not one incumbent in the State House or in Congress was replaced. Every single one that was in office when the disasterous decisions where made is still there enjoying the perks of office!

Do I understand this statistic? No. Even with nearly 40 of political experience I don’t get it! I can only say that I don’t have the live-in-New-Orleans experience to help me understand.

I hope we have some New Orleans citizens that can bluntly help us understand.  It is a mystery to me. Frankly, when I took on Stacey Tallitsch as a client I assumed this would be a cake walk! Who would keep the incumbents in office after such a tragedy? I was wrong.

The incumbent won with 88% of the vote and announced his run for Governor less than a week later. So LA-1 won’t really have a Congressman…only a candidate for higher office. And Stacey has a big campaign debt. I never would have guessed at the outcome.

And now Congressman Jefferson continues on his path.

I hope someone from NOLA can bring some light to all these things that are so hard for the rest of us to understand.

Weekly Open Thread: What Races Are You Interested In?

A little late with this week’s open thread, but here it is. The TX-23 run-off brings this cycle’s elections to a close. Then we’re on to 2007-08. Speaking of which, Sen. Thad Cochran (R-MS), who is pushing 70, is considering retirement according to this report at fellow SoapBlox site BlueSunbelt. Interesting. Very interesting.

MS-Sen: Cochran Considering Retirement In Mississippi

In a front page story in Sunday’s Clarion Ledger incumbent U.S. Sen. Thad Cochran indicated he is undecided on whether he will run for another term in 2008. In an interview with the state’s largest newspaper Cochran, who is outgoing Chairman of the Appropriations Committee, indicated disappointment in being able to get only 2 bills passed in the current session because Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist of Tennessee was “slow to move them to the Senate floor”. Cochran described the GOP decision to shift the burden of approving the budget to Democrats in January as “baseless” and indicated that he has a good working relationship with the incoming Appropriations Chairman Sen. Robert C. Byrd.

http://bluesunbelt.c…

LA-02: Rep. William Jefferson Wins Runoff with Grassroots Support

Congressman William Jefferson of LA-2 won a near landslide victory over his runoff opponent state Rep.Karen Carter on Saturday. He carried Jefferson Parish with 71% of the vote and won significant pluralities in the African-American precincts in Orleans Parish.

The New Orleans Times-Picayune attributed Jefferson’s victory
to a well organized grassroots campaign. Ironically it was Carter who had attracted substantial support from netroots online activists in her well financed campaign that included a number of high profile endorsements. Carter outspent Jefferson 5 to 1 but the incumbent congressman had the support of some powerful political leaders including Mayor Ray Nagin and Jefferson Parish Sheriff Harry Lee and ran a grassroots campaign that took him to churches and bars throughout the district.

http://bluesunbelt.c…

A Graphic Anatomy of Victory: Ohio (w/maps)

This is the fifth in a series of diaries depicting the Democratic victory in this year’s midterm elections.

Already covered have been New England, NY, NJ/MD/DE, and Pennsylvania.

Today’s diary will focus on the Buckeye state, where we find that there must be something in the water, any water.  We know that the coasts lean blue, but this is also increasingly true of Ohio River Valley.First up are the seat control charts, and yes grey means that the race is still in dispute not that some third party won.

Of   3,757,640  votes cast in 2006 US House races in Ohio,    1,970,127 (52.4%) were cast for Democrats, while 1,779,461 (47.4%) were cast for Republicans. While the only  certified Democratic pickup is in the OH-18, two other races the OH-15 and OH-02 are both still in dispute, Democrats now hold 7 (38.9%) of Ohio’s 18 Congressional districts.  

While it is neccessary to remember that seats are apportioned according to population not voter registration, and that differing turnouts mean that state totals weigh some districts more heavily than others because of these differences the degree of gerrymandering is apparent in the disparity between vote totals and the party control of seats.  The problem is that the composition of Ohio’s House of Representatives delegation isn’t very representative of the voting intentions.  

If Ohio’s House delegation were apportioned by proportional representation, Democrats would control 9 of Ohio’s 18 House seats.  Dependent on the outcome of recounts in the OH-15 and OH-02, this may still come to pass.  I’d like to point out something I found highly disturbing when researching this diary.  On the election results page of the Ohio Secretary of State page, provisional ballot totals and percentages of provisional counted as valid are given for 2004, while the 2006 results give an aggregate figure for provisionals and absentee ballots.  

I find this highly suspicous, and this technicality has the stink of bullshit upon it, because it could serve to obscure the true quantity of provisionals ballots in the two contested districts.  And this could serve to obscure evidence of voter suppression in  the application of Ohio’s new voter ID law.  The Secretary of State’s office needs to release disaggregated figures listing the number of provisional ballots seperate from absentee ballots.

Voter Turnout by County, Ohio 2006 General

The darkest shade of red indicates a turnout of less than 40%, medium red 40-45%, pink 45-50%, light blue 50-55%, medium blue 55-60%, dark blue more than 60%.

Looking at our only confirmed victory, the OH-18, we can see  a general trend, areas with the highest turnout (the Toledo area and SE Ohio) tend to be the areas where Democrats won, while lowest turnout was reported in the Cincinnati area where Republicans narrowly won.  The Democratic victory in the OH-18 by Democrat Zack Space represents a real blow to Republicans.  In 2006, Space took 62% of the district vote for a 23.9% margin over Republican Joy Padgett.  This represents a 28.1% improvement the 33.9% 2004 Democratic vote share. This is Bob Ney’s old seat, this is what happens when the incumbent congressman is serving prison time. This is what a wave looks like. Bye-bye Republicans.

The following map shows Democratic 2006 gains over their 2004 Democratic performance in the district (in % terms), improvements of less than 5% will be displayed in light blue, under 10% in the darker blue, and over 10% in the darkest blue.  Republican gains will be shown in the same manner, with the light red signifying a gain of less than 5% and so on. Races that were not contested in either of the years will be displayed in gray.

Looking more closely at the margin of victory in 2006 races,      Democratic defends and pickup opportunities emerge, the following map displays the margin of victory in 2006 races.  The deepest blue represents and Democratic margin of victory over 10%, the medium color represent more than 5%, while the lightest blue indicates that the Democratic candidate won by less than 5%.  Corresponding measures of Republican victory margins display progressively darker shades of red at the same intervals.

What emerges is a map to guide our 2008 strategy. In this series I have created a race tier system that is I will explain in the next few sentences.Tier 0 races are those where the Democratic candidate won by a margin of less than 5%, the presumption being that incumbency grants an advantage of 5-10% that with the fundraising advantage that comes with holding office should be sufficient for these candidates to defend their seats without funding from the party.  The assumption that incumbency gives a 5-10% advantage drives the classification of the pickup categories.  Tier 1 races are those where the incumbent won by less than 5% in 2006, while tier 2 races are those where Republicans won by less than 10%.  It’s really quite simple.

Tier 0

Race      D%      R%     Margin    2006 D Cand.

No races meet the criteria for this tier.

Tier 1

Race    D%    R%    Margin    2006 D Cand.

OH-2    49.4  50.6  1.3       Victoria Wulsin

OH-15   49.1  50.9  1.8       Mary Jo Kilroy

Tier 2

Race    D%    R%    Margin    2006 D Cand.

OH-01   47.2  52.8  5.6       John Cranley

One final thing that I’d like to point out before we head to the running totals for 2008 tiers is the result of Ohio’s minimum wage ballot measure. Of 3,607,184 votes cast, 2,025,997 (56.2%) voted for the measure, while 1,581,187 (43.8%) voted against the measure.  Overall, support was strongest where Democrats won in the Ohio River Valley and on the Lake Erie coast. The yes vote was the highest in Lawrence county in SE Ohio where 71.2% voted yes, and lowest in central Ohio’s Holmes county where only 31.2% voted for the minimum wage measure.

I’ve created chart below to keep a running total of races that I’ve classifed in each tier for 2008.

Tier 0

CT-02, NY-19, NH-1

Tier 1

CT-04, NJ-07, NY-25, NY-26, NY-29, OH-2, OH-15, PA-06,

Tier 2

OH-01, PA-15

States Covered

CT, MA, MD,ME, NH, NJ, NY, OH,PA, RI, VT

LA-02: Election Day Open Thread

Today is election day for the Louisiana second Congressional district runoff between Democrats Karen Carter and Bill Jefferson. The winner gets to join the majority caucus in the 110th Congress starting in January. Tim tells us what to be on the lookout for:

Here are some notes to keep on eye on this evening: 1.) There are rumors that some members of the CBC have sent staffers down to help Jefferson.  I’ll try and see what I can dig up on that.  2.) East Bank turnout vs. West Bank turnout and how many votes Carter is able to syphon away from the other side of the river.  3.) The racial divide.  4.) Are we going to see busses bringing people in to vote from outside the district.  If we do in large numbers, advantage Jefferson.  5.) How many people stay both stay at home/vote for Jefferson in the hopes at getting another crack at him in two years, or sooner if he’s no longer able to serve.

Polls close tonight at 8pm Central/9pm Eastern. The NOLA.com/Times-Picayune site looks like a good place to watch results as they come in.

UPDATE: Results are coming in. Via NOLA.com:

71 of 492 Precincts Reporting

Karen Carter (D): 47%
Bill Jefferson (D-inc.): 53%

Polls only closed 40 minutes ago, so we likely still have a while yet to go.

UPDATE: WWLTV appears to have quicker updates. They show Jefferson ahead, 54-46, with 43% of precincts reporting.

UPDATE: Wow, that was depressingly quick. Tim says that local TV is already calling it for Jefferson. Suck.