KY-Sen: Conway Will Run

From Roll Call:

A source close to Kentucky Attorney General Jack Conway said this week that the Democrat will run for Senate in 2010 and that he is expected to announce his candidacy as soon as early April.

This is hardly a surprise — Conway has been leaving strong indications over the past several months that he was inclined to jump into the race.

His decision will set up a major primary battle against Lt. Gov. Dan Mongiardo, who is seeking a rematch with Jim Bunning after a narrow loss in 2004. Republicans will be hoping for something nasty to emerge out of it, but even a lightly-battered Democratic nominee would stand a good shot against the increasingly beleaguered Bunning; in an open seat situation, a contentious Dem primary could prove problematic depending on whether or not Secretary of State Trey Grayson would be able to have the GOP field to himself.

So bored..

Okay, so I should be studying, but why do that, the papers and tests are due for another two or three weeks. We’ve talked about this before, but not sure if anyone has ever done it. What sites or blogs do you guys visit regularly for your political, not that SSP isn’t great, but I visit it like 8 times a day, and there is only so much you can read. Any sites are good, as long as they have good information. Don’t mind conservative, as long as they’re not idiots… I know, good luck, right?

Where does everyone get their fix? Please, help me out.

A game theory analysis of elections, or why Jim Bunning is only pretending to be crazy

In game theory there is game called entrance deterrence.  The idea is that when a person or firm challenges an incumbent it goes along two nodes of thought.  The first is the challenger’s decision to go against the incumbent.  The second is whether the incumbent fights the challenger, or defers to him.  This game will be able to predict both what Specter and what Bunning are doing this election season.

If the challenger decides not to play, his payout is 0 for the challenger and 2 for the incumbent.  If the challenger decides to fight, then it’s the incumbents turn to make a decision.  If the incumbent fights then his payout will be -1 to the challengers 0, and if he defers to the challenger it will be a payout of 1 to each.

As two-bit challengers appear against incumbents from time to time, it should be clarified that this game only applies when two factors are present.  The first is that the incumbent is in danger of losing his election either due to his low popularity, or his opponent’s high popularity.  The second factor is that there is gain from leaving the senate, such as a high paying job, or prestige of being a retired senator who didn’t lose.  

An example of this is the election of Mark Warner.  Last cycle John Warner was considering retirement, but wasn’t sure.  Mark Warner threw out hints that he would run.  John could say that he will fight mark regardless of what mark does, but that is unlikely.  The payoffs show that should mark run, and john fight, john will have a payout of -1, worse than his payout of 1 should he defer to mark, and retire gracefully.  

This payout comes from john either losing a fierce election with mark, ending his long running senate career in disgrace, or eking out a bare win, where he will be in the extreme minority, and his reputation still varnished.  Thus, when it became clear that john’s plans not to retire were bluffs, he realized the most logical move would be to retire.  This is what happened.  If you replace mark with Toomey (scary I know) and Warner with specter, you have the reasons why specter will retire should Toomey run.  There are variables of course, but if specter can’t independents in the primary he will retire, soon after, or shortly before Toomey announces.  

This should suggest that Bunning will retire, as a plausible republican challenger would defeat him, but there is a flaw in this plan.  This all depends on logic, Bunning’s potential challenger has to realize the payouts described above, as does Bunning.  If Bunning is Crazy, and playing illogically, then the challenger won’t play.  Why bother running, when your payoff will be 0 either way.  Either 0 for not running, or 0 for losing to bunning/winning but getting beaten up, to go onto lose to your democratic opponent.  This is what bunning wants us to think.

I theorize that he understands this game and the payouts, that’s why he has been playing up the whole “I’m crazy” shtick of late.  He’s trying to convince his opponents that he would not act logically at this game.  That if he was challenged he might defer, he might fight, he might find a third option.  Either way it would be better not to enter at all.  The reasoning is that the number of votes he loses by acting crazy is less than that he’d lose by losing the primary (where the general election votes are irrelevant) or winning the primary bloodied up and broke.  

This assumes that he’s sane, eccentric, but sane.  He has had a tendency to act weird, but the type of crazy being described here is not that of bunning.  It suggests a sincere lack of logic, not simply acting weird.  Take Bunning’s performance back in 2004, it’s weird, but not illogical.  Considering his money, the partisan tilt of Kentucky, and the fact that bush was expected to do well, he probably figured he could phone it in.  Lazy and stupid, but there was logic to it.

Furthermore, consider his recent acts of

crazy.  It’s all stuff that only would anger liberals, and the political class.  Suggesting that Ginsberg will die soon, picking fights with Cornyn and the NRCC, it’s not the kind of stuff that would anger conservative primary voters.  He’s not expecting much help from either the political class or liberals to begin with, so there’s little to nothing to lose by fighting with them.  There is logic in his eccentricities.  

This of course assumes that bunning is eccentric, but not illogical.  If he is in fact crazy crazy then everything stated is wrong, but the only way to tell that is to wait until a challenger appears and see what he does.  If he defers, then bunning is still logical, if he keeps on trucking, he’s not.  If no challenger appears then all we will know is that it worked.  

Game theory has numerous applications in politics that are still being understood.  This game shows why other politicians retired and will show why specter will retire.  It will also do what few thought possible: explain Jim Bunning.

NC-Sen: Cooper Leads Burr in New Poll

Civitas (3/16-19, registered voters):

Roy Cooper (D): 41

Richard Burr (R-inc): 38

Undecided: 21

(MoE: ±4.0%)

Roy Cooper, the Attorney General of North Carolina, continues to post the best numbers of any prospective Democrat against GOP wallflower Richard Burr. A Research 2000 poll for Daily Kos in January showed Burr edging Cooper by a 45-43 margin, while PPP had Cooper leading by a 39-34 spread in December. Burr has to be nervous about a head-to-head race against the state’s top lawman.

Both Burr and Cooper will have an opportunity to acquaint a broad swath of voters with themselves; Burr holds a 44-12 favorability rating, but 31% have “no opinion” of the Senator, and another 19% have never heard of him. Lacking a well-defined image after four years in office while holding a notoriously volatile seat seems to be Burr’s biggest weakness at this point. Cooper, meanwhile, is not exactly a household name either — he sports a 32-4 favorability rating with 27% having no opinion of him and complete unfamiliarity with another 37%.

Still, Democrats have to be pretty excited about these nums. We just have to hope that Cooper can be persuaded to take the plunge.

AR-Sen: PPP Has Lincoln Leading, but Under 50

Public Policy Polling (PDF) (3/20-22, “Arkansas voters,” no trendlines):

Blanche Lincoln (D-inc): 48

Gilbert Baker (R): 37

Undecided: 16

Blanche Lincoln (D-inc): 46

Tim Griffin (R): 37

Undecided: 16

(MoE: 4%)

State Senator Baker and former US Attorney Griffin are both unknown to over half the state, so these numbers aren’t too impressive for Lincoln. What’s more, her approvals are just 45-40. (Strangely, PPP did not ask for presidential approval ratings.) Still, she has $7 million on hand and will get all the help she needs. And neither of these potential opponents are at anything more than the “rumored” stage yet.

More discussion in Conspiracy’s diary.

(Hat-tip: Political Wire)

UPDATE: My mistake – PPP released Obama ratings yesterday. The President’s job approval is 47-45. Also, Dem Gov. Mike Beebe (up for re-election in 2010) is at 68-20, “the best ratings of any politician PPP has polled on in the entire country over the last year.”

SSP Daily Digest: 3/25

NY-20: You’ll never believe who Barack Obama endorsed in the NY-20 special election, happening in just a week: Scott Murphy! He sent out an e-mail to more than 50,000 supporters in the district making the case for Murphy. Still no sign of an Obama appearance, though – and this late move comes as House Dems were supposedly “infuriated” at a lack of White House support for Murphy. Meanwhile, Taegan Goddard claims to have been leaked an RNC internal poll showing Jim Tedisco up over Murphy by only 3.

CT-Sen: Chris Dodd just dodged a loud, annoying bullet: CNBC host Larry Kudlow has said that he won’t run against Dodd in 2010. Kudlow said, as many believed, that “it was never a serious proposition” in the first place. Dodd still faces less-known but more credible opposition in the form of ex-Rep. Rob Simmons and probably state senator Sam Caligiuri.

FL-Sen/Gov: Charlie Crist tells reporters that he’s considering forming a Senate exploratory committee even before the state legislature ends its session on May 1. Crist has previously maintained that he would not announce his future plans until after the current session comes to a close. (J) Meanwhile, former state house speaker Marco Rubio is seeming committed to staying in the Senate race even if Crist gets in; he’s been publicly going after Crist on the stimulus and on gambling.

NYC-Mayor: Quinnipiac’s newest poll is largely unchanged from its last, with Bloombo a shade under 50 and Dems in the mid-30s. But the Dem numbers have improved a little bit, and The Mayor is at his worst approval ratings of his second term (still, 64-28). Will Anthony Weiner’s apparent decision to back off the race allow Dems to rally around Comptroller Bill Thompson? (D)

NRCC: The NRCC scored a big fundraising haul for its March dinner, with Louisiana governor Bobby Jindal as the keynote speaker. They raised more than $6 million, with 95% of the House Republicans contributing.

TN-03: The Chattanooga Times Free Press takes a preliminary look at the contenders lining up to replace Zach Wamp (running for TN-Gov) in the solidly Republican 3rd. Right now, Bradley County sheriff Tim Gobble is the only formal candidate. (I’m hoping he wins just because of his hilarious name. I’m especially looking forward to the Gobble-Fudge Act. I can also think of a much more obscene-sounding bill involving a certain minority leader.) Tennessee GOP chair Robin Smith, who may be the strongest candidate, is still in the exploring stage. Other possible GOPers include state senator Bo Watson and state rep. Gerald McCormick. The district’s strongest Dem, state senator Andy Berke, seems more interested in a gubernatorial run. One other possibility is that Wamp may jump back into his seat if he doesn’t get traction in the GOP gubernatorial primary.

MI-11: Could we finally have a legit challenger in our sights to take on GOP weirdo Thaddeus McCotter? A group of local activists have banded together to draft state Sen. Glenn Anderson for the race (no relation to the six-time Stanley Cup winner). (J)

AR-Sen: Blanche Lincoln more vulnerable than expected

From PPP via Taegan:

“45% of voters support the job she’s doing while 40% say they disapprove of her work. Hurting Lincoln’s numbers are poor marks from independents, only 31% of whom say they approve of her performance while 50% rate her negatively. 73% of Democrats but only 22% of Republicans express approval.”

Lincoln (D) 48

Baker (R) 37

Lincoln (D) 46

Griffin (R) 38

http://www.publicpolicypolling…

I wonder if the hard right turn in Arkansas as evidenced by the surge to McCain last November is something more permanent. After holding out for so long is it finally catching up to the rest of the South?

PA-Sen: Q-Poll Has Toomey Smashing Specter, but F&M Has Arlen Ahead

Quinnipiac (3/19-23, “Republican voters,” no trendlines):

Pat Toomey (R): 41

Arlen Specter (R-inc): 27

Undecided: 28

(MoE: ±4.8%)

Pretty amazing. Plenty of undecideds, but Toomey never had a poll this good in 2004 – nor did Specter have one this bad. The closest Quinnipiac had it was 48-42 Specter shortly before the primary. Even more surprising is that this poll appears to be of registered voters, not likely voters, and polling from last time showed Specter understandably doing better with the former group. If he’s already faring this poorly among RVs….

In any event, it looks like Specter has moved into reverse Lieberman territory. His favorability rating is just 29-47 among members of his own party, while Dems really like him – 60-16. With numbers like these, it’s no surprise that we’ve heard chatter about a party switch, and that Specter’s been busy trying to open up PA’s GOP primary to independents.

As long as this poll isn’t some crazy outlier, this ought to be a hell of a race. Andgarden has more.

UPDATE: There’s a second poll out on this primary. Franklin & Marshall (PDF) (3/17-22, registered Republicans, no trendlines):

Arlen Specter (R-inc): 33

Pat Toomey (R): 18

Peg Luksik (R): 2

Other: 5

Undecided: 42

(MoE: ±6.8%)

Better nums for Specter, of course, but a very tiny sample (n=211), and as I said above, he never had a survey this bad five years ago. I should also add that Specter’s shameful flip-flop on EFCA has obviously infuriated his erstwhile labor allies – but it hasn’t tamped down criticism from the right, either. He’s in a very tough place right now.

Q-Poll: Specter Plastered by Toomey

Pennsylvania U.S. Sen. Arlen Specter trails former Congressman Pat Toomey 41 – 27 percent in a Republican primary for the 2010 Senate race, with 28 percent undecided, according to a Quinnipiac University poll released today.

Moreover:

Voters approve 52 – 33 percent of the job Specter is doing, with a 71 – 16 percent positive score from Democrats and a 41 – 37 percent boost from independent voters, off-setting a 52 – 36 percent disapproval from Republicans. This is Specter’s highest approval among Democrats and lowest approval among Republicans since Quinnipiac University began polling Pennsylvania in 2002.

Even Better:

Pennsylvania’s junior Senator Robert Casey gets a 52 – 23 percent approval rating. The Democrat’s 35 – 39 percent score among Republicans is better than Specter’s negative score.

Wow.

The meaning of all of this? Unless Specter is able to carve out a miraculous recovery with Republicans, he is apparently on a path to committing political suicide by primary next May.

These numbers suggest that he should have either switched parties or gone directly to the independent route–which I think his favorability numbers suggest he probably could have used to win.

This is frankly a little bit unreal. I thought Specter might be behind or a little bit weak in the Republican primary, but these numbers suggest that he has no chance at all. We need a real Democrat in this race, so I really hope Joe Torsella is up to raising they money.

KY-Sen: Bunning Waffling on Re-Election Plans?

Is the stubborn sumbitch teetering? Check out this teaser from Roll Call:

But after stressing repeatedly that he will run again in 2010, Bunning seemed to leave the door open to not seeking re-election on Tuesday, saying that he will make a decision on whether to stay in the Senate race within the next few months.

What’s more, the Junior Senator from Kentucky seems to be getting slightly more… self-aware. From the AP:

“When they recruit someone to run against you in a primary it puts doubt in people’s minds that you are going to finish the race,” Bunning told reporters. “Therefore they’re waiting and waiting and waiting, and that makes it, it’s almost a self-fulfilling prophecy.”

Meanwhile, Bunning is lapping up the profuse support of his colleagues:

“I’ll support the nominee of our party,” Rep. Hal Rogers said Tuesday when asked about whether he was supporting Bunning.

Rep. Ed Whitfield likewise said that Bunning “is the only [Republican] candidate for U.S. Senate who has announced. So, at this point, I’m supporting him.”

Can’t you just feel the love?

With Bunning momentarily backing off from his staunch statements that he is without question running for another term followed by melancholic ruminations about “self-fulfilling prophecies”, perhaps Cornyn and McConnell are having some success in forcing the 77 year-old Senator to re-evaluate his options.

Come on, you old bastard: you can’t let them win!