OH-16: John Boccieri Needs 15 More Votes

Boccieri Breaking News:

John is Just 15 Votes from the Final Round – Vote Now!

BoccieriBiden

From the Akron Beacon Journal:

VP candidate draws 2,500 in Canton

“…Gov. Ted Strickland and state Sen. John Boccieri, the Democratic candidate for the Canton-based 16th Congressional District, introduced Biden to the Canton crowd, with the three of them locking hands in a victory pose. Strickland called Boccieri one of his ”closest personal friends.”

Boccieri, D-Alliance, told the audience: ”It is time we elect change. That is why we need Barack Obama and Joe Biden. ”

Boccieri said Biden is from a middle-class family and is a ”tough, smart and realistic leader.”

Read the full article…

There’s more…

John only needs 15 more votes by midnight on Saturday to advance to the final round in 21st Century Democrats online contest!

If you haven’t voted, please vote now. If you have, please urge all your friends to vote, too.

Again, the winners of this contest will receive an additional staff member for their campaigns. That extra organizer could lead to dozens of extra volunteers, thousands more phone calls and door-knocks, and a winning margin of votes on Election Day.

The deadline for Round 1 voting is midnight on Saturday. Please vote ASAP!

Thanks for Your Support,

Team Boccieri

MO-06: Graves Regrows Lead in New Poll

SurveyUSA (9/17-18, likely voters, 7/30-31 in parens):

Kay Barnes (D): 42 (44)

Sam Graves (R-inc): 51 (48)

Dave Browning (L): 4 (-)

Undecided: 4 (2)

(MoE: ±4%)

Graves is back on top with a decent lead over former Kansas City Mayor Kay Barnes. Interestingly, this poll offers a bit of a course correction in its sample of young voters; in July, SUSA showed Graves with a monster 52-37 lead among 18-34 year-olds (a recurring issue in many SUSA polls we’ve seen this year), but now finds Barnes ahead in that age bracket by 47-40. However, the new poll also finds Barnes backsliding among 35-64 year-olds.

There’s no question that Graves is a gay-baiting (and I’d even say race-baiting, based on this ad) neanderthal who deserves to lose, but he’s already smacking his chops over his next hit on Barnes: she was a (gasp!) sexuality consultant in the 1970s!

SSP currently rates this race as Lean Republican.

ID-01, ID-Sen: Sali Leads by 11, Risch by 23

Research 2000 for Daily Kos (9/17-18, likely voters):

Walt Minnick (D): 35

Bill Sali (R-inc): 46

Undecided: 19

(MoE: ±5%)

Sali is under 50%, so he’s definitely in the danger zone, but this will be an uphill race for Walt Minnick. Most troubling is Minnick’s favorability rating: 41-40. Those are some inexplicably high negatives for a challenger in a race that hasn’t really heated up yet. Neither Sali nor the NRCC have gone up with negative ads against Minnick, while Minnick has been airing positive bio ads for quite some time. I’m at a loss to explain why nearly as many people view him unfavorably as they do favorably.

Up the ticket, McCain is beating Obama by a 59-32 margin, not an especially dramatic improvement for Team Blue over Kerry’s 69-30 loss here in 2004.

UPDATE: The Minnick campaign releases a statement about this poll to SSP (via email):

Our internal polling has been consistently and dramatically different from the numbers released today. We are confident going forward to Election Day.

SSP currently rates this race as Likely Republican.

Update: The Great Orange Satan also polled the state’s Senate race (9/16-17, likely voters, 7/28-30 in parens):

Larry LaRocco (D): 33 (32)

Jim Risch (R): 56 (42)

Rex Rammell (I): 3 (5)

Other: 3 (4)

Undecided: 5 (17)

(MoE: ±4%)

The undecideds have come off the fence — and they’ve landed on exactly the side you’d expect in this crimson red state. Tough breaks, but it’s Idaho.

NY-26: Judges to Davis: Scram!

The law has spoken:

A State Supreme Court justice Thursday rejected congressional candidate Jack Davis’ attempt to remain on the November ballot, ending his third attempt to win the job. […]

Justice Richard M. Platkin of Albany disagreed with Davis’ contention that his petition to form a minor party line called Save Jobs and Farms should have been accepted even though he failed to file a certificate of acceptance on time, as required by state election law.

Davis argued that the state Board of Elections should have provided him an opportunity to submit the late application anyway and that the board acted “arbitrarily and capriciously” in not allowing him to file.

The judge ruled otherwise.

“The court concludes that this case is governed by myriad authorities holding that the failure to timely file a certificate of acceptance is a fatal defect that cannot be cured or excused,” Platkin wrote.

Davis left a voicemail with Democrat Alice Kryzan yesterday to congratulate her on her primary win, but would not commit to helping her campaign — because he doesn’t think that she “understands” his anti-trade message.

Also non-committal is Jon Powers, who has yet to either endorse Kryzan or confirm whether or not he’ll be actively campaigning as the Working Families Party candidate. This is getting pretty lame.

SSP currently rates this race as Lean Republican.

(H/T: The Albany Project)

OH-16: John Boccieri Vows to Tackle Pension Problems

Boccieri Banner

Boccieri Vows to Tackle Pension Problems

After meeting on Thursday with local retirees from Republic Technologies International (RTI) who have been battling for years to secure the pensions they were promised, State Sen. John Boccieri affirmed his commitment to fight for a resolution to their struggle as a member of the U.S. Congress.

Boccieri also promised to attend a major public meeting about these pension problems on Saturday, October 11. Other elected officials, candidates, and members of the press have also been invited.

State Senator John Boccieri said:

“It’s criminal that you would work your whole life, pay into a pension plan, and then get almost nothing because bad trade policies or irresponsible executives bankrupt your company. This issue requires a strong and loud voice in Congress to ensure that laws protecting pensions are enforced and are strengthened to protect workers.”

For years, thousands of local workers and retirees from RTI have been struggling with the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC), the government agency that takes over a company’s pension plan if it declares bankruptcy to ensure that employees still receive pension benefits.

Despite this intent, many workers see their pensions dramatically reduced when the PBGC takes over from a bankrupt company, due to funding problems and complex laws governing how the agency makes payments.

In the case of RTI, the situation was made worse by extended legal battles over the amounts owed by the PBGC to affected workers, which have now resulted in the agency demanding that retirees pay back pension “overpayments” as large as $60- or $70,000.

Individuals at Thursday’s meetings also expressed frustrations with the PBGC’s lack of responsiveness and consistency in addressing their concerns. “You ask the same question three times and get three different answers,” one retiree said. Others said that PBGC had miscalculated benefits, confused the benefits owed by RTI and previous companies operating the same facilities, and awarded, reduced or revoked benefits arbitrarily.(emphasis added)

Boccieri’s initial proposals to address these concerns include:


  • Working directly with the PBGC, as well as with Senator Sherrod Brown, the Steelworkers Union, and others who have taken the lead on these issues, to push for swift, fair solutions;
  • Creating a “Pension Protection Caucus” in Congress that would bring together legislators from all of the districts and states affected by these pension problems to seek resolutions;
  • Increasing enforcement of pension protection laws to ensure that both corporations and the PBGC are honoring their obligations to workers;
  • Passing legislative improvements to current law, such as measures to give workers’ pensions fairer treatment in bankruptcy proceedings and prevent retirees from having to repay PBGC when it takes years to recalculate pension payments;
  • Improving the responsiveness and transparency of the PBGC in its dealings with pension recipients;
  • Ensuring that improvements in enforcement and legislation are retroactive in order to address the plight of RTI employees.
  • Once again, Senator Major John Boccieri is first on the issues that most affect the voters of Ohio’s 16th Congressional District!

    ME-Sen, OK-Sen, KY-Sen: Collins, Inhofe, McConnell Continue to Lead

    Rasmussen (9/17, likely voters, 8/12 in parens):

    Tom Allen (D): 42 (40)

    Susan Collins (R-inc): 55 (55)

    (MoE: ±4.5%)

    We’ve all been waiting for something… anything… to happen here, but Allen has not been able to land many direct hits so far. Will the bomb ever drop?

    And how are things going in Oklahoma? Rasmussen (9/11, likely voters, no trend lines):

    Andrew Rice (D): 39

    Jim Inhofe (R-inc): 55

    (MoE: ±4.5%)

    That seems about right, but I understand that there may be another poll of this race by a different outlet released soon.

    And finally, Kentucky: Research 2000 for Daily Kos (9/15-17, likely voters, 7/28-30 in parens):

    Bruce Lunsford (D): 37 (38)

    Mitch McConnell (R-inc): 50 (49)

    (MoE: ±4%)

    No real movement, but Kos sees a glimmer of hope in that 16% of Democrats are undecided.

    NC-Sen, NC-Gov: Neck ‘n’ Neck

    Elon University (9/15-16, residents):

    Kay Hagan (D): 35

    Elizabeth Dole (R-inc): 35

    (MoE: ±4.9%)

    Bev Perdue (D): 35

    Pat McCrory (R): 37

    (MoE: ±4.9%)

    First off, this is a strange poll, from a pollster I’ve never heard of before: a poll of North Carolina residents, with no regard to voting likelihood or registration, with a 4.9% MoE, and, judging by the very low numbers, little interest in pushing leaners. (UPDATE: Nor does the poll even give the names of candidates, only asking whether respondents are voting Democratic or Republican in each race!)

    On the other hand, the numbers seem quite consistent with what we’ve seen recently: a tied race in the Senate, and a governor’s race moving in the last month from a slight Dem lean to a slight GOP lean. McCain leads Obama 41-35, also plausible.

    WA-Gov: Small Rossi Edge

    Strategic Vision (R) (9/14-16, likely voters, 7/25-27 in parens):

    Chris Gregoire (D-inc): 46 (47)

    Dino Rossi (R): 48 (45)

    (MoE: ±3%)

    Another poll of the Washington gubernatorial race, although from rather suspicious Republican polling firm Strategic Vision, confirms the movement in the last month of this race from lean Dem status to a tied, if ever-so-slightly-leaning-GOP, game. Gregoire, after ceding the airwaves for a while, appears to be renewing her ad efforts this week, but news of a $3.2 billion state budget deficit for the next biennium isn’t likely to play out in her favor.

    Obama leads McCain 47-42 in Washington in the same poll, consistent with most other polling as well.