Senate Update: End of September

My latest update is ready, with the big news being Oregon and North Carolina.

1. Virginia: No change. I have nothing more to say about this one.

2. New Mexico: No change. The NRSC pulled the plug on this one.

3. Alaska: No change. Things look grim for Uncle Ted. The Federal criminal trial is underway and witnesses testified that he was never billed for the work on the house. Palin’s presence will not help either, especially since she threw him and Don Young under the bus. Young’s name on the ballot will be no help either. At this point, I don’t even think a new name on the ballot would help at this point. I think it’s over.

4. Colorado: Previously fifth. Udall’s increasing strength and new tightness in the New Hampshire race bring this up a notch.

5. New Hampshire: Previously fourth. Sununu is showing signs of life, especially with McCain’s strength at the top of the ticket. Shaheen should still win, though.

6. Oregon: No change. Merkley has surged and Gordon Smith is finding himself of trouble. Unless Smith can find a way to change the game, it might be over for him.

7. North Carolina: Previously eighth. This race has really taken off and some operatives are describing Dole as “political road kill”. I suggest everyone contribute to this race and Oregon if you can.

8. Minnesota: Previously seventh. This shifted downward only because of Hagan’s new strength. However, Al Franken has a lot of work to do.

9. Mississippi: No change. Musgrove is still in the hunt.

10. Kentucky: No change. Recent polls have Lunsford getting very close to McConnell. It remains to be seen whether he can keep that momentum up. He certainly has the money to do so. McConnell’s strength in the Bluegrass State has long been overstated by pundits. He has never been loved the way Wendell Ford was and he never had a tough opponent after 1990. I had written this one off because Lunsford did not show much signs of life. The current surge could be due to current conditions rather than the candidate. Still, we have ten races now where the Democrat is either likely to win, or has a good shot.  

The Republican Meltdown of 2008

The last issue John McCain wanted to run on was the economy.  In fact, Republicans spent their first full summer in Washington pushing their election agenda: DRILL, DRILL, DRILL.  It seems that Republicans may have indeed accomplished something for once.  They’re slowly starting to DRILL themselves out of office courteousy of the Financial Meltdown of 2008.

As a result of the financial bailout and the thousands of jobs that have been or are expected to be lost, let’s look at incumbents who have become more vulnerable as a result:

Mark Kirk (IL), Chris Shays (CT), and Dave Reichert (WA).  All three represent Democratic affluent suburbs of major cities.  Chicago is sufferring the same woes as New York’s Wall Street and the collapse of Washington Mutual, based in Seattle, will translate into massive job losses for the Seattle area.  (This also does not translate well for Gov. Gregoire’s re-election).  Expect supporters for all three to sit this election out.  All three also have no choice, but to support a Wall Street bailout.

Scott Garrett (NJ).  He has proven to be an ineffective congressman since taking office.  If he fails to support a Wall Street bailout, where many of his affluent constituents hold jobs, then expect this race to change dramatically.

Bill Sali (ID), Jean Schmidt (OH), and Marilyn Musgrave (CO).  All three are infamous for pushing social agendas throughout their congressional careers.  Now that the economy has become the central focus and none of the three are expected to respond correctly, expect all three to find PINK slips come November.

Robin Hayes (NC).  Trade deals do indeed SUCK.  Now the electorate, with a large African-American turnout, will finally push Hayes to the curb.

Mark Walberg (MI) – The economy is going downward and Michigan has been sufferring greatly.  Walberg is gone already.

Jon Porter (NV), Ileana Ros-Lehtninen, Mario Diaz-Balart (FL), and Lincoln Diaz-Balart (FL).  All four represent areas with dwindling home values and skyrocketing insurance rates (in the case of Florida).  While Mario may survive, don’t expect Lincoln to prevail.  Ros-Lehtninen’s opponent has also sharpened her attacks against Ros-Lehtninen.  A ballot measure banning gay marriage statewide may increase voter turnout in South Beach and Key West, against Ros-Lehtninen by a constituency she has carried in the past.  In short, Porter is fried.

Don Young (AK) and Tom Feeney (FL).  Both are infamous for their ties to lobbyists.  A change in Congress will ensure both are swept back home.  I expect that Young staffers are already submitting resumes online.

Tom Latham (IA) – Obama is clearly doing well in Iowa and McCain is against ethanol subsidies.  The district is also Democratic leaning and has several colleges.  Who are you supporting again Tom?  

Michelle Bachmann (MN) – She spent her summer visiting ANWR, instead of her own district.  The Independent Party clearly wants her gone, as does the Democratic Party.  She wanted to run on DRILL here..DRILL now, but that all seems to have vanished.  Bachmann is so entrenched with Big Oil that she even stated that oil drilling should fix the economy.  How did voters even place a nutjob like this in office?

Lee Terry (NE), Phil English (PA), Ric Keller (FL), Sam Graves (MO), Randy Kuhl (NY), and Mark Souder (IN). All six have shown vulnerabilities in the past.  Including close races against poorly funded challengers or ineffective constituent services.  Changing demographics accompanied by an increase in Obama turnout could spell the end for all six.

Republicans that are currently not considered extremely vulnerable, yet could indeed be brought down with the financial crisis (due to their closeness with the Bush administration and proximity to areas being affected by the economic turndown):

– David Dreier (CA)

– Judy Biggert (IL)

– Peter King (NY)

– Jim Gerlach (PA)

– Charles Dent (PA)

– Bill Young (FL)

And then there is the infamous Bush “foot soldiers” who could indeed be placing themselves in perilous waters:

Adam Putnam (FL) – His district currently has a Democratic voter registration advantage.

John Shadegg (AZ) – He may actually get to retire early as he desired.

Stephen Buyer (IN) – If seen as hijacking the bailout, Buyer could pay the consequences.

Of course there are vulnerable Democrats as well.  The five most vulnerable (in order of vulnerability):

1. Nick Lampson

2. Nancy Boyda

3. Tim Mahoney

4. Carol Shea-Porter

5. Chris Carney

**Kanjorski is vulnerable, yet he should narrowly get by.

As for the Senate, expect Republican losses galore:

Ted Stevens indictment will spell the end for him.

Libby Dole wanted to run on a “Hate the Hispanic” campaign, but clearly voters are not interested.  Bye bye Libby.

Gordon Smith will have great difficulty distancing himself from Bush.  Ohhh…too BAD!!!

– The breakthrough Franken needed was Norm Coleman and his failure to regulate the Bush presidency.  Expect an upward trend toward Franken in the next polling, yet very little upward.

John Sununu should contact Santorum and see how it felt to lose so badly.

Mitch McConnell is entrenched with Bush and will not survive.  Expect polls to show Mitch behind in the coming weeks and early voting already had begun on the eclipse of economic disaster.  (Expect the DSCC to pull out of Maine and show Mitch more attention).

Democrats have essentially already secured VA, NM, and CO.  A 9 seat pickup is now REALITY.  

However, expect Lautenberg (NJ) to turn out to be more vulnerable than Landrieu (LA).  

KY-Sen: Lunsford and McConnell Neck-and-Neck in New Poll

Mason-Dixon (9/22-25, likely voters):

Bruce Lunsford (D): 44

Mitch McConnell (R-inc): 45

(MoE: ±3.7%)

Mason-Dixon is seen by some as the “gold standard” of Southern polling, so these are some fantastic numbers for Bruce Lunsford. They also closely mirror a recent SUSA poll showing McConnell leading by only three points.

The underlying environment is a treacherous one for an incumbent according to the poll: 85% of voters feel the country is headed on the wrong track — the highest this measure has ever been since 1990. McConnell’s favorable/unfavorable rating is quite low (40-31), but Lunsford isn’t fairing a whole lot better (26-29). You don’t like to see a challenger with a higher unfavorable number than a favorable number, so that makes the head-to-head top lines all the more remarkable.

This one could be a real race.

(Hat-tip to MediaCzech for flagging this one.)

AZ-03: DCCC Goes After Shadegg

If you’ve been following SSP’s Independent Expenditure Tracker over the past couple of months, you’re well aware that most of the DCCC’s expenditures have been made in some of the more obviously top tier races. Starting to break that trend, the DCCC has just posted a $91,500 media buy against GOP Rep. John Shadegg in Arizona:

Shadegg, an ultra-conservative congresscritter representing an R+6 northern Phoenix district, announced his retirement back in February only to reverse course after his GOP colleagues begged him to stay. Still, it’s been pretty clear that his heart just isn’t in it anymore. With a tougher race than he perhaps had anticipated back in February, perhaps Shadegg will regret going through the hassle and not taking that swanky private sector job.

LA-Sen: Rasmussen Shows Another Big Landrieu Lead

Rasmussen (9/25, likely voters, 8/17 in parens):

Mary Landrieu (D-inc): 54 (56)

John Kennedy (R): 41 (39)

(MoE: ±4.5%)

Landrieu delivers another kick in Kennedy’s short pants with this poll, which is always a joy to see. Kennedy is currently blitzing the airwaves with ads claiming that Landrieu is Louisiana’s “most liberal Senator in history”. Nothing seems to be sticking so far for Little John.

SSP currently rates this race as Lean Democratic.

UPDATE: Chad makes a good point:

For the second consecutive cycle… It appears that the most overrated GOP Senate candidate has the last name Kennedy.

Rasmussen LA-SEN: Landrieu still cruising (up 13)

So much for the republicans only shot at a Senate pickup this year.

http://www.rasmussenreports.co…


Poll taken 9/25/08:

Landrieu (D) 54% (53)

Kennedy (R) 41% (37)

Favorables:

Landrieu (D) – 61/36

Kennedy (R) – 50/39

http://www.rasmussenreports.co…

Bonus find (LA-Pres):

McCain (R) 55%

Obama (D) 40%

Obama down only 15 actually seems to be good news.  If he can hold it to a 15 point loss in LA it should help us in places like LA-04 and LA-06.

 

KY-Sen: ANOTHER poll shows McConnell tied

(crossposted at Barefoot and Progressive)

Last week, SUSA shook KY and America with its poll showing Mitch “Wall St.” McConnell and Bruce Lunsford in a statistical tie at 49-46%. The poll was a 9 point plunge for McConnell, despite the fact that Democrats were severely undersampled.

And what do we have today? From Mason-Dixon’s new poll:

The latest Courier-Journal Bluegrass Poll shows that Kentucky’s U.S. Senate race between Minority Leader Mitch McConnell and Democrat Bruce Lunsford is a statistical tie.

The telephone survey of 717 likely voters taken last week showed that McConnell and Lunsford are in a dead heat when respondents were asked who they would vote for if the election were held “today.”

McConnell moves ahead by one point when those who are undecided are asked which candidate they are leaning toward. The Bluegrass Poll, which was conducted by Mason-Dixon Polling & Research Inc., has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.7 percentage points.

No, that’s not KY rain you feel, that’s Mitch McConnell sweating bullets…

The exact #’s will be out soon, I’ll update you.

By what margin will Bob Shamansky win?

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CA-04: Brown Leads McClintock by Five, SSP Moves Race to “Lean Republican”

Research 2000 for Daily Kos (9/23-25, likely voters):

Charlie Brown (D): 46

Tom McClintock (R): 41

(MoE: ±5%)

Earlier in the month, Brown posted a two-point lead over carpetbagging blockhead Tom McClintock in an internal poll conducted for his campaign. Both candidates have similar favorable numbers (41% for McClintock and 44% for Brown), but McClintock is a bit more banged up, posting a 35% unfavorable rating compared to Brown’s 25%.

The poll also identifies an 18-point gender gap in the race, with women preferring Brown by a 50-36 margin, but men siding with the Conservative Icon by 46-42. Independents also side with Brown by 49-33.

Brown still faces a tough Presidential headwind in this R+11 district (Bush won here by 59-36 and 61-37 margins in 2000 and 2004, respectively), but the numbers are a bit better this time around: McCain leads Obama by 51-39. Even if most of those undecideds break to McCain, this will still be an improvement for Team Blue over the last two elections.

SSP is moving its rating of this race from “Likely Republican” to Lean Republican.

Why “Lean”, and not Tossup? Well, for one, we never underestimate the ability of Republicans to rally around their own in GOP strongholds. Brown still has the Presidential headwind to deal with, and those undecideds are still a tough nut to crack. But Brown is looking as good as he’s ever looked right now.

Dems Poised to Flip New York State Senate

Siena College (9/11-17, likely voters):

SD-03

Brian Foley (D): 40

Caesar Trunzo (R-inc): 46

(MoE: ±4.9%)

SD-07

Craig Johnson (D-inc): 49

Barbara Donno (R): 25

(MoE: ±4.9%)

SD-15

Joseph Addabbo, Jr. (D): 42

Serphin Maltese (R-inc): 42

(MoE: ±4.9%)

SD-48

Darrel Aubertine (D-inc): 51

David Renzi (R): 31

(MoE: ±4.7%)

SD-56

Richard Dollinger (D): 38

Joseph Robach (R-inc): 49

(MoE: ±4.7%)

SD-61

Joseph Mesi (D): 40

Michael Ranzenhofer (R): 38

(MoE: ±4.6%)

The New York Senate is the last bulwark for the Republicans in New York, and Democrats have steadily chipped away at it. Republicans currently have a 31-29 edge, with 2 vacancies (one of which was the seat held by Joe Bruno, GOP senate leader since time immemorial).

New polling by Siena of six of the most hotly contested Senate seats suggests that the Dems are poised to take over the chamber in 2008. First, assume that the two vacancies are retained by the Dems and GOP respectively (SD-13 is a safe Dem district in Queens; SD-43, Bruno’s old seat, is in GOP-leaning Albany suburbs, and not a sure bet to stay red, although it wasn’t polled). That would push the vote count to 32-30 in favor of the GOP.

However, these polls see Dem Joseph Mesi picking up SD-61 in the Buffalo suburbs, held by the retiring Republican Mary Lou Rath. Net result? 31-31. Ordinarily, the tie would be broken by the Lieutenant Governor… but New York doesn’t have one right now, as the post was left vacant when David Paterson succeeded Eliot Spitzer. So then who takes over? Short answer: no one knows.

But… Joseph Addabbo is tied with incumbent Republican Serphin Maltese in SD-15, a heavily Democratic area in Queens (the same poll also asked presidential preferences in each district, and Obama leads McCain 49-31 in the 15th). Maltese also might suffer from the recent arrest of Democratic Assemblyman (but key Maltese ally, whose Assembly district covers part of the 15th) Anthony Seminerio on federal corruption charges. This could be the tiebreaker.

The remaining polls show the two Democratic freshmen elected in mid-term, Craig Johnson and Darrel Aubertine, cruising to re-election, while threatened GOP incumbents Caesar Trunzo and Joe Robach are holding onto decent-size leads.

SC-01: Ketner Hits Brown Over Forest Fire Scandal in New Ad

DavidNYC had more on this sordid story of reckless behavior, abuse of power, and bureaucratic cowardice last week. I’m glad to see Ketner taking this issue onto the airwaves. GOP Rep. Henry Brown could very well be the King of the Crumb-bums.

Hat-tip to Elonkey for flagging this one.