PA-SEN, MN-SEN: Uhhh, what?

Dear Arlen, STFU

In an interview with the New York Times Magazine, the newly minted Democrat said he thinks Republican Norm Coleman should win his Senate recount court battle against Al Franken in Minnesota.

“There’s still time for the Minnesota courts to do justice and declare Norm Coleman the winner,” Specter said, when asked how he felt about the lack of Jewish Republicans in the Senate.

Well, I might be working a few dollars out of my budget for Joe Sestak.

I guess I can see how Specter is disheartened to see the Republican Senate caucus devoid of a Jewish voice, but suggesting that there would be anything just about seating Norm Coleman? Now he’s just being an ass.

The fact is that even a lot of Republicans will admit that Franken is likely the rightful Senator from Minnesota and the sooner we seat him, the sooner everyone can just get on with their lives. It takes a real low-life to buck the Democratic party-line on this issue.

If you’re still doubting that Specter is looking out for anything but himself or his buddies (which I was, I mean he can’t just do a 180 on half of his policy positions overnight), here’s all the proof you should need.

MN-06: A candidate emerges to Dump Bachmann

Could 2010 be the year we finally Dump Bachmann?

Political Muse of Liberal in the Land of Conservative is reporting (and I have been able to independently confirm) that 2006 Independence Party Lt. Governor Nominee Dr. Maureen Reed spoke to a meeting of the 6th District DFL last night and announced that she will be running against Rep. Michelle Bachmann as a DFL candidate in 2010.

This is a very interesting development. Reed would be a very strong candidate. First. Who is she?

Dr. Maureen Reed currently serves as a diplomate in internal medicine with the American Board of Internal Medicine and a fellow of the American College of Physicians. She formerly served as medical director for HealthParners and as a member and chair of the University of Minnesota Board of Regents. In 2006 she ran for Lt. Governor on the Independence Party ticket with Peter Hutchinson. If she does indeed run she would be the first candidate to announce a run against Bachmann so far this cycle. 2006 and 2008 DFL candidate El Tinklenberg is also rumored to be mulling a run.

However I don’t believe a Democrat is likely to beat Bachmann unless one of three things happens: Minnesota passes fusion voting in time for the 2010 election, Minnesota passes Instant Runoff Voting in time for the 2010 election or only two major parties run candidates on the ballot in 2010.  

First of all. Why does one of those things need to happen for a Democrat to have a strong chance of winning? In Minnesota three political parties have qualified for major party status. The Republican Party (which will nominate Michelle Bachmann should she run for re-election), the DFL Party and the Independence Party.

In 2006 El Tinklenberg was endorsed by both the DFL Party and the Independence Party. However Minnesota law does not allow candidates to appear on the ballot for multiple parties so Tinklenberg filed to appear on the ballot as a DFLer. You might expect no one to file for the Independence Party seeing as they’d already endorsed Tinklenberg, however someone named Bob Anderson plunked down the 300 bucks to file thus ensuring his appearance on the general election ballot as the Independence Party candidate.

In November Bachmann got only 46.4 percent of the vote. However she still won the election beacuse Anderson pulled 10 percent of the vote which split the anti-Bachmann vote and let her sneak into office again with a plurality. If this happens again and the Independence, DFL and Republican Parties all run candidates I do not think that Democrats have a good chance of winning the seat. However if a former Independence Party member like Reed runs and one of these three things happens I believe we can Dump Bachmann.

1. Pass into law and and implement Instant Runoff Voting before for 2010 elections

This is my preferred solution and probably the least likely to happen. It would allow both the DFL and IP to run candidates and allow voters to choose whoever they thought was the best candidate. As long as a majority picked the DFLer or IP candidate before Bachmann she would be defeated. However it seems very unlikely that this could happen before 2010 as Tim Pawlenty would surely veto it if it came to his desk.



2. Pass into law and implement fusion voting before the 2010 elections.

Fusion voting allows a candidate to be endorsed by multiple parties. It is currently in use in New York. Reed could then run for both the DFL and Independence Party endorsements and appear on the ballot and the candidate for both parties. Had this been the law in 2008 Tinklenberg would have appeared on the ballot for the DFL and IP and I believe he’d be the congressman currently.  

Unlike Instant Runoff Voting fusion would not require replacing the current machines and so it might have a better chance of passing but I still doubt it will be made a priority and get Pawlenty’s signature before 2010.



3.  Have only two major party candidates on teh ballot in 2010

Of the three I believe this one is the most achievable beacuse it does not require a change in law that could be blocked by Pawlenty.

First Reed or another candidate would need to secure the backing of both the DFL and Independence Party as Tinklenberg did. They would then need to make sure that unlike in 2008 no other Independence Party candidate filed and thus put three major party candidates on the ballot.

It may not be necessary to do anything to make sure that happens. Anderson was the only person to file as a Independence Party candidate after Tinklenberg had won the official IP endorsement and perhaps no one would do the same this time making sure the IP had no candidate on the ballot. However it’s always possible that someone WOULD file thus potentially making a split outcome that sends Michelle Bachmann back to Congress.

So how to prevent that possibility? I see only one legal way. Run a front candidate. Now I know that doesn’t sound very nice but if Reed or another candidate wins both the DFL and IP endorsements and wants to win in November I think it needs to happen. Essentially assuming that does happen someone needs to file for the IP primary on a platform of dropping out to make sure the officially endorsed IP candidate doesn’t lose in the general. If it turns out no one else files they can end their campaign up to two days after the filing deadline, if someone else does file they have to win the primary and then they can drop out leaving the November ballot with just two major party candidates and giving the DFL and Independence Parties and chance to unseat the worst member of Minnesota’s delegation to Washington.

Personally I think the final option is the most realistic. If we want to Dump Bachmann Democrats, IP members, independents and sane Republicans are going to need to join together. Dr. Reed is well positioned to do just that. It will be interesting to see how her campaign plays out.

Originally posted at MN Progressive Project

DE-Sen: Master of His Domain?

Susquehanna Polling and Research (R) (4/27-30, registered voters):

Beau Biden (D): 34

Mike Castle (R): 55

Undecided: 8

(MoE: ±4.3%)

Numbers like these are the sort of thing that may nudge Castle into actually making a race of it, but bear in mind that Susquehanna is the same Republican firm that put out a somewhat dodgy-looking PA-Sen poll yesterday, so perhaps a grain of salt is merited here. A poll conducted in March by the much more reputable Public Policy Polling also had Castle leading Biden, Jr., but only by 44-36.

UPDATE: It also just occurs to me that Susquehanna is the same firm that released a poll last fall showing Democratic Rep. John Murtha leading his no-name Republican challenger by only five points. Murtha went on to win by 16 points in November.

NY-Gov, NY-Sen-B: Paterson Crosses Event Horizon, Gillibrand Slides

Marist Poll (4/28-29, registered voters, late Feb. in parens). First, the NY-Gov primary matchups:

Andrew Cuomo (D): 70 (62)

David Paterson (D-inc): 21 (26)

(MoE: ±4.5%)

Rudy Giuliani (R): 75

Rick Lazio (R): 14

(MoE: ±6%)

And the general election matchups:

David Paterson (D-inc): 32 (38)

Rudy Giuliani (R): 56 (53)

David Paterson (D-inc): 37

Rick Lazio (R): 40

Andrew Cuomo (D): 55 (56)

Rudy Giuliani (R): 38 (39)

Andrew Cuomo (D): 67

Rick Lazio (R): 22

(MoE: ±3%)

Paterson losing to Rick Lazio? That Rick Lazio? Oh man. Please, just make it stop. Believe it or not, though, it actually gets worse. In response to the question “Who would you rather have as governor right now?”, voters prefer Eliot Spitzer over David Paterson by a 51-38 margin. Yeesh.

Sigh. Okay. The Senate side primary head-to-heads:

Kirsten Gillibrand (D-inc): 36

Carolyn Maloney: 31

(MoE: ±4.5%)

George Pataki (R): 48 (56)

Peter King (R): 36 (32)

(MoE: ±6%)

And the general:

Kirsten Gillibrand (D-inc): 38 (45)

George Pataki (R): 46 (41)

Kirsten Gillibrand (D-inc): 42 (49)

Peter King (R): 31 (28)

(MoE: ±3%)

Marist unfortunately doesn’t offer any explanation as to why Gillibrand’s numbers have dropped. Her approvals have worsened, from 18-32 to 19-38. But on that question, Marist is a strange outlier from all other outfits – no one else has Gillibrand under water like that.

As for a potential primary challenge, Marist showed Gillibrand with almost identical numbers a few months back against the other Rep. Carolyn (McCarthy of Long Island). But I’m convinced that Steve Israel is by far the most likely to actually show up, and is the only person I think would have any kind of chance.

VA-Gov: PPP Poll Shows McAuliffe Surging in Dem Primary

Public Policy Polling (PDF) (5/1-3, likely voters, late March in parens):

Terry McAuliffe (D): 30 (18)

Brian Moran (D): 20 (22)

Creigh Deeds (D): 14 (15)

Undecided: 36 (45)

(MoE: ± 4.1%)

This is a big jump for T-Mac from the last PPP poll, which actually had him trailing Moran. But this is now the second survey in a row (SUSA’s was the first) to show McAuliffe with a sizable lead. Still, there are a ton of undecideds and just a month left to go in the race – a lot can happen.

PA-Sen: New Poll Shows Toomey Much Closer, and Ridge Tied

Susquehanna Polling & Research (R) for PEG PAC (“end of last week”, registered voters, no trendlines):

Arlen Specter (D-inc): 38

Tom Ridge (R): 39

Arlen Specter (D-inc): 42

Pat Toomey (R): 36

(MoE: ±2.8%)

PEG PAC describes itself as “Pennsylvania’s oldest pro-business political action committee and the affiliated PAC of the Pennsylvania Business Council (PBC)”. I personally don’t know much about them, but I think the remarks of PBC’s president tell us everything we need to know about where their political biases lie: “We don’t know how [Specter’s] positions and voting might change now that he has joined the Democrat Party.” Democrat Party, huh? And Susquehanna is a Republican firm, FWIW.

Anyhow, the Ridge numbers are pretty similar to the Quinnipiac poll we saw yesterday, but this poll makes Toomey out to be a lot more competitive. Color me skeptical – though Dave Weigel does report that Toomey claims to have already raised half a million bucks since his April 15th entrance. In any event, Research 2000 will have a new poll out soon, so I’m waiting for that. And unlike the two surveys we’ve seen so far, it will test both the D and R primaries.

Speaking of Dem primaries, the anti-Specter sentiment appears to be heating up from labor quarters. SEIU’s Andy Stern said yesterday, “It is hard to imagine any union supporting a candidate in the Democratic Party for the US Senate who doesn’t have strong positions on both healthcare and Employee Free Choice.” An AFL-CIO official said something similar. Personally, I like Stern’s framing – yet another flip-flop on EFCA from Specter (were one to happen) would hardly be soothing and would not constitute a “strong position.” So this leaves the door open for a primary challenge even if Specter does change his mind for the umpteenth time. And I increasingly think I’d like to see that challenge.

KY-Sen: Bunning Says He’s Running Again, But…

The question of whether or not Republican crustbucket Sen. Jim Bunning is planning on retiring at the end of his current term was on everyone’s mind last week after word leaked out that Kentucky Secretary of State Trey Grayson was setting up an exploratory committee for Bunning’s Senate seat — with his apparent approval. During his weekly conference call today, Bunning says that he’s still planning on running again, but he’s adding a major caveat. Roll Call has the scoop:

Bunning told Kentucky reporters on his weekly conference call that the only way he would abandon his re-election effort would be if he did not meet his fundraising goals later this year. […]

As for Grayson’s exploratory committee, Bunning said he recommended it so Grayson could raise money for a future political race.

“He’s a dear friend, and I thought this would be a way for him not to have to travel around the state and still gather up some money for any federal office he chooses to run for,” Bunning said on the call, according to WFPL news radio.

Um, right. So Bunning claims he’ll run again, as long as he can meet his fundraising goals… which, during his last update on the topic, stood at $7 million. Considering that Bunning could only rustle up $260K in the first three months of the year, he’ll have an extremely difficult time meeting that target — especially considering how blatantly obvious it is that Mitch McConnell and other GOP leaders badly want Bunning to hang up his spurs. I’m sure that this admission will give McConnell and John Cornyn extra incentive to choke off Bunning’s major fundraising sources completely and redirect them to Grayson.

In other words, we might as well start considering this to be an open seat race in 2010.

UPDATE: At least the Bunster is still good for a nice, nasty quote:

“Do you know Arlen Specter will be 80, has had four bouts with cancer and he still wants to run for the U.S. Senate?” Bunning continued. “And I’m being criticized at 77 and healthy for wanting to run for the U.S. Senate by certain leadership people in my party. Give me a break.”

Asked if the leadership he was referring to was McConnell, Bunning answered: “Obviously. Do you want me to spell it out for you?”

He said: “Do you realize that under our dynamic leadership of our leader, we have gone from 55 and probably to 40 (Senate seats) in two election cycles, and if the tea leaves that I read are correct, we will wind up with about 36 after this election cycle. So if leadership means anything, it means you don’t lose… approximately 19 seats in three election cycles with good leadership.”

GA-Gov, GA-Sen: Isakson Under 50, Dems Competitive in Gube Race

It’s midnight madness here at SSP, and all old polls must go before they get too musty-odored.

Research 2000 for the Great Orange Satan (4/27-29, likely voters):

Roy Barnes (D): 44

John Oxendine (R): 46

Roy Barnes (D): 45

Karen Handel (R): 39

Thurbert Baker (D): 42

John Oxendine (R): 47

Thurbert Baker (D): 42

Karen Handel (R): 40

David Poythress (D): 43

John Oxendine (R): 47

David Poythress (D): 43

Karen Handel (R): 39

(MoE: ±4%)

Daily Kos took a look at the Georgia gubernatorial race late last week, and found the Democratic field in competitive shape against Republicans John Oxendine (the state Insurance Comm’r) and Karen Handel (Georgia’s SoS). Here’s the wrinkle, though: R2K pegged the African-American vote at 28% of the electorate, which is awfully close to the 30% mark that black voters hit in last year’s presidential election, according to CNN’s exit poll.

The Democratic nominee will have to wage a rigorous campaign in order to keep many of these voters from taking an electoral hiatus, lest they suffer the same fate of the uninspired campaign of Democrat Mark Taylor in the 2006 gubernatorial race, when African-American voters made up just 16% of the electorate. Perhaps the nomination of Attorney General Thurbert Baker (himself an African-American) might help rev up the base vote, or perhaps not — after all, a recent Strategic Vision poll suggested that ex-Gov. Roy Barnes would handily beat Baker for the nomination if he decided to run.

R2K also took a quick look at the Senate race:

Jim Marshall (D): 40

Johnny Isakson (R-inc): 48

Roy Barnes (D): 43

Johnny Isakson (R-inc): 47

Despite possessing a generally more congenial attitude than Georgia’s Senior Senator, wingnut punk Saxby Chambliss, Isakson’s favorability score is not exactly impressive: 47-41. That’s a markedly weaker score than the 55-37 rating Isakson earned in Strategic Vision’s polling earlier this month. But the question must be begged: with most of the state’s top Democratic talent gravitating toward the open Governor’s race, who wants to take on Isakson? Barnes has only expressed interest in a gubernatorial comebacker, and Marshall seems like a pretty long longshot to jump into this type of race. This could be an ideal situation for the recruitment of a well-to-do self-funding candidate to help shoulder the party’s ticket, if Georgia Democrats could manage to find such a candidate.

UPDATE: Lots of discussion underway in fatcathobbes’s diary.

CA-10: Garamendi Has a Commanding Lead

Found this J. Moore Methods poll over at Calitics. Lt. Gov. John Garamendi leads among likely voters (36% have no opinion). (Rupf is Republican Warren Rupf, Sheriff of Contra Costa County.)

Garamendi Rupf DeSaulnier Buchanan
Support: 24 17 13 10
Known: 80 20 39 45
Favorable: 35 9 16 17
Unfavorable: 12 9 13 12

While Garamendi does have a commanding lead in the polls and the name rec, Senator Mark DeSaulnier or Assemblywoman Joan Buchanan can try and catch up, but it will be a long shot when facing Garamendi’s high name rec and campaign war chest. DeSaulnier is a great progressive in the state legislature and I would like him to win, but no one knows if it will be enough. For now this race is Garamendi’s to lose.

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Reply #1 on: Today at 03:48:38 pm »  

Alcon

I think you (again) are confusing skepticism with knee-jerk disagreement.  Being “skeptical” does not entail staking the position that is contrary to mainstream medicine, culture, whatever.

That having been said, most Americans on both sides of this issue, have very little idea of what they’re talking about.

Reply #2 on: Today at 04:54:30 pm

Torie

Quote

That having been said, most Americans on both sides of this issue, have very little idea of what they’re talking about.

This is one of the truest statements that has ever been scrivened, in this or any other language for that matter.

I defy anyone to find a website that intelligently sets forth the points and counterpoints, and the points of contention, and what it is practicable to expect can be accomplished, and how much impact on temperatures if any might be achieved if something is accomplished, and indeed what will be the economic impact of a temperature rise of some specified amount.