U.S. Senate 2010 Potential Challengers

Things could get interesting for U.S. Senate incumbents of both parties in 2010, especially with the Democratic majority again seeking a fillibuster proof 60 seats. With 37 races on the ballot, about 20 of them, in my opinion, present opportunities for exciting matchups and electoral fireworks!  The list below presents these potential races.  These are merely predictions and not set races for 2010.

1. Alaska – Murkowski (R) v. Knowles (D).  Murkowski also faces a challenge from Palin in the GOP primary

2. California – Boxer (R) v. Schwarzenegger (R).  Assuming Schwarzenegger survives a likely GOP primary fight from the right of his own party.

3. Arizona – McCain (R) v. Napolitano (D). Would the popular former Governor be willing to abandon Homeland Security for the Senate, especially against a high profile incument?

4. North Dakota – Dorgan (D) v. Hoeven (R).  Dorgan’s a Democrat in a red state.  Could he survive such a matchup?

5. South Dakota – Thune (R) v. Herseth-Sandlin (D).  Democrats have been out for revenge since Thune narrowly took out Daschle in 2004.

6. Oklahoma – Coburn (R) v. Henry (D)

7. Iowa – Grassley (R) v. Vilsack (D).  Would Vilsack be willing to give up Agriculture for the U.S. Senate against a Senate fixture?  

8. Missouri – Carnahan (D) v. Blunt (R). An open seat always presents fireworks and an influx of cash from either party.  Can Carnahan transform name recognition and a recent Democratic lean in the state into a Senate seat?  

9. Arkansas – Lincoln (D) v. Huckabee (R). Could Huckabee become only the second Arkansas Republican in the Senate since Reconstruction?  

10. Wisconsin – Feingold (D) v. Thompson (R).

11. Indiana – Bayh (D) v. Pence (R).  As Republican Conference Leader in the House, Pence has a huge public profile, but will he be willing to give it up for a shot at the Senate or wait to take on the aging Dick Lugar in 2012?

12. Kentucky – Bunning (R) v. Mongiardo (D).  Mongiardo lost in 2004 by only 2 points. Bunning’s recent comments regarding Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s cancer, concerns about his mental fitness for the job, low poll ratings, and the lack of Bush on the ballot this year make this potential rematch a likely Democratic pickup.

13. Florida – If the 2000 Presidential race here had you sweating bullets, the 2010 Senate race for the open seat is bound to be just as close.  Possible Republicans include popular GOP Rep. Connie Mack and current Gov. Charlie Crist.  Democrats eyeing the seat might include Reps. Kendrick Meek and Debbie Wasserman Schultz – both young and media savy.

14. South Carolina – Graham (R) v. Clyburn (D).  Would Clyburn be willing to abandon House Majority Whip for the Senate?  

15. Maryland – Mikulski (D) v. Steele (R).  Steele just won GOP chair and was a popular Lt. Gov.  But if he couldn’t win for the GOP against Cardin in 2004, his odds are long in this solidly Democratic state.  

16. Delaware – Is this seat being held for Beau Biden?  Survey says – probably so!

17. New York – The big question isn’t will Gillibrand make it to the general election, but will she survive the primary.  In a liberal state with an anti-gun swing, odds are she won’t.  Even if Long Island Rep. Peter King were to run, this seat is probably safe for the Democrats – probably a current House member from downstate.  

18. Connecticut – Dodd (D) v. Rell (R).  New England has solidified as a Democratic base and Rell is popular.  Angst over Dodd’s role as chair of Senate Banking could present some roadbumps, otherwise Dodd should be OK.  

19. Vermont – Leahy (D) v. Douglas (R).  Governors in Vermont serve only 2 years so Douglas would face a challenge with two races against a popular incumbent and a high profile one as Judiciary chairman.

20. New Hampshire – like Vermont, Governors in New Hampshire serve only 2 years.  However, John Lynch is highly popular in a state that’s been trending bluer over the past few election cycles. With this seat open, it’s a free for all.  

21. Hawaii – Inouye (D) v. Lingle (R).  Little Hawaii way out in the Pacific gets little play in national elections.  It’s solidly Democratic, so much so it’s taken for granted.  Inouye (D) has been in the Senate since 1962 and may ultimately retire.  Lingle’s a popular Gov. who may make this one a fight; even more so if Inouye retires.  

U.S. Senate 2010 Initial Predictions

With the 2008 elections just over and President Obama inaugurated, it’s never to early to turn our attention to the next big electoral cycle in U.S. politics – the 2010 congressional midterms.  Democrats currently have a majority of 56 seats, Republicans hold 41 seats, two seats are held by Independents (Lieberman and Sanders), and one seat – the Class II seat from Minnesota – remains vacant.  

2010 will be a Class III cycle featuring 14 incumbent Republicans seeking reelection along with 13 Democrats.  Six seats will be open (Missouri, Illinois, Ohio, Kansas, Florida, and New Hampshire).  One Senator (Michael Bennet of Colorado) will be seeking his first full term after having been appointed to an unexpired term in 2009.  Two seats for unexpired terms (a Class I seat in New York and a Class II seat in Delaware) will also be on the ballot.  

Solid Democratic Senators, I am predicting, include: Patty Murray in Washington and Harry Reid in Nevada.  Likely Democratic Senators, I am predicting, include: Boxer, Dorgan, Lincoln, Feingold, Bayh, Mikulski, Schumer, Dodd, Leahy, and Inouye.  Solid Republican Senators, I am predicting include: Crapo, Bennett, Shelby, and Isakson.  Likely Republican Senators, I am predicting, include Murkowski, McCain, Thune, Coburn, Grassley, and Graham.  My only lean Republican prediction is Specter.  

My tossups among Senate incumbents include Vitter, Bunning, and Burr.  

KY-Sen: Cornyn Smells the Glove

After weeks of “not knowing” whether Jim Bunning should run for re-election, and after meeting with a potential primary challenger, NRSC Chair John Cornyn is finally endorsing the embattled Kentucky Senator.

WaPo:

As for that meeting with Williams at the NRSC Friday, NRSC Chairman John Cornyn (Texas) told Capitol Briefing today that it was just “a courtesy visit.”

“Just to clear up any potential confusion, the NRSC supports Sen. Bunning,” Cornyn said, adding that the committee would back Bunning in a contested primary, just as it does as a rule with all of its incumbents.

Cornyn said he was aware of chatter that some Republicans might want Bunning to retire. “My position is that this is Sen. Bunning’s decision to make, and as long as he says he is running I will be supportive of him,” Cornyn said.

I guess he decided that continuing to kneecap the stubborn sumbitch was no longer in the GOP’s best interests. Go figure.

Discussion already underway in JFM110’s diary.

UPDATE: This is too brilliant:

If Republican campaign organizations tried to recruit another candidate to run in Bunning’s stead, “I would have a suit against the (National Republican Senatorial Committee) if they did that,” Bunning told reporters on Tuesday. “In their bylaws, support of the incumbents is the only reason they exist.” […]

“I don’t believe anything Cornyn says… I’ve had miscommunications with John Cornyn from first week of this session,” Bunning said. “The NRSC never helped me last time and they’re probably not going to help me this time.

(Hat-tip: LeftistAddiction)

KY-Sen: NRSC backs Bunning

Uh, why?

From Politico:

A noteworthy development in the Kentucky Senate race: National Republican Senatorial Committee chairman John Cornyn said — for the first time — that the committee will be endorsing Sen. Jim Bunning (R-Ky.), if he runs for re-election.

Cornyn told the Washington Post’s Ben Pershing yesterday that Bunning has the full support of the committee.

“As long as he is running, I will be supportive of him,” Cornyn told the Post.

Full story: http://www.politico.com/blogs/…

The question in my mind is, how much pull does the NRSC have anymore – especially in relation to a whole lot of exasperated Kentuckians? I guess we can only hope and pray that its enough to drag his sorry butt across the finish line in the primary.

IL-Sen, IL-Gov: Burris Will Not Run for Re-election, But Quinn Will (Updated)

After weeks of dribs and drabs of revelations that his stumbling upon the Illinois senate seat wasn’t so innocuous after all, the question was starting to become whether Roland Burris would survive the end of the month, not whether he’d be able to win re-election. Today, Burris will announce that he’s splitting the difference: he won’t resign, but he won’t run for re-election either.

This may not change the 2010 calculus that much; Jan Schakowsky and Alexi Giannoulis were probably going to run in the Democratic primary whether or not Burris was there; the main question was whether Burris could sneak through the primary based on African-American support and a split liberal vote. At any rate, it gives Burris a graceful (or at least less graceless) way to ride off into the sunset and carve another line on his mausoleum.

Also, Pat Quinn, who took over as governor in the wake of Rod Blagojevich and who was one of the first to call for Burris to resign, announced that he will be running for re-election in 2010.

“I have no reason not to run,” Quinn told me when I asked him about the 2010 election. “I think I am doing a good job today. I anticipate I will continue to do that. Stabilizing the ship of Illinois is vitally necessary. I think even in the first three-and-a-half weeks we’ve done a decent job of turning a page in an unhappy chapter in the state’s history.”

By getting out in front of the Blago blowback, Quinn seems to have stabilized his situation and there doesn’t seem to be any discussion of primary competition for him (yet).

UPDATE by Jimmy Hell: Now Camp Burris is denying everything, saying that no 2010 decisions have been made.

Bachmann to be Saved From Certain 2012 Doom?

It looks as though Congress and the White House will both now be pushing to give DC full voting rights in the House and will expand the House to 437 members and giving Utah another seat.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/29…

What does this mean then?  Utah will no longer be appropiated another seat and that means the state on the bottom of the lose a seat list will get to keep that seat.

Who is at the bottom of the list, Minnesota.  Who is the most odious elected official from Minnesota, Michele Bachmann.  And whose congressional district is the easiest to break up out of the 8 Minnesota has?  Bachmann’s.  

Here is the district, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M…

While she may not be around by 2012 if we can finally stab that vampire in the heart in next year’s election, she may have just had her seat saved, by Democrats!  Liberal black ones who cause housing crises!  (She blamed them for the financial crisis.)

MSNBC reports that the Senate vote is on Tuesday and that last time it failed by 3 votes.  This time, we’ve added 7 Democrats and seven of the eight Republicans who voted for it are still in the Senate.

And, that probably means MUCH safer lines for Matheson.

NH-Sen: Primary Hijinks A-brewin’?

This could be truly delightful if it pans out:

Well-placed sources close to former US Senator Bob Smith (R) tell Politics1 that Smith has shifted away from his earlier plan to run for US Senate in Florida, where he has lived for the past few years. Instead, Smith – who has maintained a home in New Hampshire – now plans to return to the Granite State and run for US Senate in the GOP primary next year if former US Senator John Sununu Jr. runs for Judd Gregg’s open seat. One of Smith’s consultants, who asked not too be named, said Smith will emphasize his pro-gun rights, pro-life and pro-environment stances against Sununu. Smith lost for renomination to Sununu in the bitter 2002 primary, so part of Smith’s motiviation for running against Sununu would be to inflict as much political damage as possible on Sununu.

If these sources are telling the truth, then Smith wants to get in purely out of spite – and wants the world to know it. It’s a motive straight out of a Seinfeld episode. Dean Barker explains just how fantastic this could be for Team Blue:

1) Bob Smith, by virtue of what was done to him by Sununu in 2002, is not beholden to the Sununu-Sununu lockdown on the Senate nomination.  So while all the other NHGOPers are not preparing and raising money while they wait for John E. to make up his mind, Smith can walk right in and blow this holding pattern to… smithereens (sorry; couldn’t resist).  This, in turn, gives the green light to others to go in too, despite the first and last name of the NHGOP Chair. “Well, if there’s going to be a primary regardless, etc….”

2) A Smith-Sununu contest would be incredibly confusing on the issues for the right, and has the potential to be very divisive.  Sununu is tied and bound to the Bush years, anti-choice, doesn’t really focus much on guns, and doesn’t believe in anthropogenic climate change.  Smith is not tied to the Bush years, more progressive on environmental issues, but more openly conservative on others, especially social issues like abortion and guns.  Confusing!

More at the link, and some Blue Hampshire commenters worry that this could, perversely, help Sununu. I just don’t see it, especially with New Hampshire’s very late (September) primary. This really could be quite a lot of fun.

Proposed New Jersey Congressional Redistricting – 2010

District 1: Western Camden, Gloucester, northern Salem. Camden, Cherry Hill, Haddonfield, Woodbury, Glassboro.

District 2: Cumberland, Southern Salem, Cape May, southeastern Atlantic, Vineland, Bridgeton, Cape May, Cape May Courthouse, Atlantic City, Wildwood.

District 3: Northwestern Atlantic, most of  Ocean, parts of southern Monmouth. Mays Landing, Tuckerton, Manahawkin, Lacy, Jackson, Stafford, New Gretna, Howell, Wall.

District 4: Extreme southwestern Warren, western Hunterdon, western Mercer, northwestern Burlington,Trenton,Lawrenceville,Phillipsburg,

Lambertville,Mt. Holly, Riverside, Ewing, Hamilton.

District 5: Most of Hunterdon, Somerset, extreme western Union, Southwestern Middlesex, central and western Monmouth, Flemington, Sommerville, Bound Brook, Bedminster, Westfield, Jamesburg,

Monroe, Holmdel, Shrewsbury, Freehold, Manalapan.

District 6: Bayshore of Monmouth, coastal Monmouth, coastal Ocean, Keyport, Hazlet, Red Bank, Middletown, Long Branch, Asbury Park, Point Pleasant, Seaside Heights.

District 7: Northeastern Middlesex, most of Union,Metuchen, Edison, Clark, Woodbridge, Sayreville, Old Bridge, Plainfield, Mountainside, Summitt, Liden, Elizabeth, Rahway.  

District 8: Eastern Morris, southeastern Passaic, Morristown, Patterson, Wayne, Pompton Plains.

District 9: Most of Bergen, Hackensack, Ft. Lee, E. Rutherford, Bogota, Tenafly.

District 10: Most of Essex,Newark, West Orange, Irvington, Caldwell.

District 11: Most of Warren, Sussex, northwestern Passaic, western and central Morris,Newton, Sparta, Ogdensburg, Belvidere, Cedar Knolls, Mahwah, Totowa.

District 12: Most of Hudson, parts of southern Bergen, West New York, Bayonne, Jersey City, Weehawken, Union City, Hoboken.

Commerce Secretary pick is Former WA Gov. Locke

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/29…

Official: Locke likely to head Commerce

Former Washington governor would be Obama’s third pick for post

A senior administration official says President Barack Obama’s likely pick to head up the Commerce Department is former Washington Gov. Gary Locke.

Locke will be Obama’s third pick to lead the department. Republican Sen. Judd Gregg withdrew his name from contention on Feb. 12, citing “irresolvable conflicts” over the president’s massive stimulus plan.

New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson dropped out of the running last month, citing the distraction of a federal investigation into the awarding of a lucrative contract in his state.

Locke served two terms as governor of Washington state.

Lets hope the THIRD time is the charm here!

DCCC Deploys Robot Army Against 12 Vulnerable Republicans

OK, the title’s a little hyperbolic: the robots in question are only auto-dialers, not cyborgs with lasers. Anyone who’s tried to eat a quiet dinner in a swing state knows just how unstoppable they are, though. At any rate, the DCCC is unleashing the robot army against 12 of the most vulnerable House Republicans, and they’re engaged in a nice bit of jujitsu that might sow some doubts with conservative voters: going after the GOP for not voting for their precious tax cuts, and for not voting according to the wishes of their overlords at the Chamber of Commerce.

Did you know Congressman Thad McCotter voted against President Obama’s economic recovery plan, endorsed by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce?  McCotter’s empty rhetoric can’t hide that he voted to raise the AMT tax on 22 million middle class Americans and against the largest tax cut in history.

McCotter (who’s ranked #5 on our Vulnerability Index) may be the marquee target here. Today’s New York Times has a piece on how McCotter, a junior member of leadership who represents a particularly economically-hard-hit district in Detroit’s middle-class suburbs (and one that Obama won 54-45), is getting an earful from constituents. Constituents, of course, who might specifically benefit from provisions in the stimulus, such as incentives for car buyers and federal purchasing of new car fleets. (The NYT article also includes quotes from Michigan House Speaker Andy Dillon, who may be a top-tier 2010 opponent in this usually neglected seat, although he may also be eyeing the governor’s race.)

Here’s the full target list:

Representative Judy Biggert (IL-13)

Representative Ken Calvert (CA-44)

Representative Michael Castle (DE-AL)

Representative Charlie Dent (PA-15)

Representative Jim Gerlach (PA-06)

Representative Mark Kirk (IL-10)

Representative Blaine Luetkemeyer (MO-09)

Representative Dan Lungren (CA-03)

Representative Thad McCotter (MI-11)

Representative Adam Putnam (FL-12)

Representative Dave Reichert (WA-08)

Representative Pete Sessions (TX-32)

While there are some unsurprising choices here (Reichert, Gerlach, Kirk, Dent), there are also some guys who held on by dangerously close margins in red districts (Luetkemeyer, Calvert, Lungren), and a few old-timers (Castle, Biggert) in blue districts who might need some encouragement to explore retirement. There are also a few current or former leadership members here, as is often the case in these kinds of targeted robocalls, but there’s some long-term thinking here, too: Putnam will be retiring, so it’s time to start priming FL-12 voters for an open seat race in 2010, while Sessions’ district is still red but undergoing a rapid yet under-the-radar demographics-driven bluening (McCain won TX-32 only 53-46).