IA-03: Boswell (D) says he’ll run again

I don’t know why Chris Cillizza of the Washington Post keeps suggesting that Representative Leonard Boswell is a retirement risk for Democrats. True, Republicans have been trying to pressure him to call it quits, but I haven’t heard any Democrat around here express concerns about it.

According to Radio Iowa’s Kay Henderson, Boswell told a “small group of reporters” on Monday, “I’m running.”

Five Republicans have already announced plans to run in Iowa’s third Congressional district, and three of them have started hiring campaign staff.

It seems we’ll get a mini-test of the “tea party” phenomenon in the IA-03 Republican primary. Two contenders have significant backing in the Republican establishment: various elected officials are supporting State Senator Brad Zaun, while a bunch of major donors are supporting Jim Gibbons.

Long-shot candidate Dave Funk was the first Republican to step up against Boswell, and he just hired Iowa Tea Party Chairman Ryan Rhodes as his political director. I assume that Funk will not be able to raise enough money to compete with Zaun and Gibbons, and that there aren’t several thousand central Iowa teabaggers for him to pull out of his hat.

Whoever wins the June primary, the GOP will need something better than the tired rhetoric they’ve thrown at Boswell lately to win this D+1 district.

CT-Sen: Blumenthal Crushes Opposition; SSP Moves To Lean D

Public Policy Polling (1/4-5, registered voters):

Richard Blumenthal (D): 59

Rob Simmons (R): 28

Richard Blumenthal (D): 60

Linda McMahon (R): 28

Richard Blumenthal (D): 63

Peter Schiff (R): 23

(MoE: ±4.3%)

We got some tweets yesterday from PPP that they found Democratic AG Richard Blumenthal leading Republican opposition in the Connecticut Senate race by “uber-safe” margins. It seems like the message from that poll was received, as in the intervening day, Chris Dodd announced his retirement, and Blumenthal finally got took the plunge and is running for the open seat. With everyone wondering about the ramifications of this stunning swap, this has to be one of the most eagerly awaited polls I’ve seen.

The numbers are, indeed, stunning. Blumenthal routs his Republican opposition, with the closest race against ex-Rep. Rob Simmons a whopping 31-point margin. Blumenthal’s favorables are 59/19, including 71% favorable among Dems, 60% among indies, and even a 37/35 favorable among Republicans.

This contrasts with Chris Dodd’s numbers: losing 44-40 to Simmons, tying Linda McMahon at 43-43, and beating Peter Schiff 44-37. While that’s actually a little better than some other recent polls had shown, it still indicates pretty clearly why he felt it was time to step aside. PPP also tested Rep. Chris Murphy, who seemed like a likely Plan C but seems highly unlikely to enter now that Blumenthal is already in. Murphy beats Simmons 42-35, McMahon 43-36, and Schiff 44-28: again, indicating that the problem was specific to Dodd (who clocked in with a pitiable 29/57 approval), and not with Connecticut suddenly turning against Democrats.

With this, we’re moving the race rating to Lean Democratic. Why only Lean D? (This may actually disappoint many of our salivating fans.) Our rationale is that Blumenthal is untested in terms of running for federal office, with potentially “mile wide, inch deep” support that comes with name rec from decades as the state’s AG that may dissipate somewhat in a heated election, especially one in an unfavorable year for Democrats. However, we’re doing so out of an abundance of caution, and expect to move this rating further in the Democratic direction if additional polls are in the same range.

RaceTracker Wiki: CT-Sen

ND-Sen: Hoeven (R) in, Ed Schultz (D) being asked

Breaking news from Politico, it looks like North Dakota Governor John Hoeven (R) WILL run for the Senate to replace Dorgan.

So does this mean SSP changes it to “Likely R”?

FYI, with a nationwide economy where every state seems to be in the red, Hoeven’s popularity is sky high in part because North Dakota is like one of only two states where they actually somehow have a budget surplus.

And now we’re getting reports that MSNBC host Ed Schultz has been called up by the ND Dems leader Merle Boucher about possibly running for the Senate seat.  As it’s so new, Schultz hasn’t categorically said no.  More discussion on this at DailyKos and Huffington Post.

CT-Sen: Blumenthal Will Run

From Roll Call:

Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal (D), one of the Nutmeg State’s most popular politicians, will announce Wednesday afternoon that he will run to replace Sen. Chris Dodd (D-Conn.), who is expected to hold a noon news conference where he will announce he is not seeking re-election.

Blumenthal is likely the most popular politician in Connecticut and has easily won re-election to his statewide post since he was first elected in 1990. A November poll from Quinnipiac University showed Blumenthal with a 78 percent approval rating – and his entry into the race certainly boosts Democratic chances of keeping the seat.

Meanwhile, former World Wrestling Entertainment CEO Linda McMahon (R) and former Rep. Rob Simmons (R) have indicated that they are still in the race no matter what happens with Dodd – or who runs in his stead.

Democrats have their candidate of choice now. This race just got a whole lot tougher for the Republicans. How tough? Well, Public Policy Polling will give us a detailed look later this afternoon.

RaceTracker Wiki: CT-Sen

TN-8: Herron (D) banks 675K for Tanner’s seat

The Jackson Sun has reported that State Senator Roy Herron (D-Dresden) has announced he has raised 675K in his bid to replace retiring Congressman John Tanner (D-Union City) since his entry into the race on December 2nd. A caveat of this total is that 250K are funds donated by Herron to his own campaign, which in itself shows a rather large commitment and ability to self-fund. This rather large figure however has not completely cleared the primary field for Senator Herron as retired State Representative, and former House Transportation Chairman, Phillip Pinion (D-Union City) says he is still considering the race and states he can raise the funds to compete with Herron if he chooses to enter the race.

Source link: http://www.jacksonsun.com/arti…

On the Republican side of the aisle – gospel singer/farmer/agri-business operator Stephen Fincher, of Crockett County, announced shortly after the Herron release that he had 620K from two quarters of fund-raising. Fincher was the touted candidate of the NRCC even before Tanner’s retirement due to his fund-raising ability, but this has changed somewhat now that Dr. Ron Kirkland of Jackson has entered the race as of January 4th. Dr. Kirkland is a highly respected doctor and military veteran from the district’s largest population center, Jackson. Big strengths to Kirkland’s campaign will be his ability to raise money and/or self-fund, strong ties to business/professional community within the district, and links to strategically important northwest Tennessee via his family ties to Union City.

Source links:

Jackson Sun (on Kirkland): http://www.jacksonsun.com/arti…

Knoxville News-Sentinel (Fincher fundraising/Kirkland): http://blogs.knoxnews.com/hump…

Texas Congressional Candidate Filing closes

Texas candidate filing has now closed.

How are the parties going vis-a-vis recruiting candidates to run in all 32 House Districts?

Below the fold for all the details and hey go check out the 2010 Race Tracker Wiki over at Open Congress for all your House, Senate and Gubernatorial needs.

(Cross posted at Swing State Project, MyDD and Open Left)

The Texas Congressional House delegation is currently split 20/12 in favor of the GOP.

All incumbents have refiled for all 32 Districts.

So onto challenger filings.

First the bad news and there is no way to sugarcoat this – The GOP have a full slate, many with multiple candidates. Yep all 12 Dem held Districts have GOP candidates:

TX-09 (Green) – D+22,

TX-15 (Hinojosa) – D+3,

TX-16 (Reyes) – D+10,

TX-17 (Edwards) – R+20,

TX-18 (Jackson Lee) – D+24,

TX-20 (Gonzalez) – D+8,

TX-23 (Rodriguez) – R+4,

TX-25 (Doggett) – D+6,

TX-27 (Ortiz) – R+2,

TX-28 (Cuellar) – R+0,

TX-29 (Green) – D+8,

TX-30 (Johnson) – D+27,

And for Democrats the news isn’t great.

We have confirmed candidates in only 13 of 20 GOP held Districts:

TX-03 (Johnson) – R+14,

TX-04 (Hall) – R+21,

TX-05 (Hensarling) – R+17,

TX-06 (Barton) – R+15,

TX-10 (McCaul) – R+10,

TX-11 (Conaway) – R+28,

TX-12 (Granger) – R+16,

TX-14 (Paul) – R+18,

TX-19 (Neugebaeur) – R+26,

TX-21 (Smith) – R+14,

TX-22 (Olsen) – R+13,

TX-26 (Burgess) – R+13,

TX-32 (Sessions) – R+8,

And in the other 7 GOP held districts it seems that there is no candidate:

TX-01 (Gohmert) – R+21,

TX-02 (Poe) – R+13,

TX-07 (Culberson) – R+13,

TX-08 (Brady) – R+25,

TX-13 (Thornberry) – R+29,

TX-24 (Marchant) – R+11,

TX-31 (Carter) – R+14,

This is unfortunate to say the least.

Remember that in 2008 we did not run candidates in 6 districts:

TX-01 (Gohmert) – R+21,

TX-02 (Poe) – R+13,

TX-05 (Hensarling) – R+17,

TX-11 (Conaway) – R+28,

TX-14 (Paul) – R+18,

TX-21 (Smith) – R+14,

One potential snafu is that it seems that Grier Raggio is not listed as filed in TX-32. Given that there were media stories about him filing on December 30th I expect that he will bob up on the TX Dems list in the next day or two. There are also 2 Dem candidates listed without a race so we will see where they end up too.

A disappointing but not surprising effort from the Texas Democratic Party. Whilst write-in candidates are possible this is highly unlikely if past cycles are any judge.

How can we expect to win the Governors race when 1/3rd of Republican Texan Congresscritters will not have a Democrat running against them in November?

** Tips, rumours and what not in the comments please.***

CT-Sen: Chris Dodd Will Retire

Whoa — now this just caps off the craziest day of horserace politics we’ve seen in a long time:

Senator Christopher J. Dodd, the embattled Connecticut Democrat who was facing an increasingly tough bid for a sixth term in the Senate, has decided to step aside and not seek re-election, Democrats familiar with his plans said Wednesday.

Mr. Dodd, 65, will announce his decision at a news conference later in the day in Connecticut.

Unlike Byron Dorgan’s tragic retirement decision in North Dakota, Dodd is actually taking one for the team here. Dodd’s well-documented baggage proved to be a tremendous burden for him in every poll we’ve seen of his re-election bid this year. PPP will also come out with a poll soon suggesting that Democrats would breathe a lot easier with longtime state AG Richard Blumenthal in Dodd’s place in November. Blumenthal has been notoriously reluctant to leave his AG perch, but he has made noises in the past year about taking a crack at the Senate (in 2012, against Lieberman), but this would be a much clearer shot for him. If he decides to pass, Democrats would have other perfectly suitable choices to turn to, including 5th CD Rep. Chris Murphy, who has proven himself to be a strong campaigner.

(Discussion already underway here and here.)

RaceTracker Wiki: CT-Sen

Contest Entry: Redistricting New York – 28 D, Zero R

My entry in the redistricting contest. I manage to create one new Democratic district and eliminate both Republicans, while making most of the vulnerable Democrats safer.  Enjoy.







1. (Bishop) East Suffolk same as the current district.

Pop. 706,721. 84%W, 4% Bl,  2% Hisp   Obama 52%, McCain 48%

Current District:  Obama 52; McCain 48 (same breakdown)

Virtually identical to the existing district; in fact, the only one where I had to remove blocs due to expanded population.

2. (Israel) West Suffolk.

Pop 706,650  72%W, 10%Bl, 14% Hisp   Obama 55%, McCain 45%

Current District:  Obama 56; McCain 43 (down 1 point)

Adds some South Suffolk blocs; removes the Nassau blocs. More compact and contiguous than the old 2nd, and safe for Israel.  I had wanted to push this and the 1st deeper into the current 3rd, but it could not be comfortably done.

3. ( Lowey, King. Advantage Lowey). East edge of Nassau;  Oyster Bay and North Shore; Great Neck; Throgs Neck; Long Island Sound; Pelham; New Rochelle; Larchmont; Rye; Harrison; White Plains.

Pop 702,996 79% W, 4%Bl, 11% Hisp Obama 54%, McCain 45%

Current District: None

Here’s where I start to get creative. If  we must lose one district, I want it to be the one held by “King Peter”in the current 3rd.  However, way out on Long Island like that, contiguous to only a few districts, none of which can afford more Republicans, that’s hard to do.  Plus, the upstate districts lost more population than Long Island, and if we started on the other end of the state and worked east, the districts would start to look really unfamiliar by the time we got to Westchester (see what I had to do with Hinchey’s district, for example. That one made it all the way to Westchester!)  

The solution is to bring in Nita Lowey from Westchester across the Sound.  Lowey is a suburban representative who ought to be a good fit for the Long Island suburbs.  The new 3rd is about 1/3 Lowey’s old district, 1/3 of the old 3rd (the north shore is the most liberal part of King’s existing district), and 1/3 other parts of the North Shore, the Westchester shore, and the Bronx shore taken from the Ackerman and Crowley districts, all of which should be more friendly to Lowey than to King.  Back in the 1980s, when Long Island was considered a conservative Republican stronghold, a solid North Shore district was comfortably occupied by Democrat Robert Mrazek. Also, this model of the 3rd does go as far west as the Throgs Neck Bridge–though only the north side of it.

4. (McCarthy) South Nassau, including Mineola, Freeport, Levittown, most of the south shore.

Pop 699,475  67% W, 15%Bl, 12% Hisp Obama 56%, McCain 43%

Current District:  Obama 58; McCain 41  (down 2 points, still safe)

This one is measured to be about 2/3 within the existing 4th and 1/3 in the 3rd. It’s not in “King Peter”s residential zone, but it does have most of his base. It lops off part of the top of the old 4th to give the Weiner and Ackerman districts room to snake in.   Slightly less Democratic, but still safe for McCarthy.

5. (Ackerman) North Queens: Elmhurst, Murray Hill, Littleneck and east into Nassau, then Southward into the current 3rd to Hicksville.

Pop 702,921 49% W, 5%Bl, 22% Asian, 22% Hisp Obama 59%, McCain 40%

Current District:  Obama 63; McCain 36 (down 4 points. As it should be; 63 is overkill)

A little more snakelike and gerrymandered than the current 5th, but still recognizably and safely Ackerman’s.

6.  (Meeks) Jamaica.

Pop 701,408  15% W, 51%Bl, 17% Hisp Obama 88%, McCain 12%

Current District:  Obama 89; McCain 11 (down 1 point)

It would have been much easier to screw “King Peter” and protect McCarthy and Weiner if I had been allowed to tinker with this district. But it was VRA-protected and surrounded by lily-white communities, and so I left it pretty much as is. You’ll notice I did the same with all the other majority-minority districts, all of which look pretty much the same as the old versions. You’ll also notice these districts are the ones most likely to skirt the lower edge of the minimum population requirements. I didn’t want to have to stuff more Democrats into districts that regularly give 70%+ Democratic victories.  Good thing disproportionate population increases reduced the need to expand them.

7. (Crowley) East Bronx, LaGuardia airport, Woodside, and east into Queens, short of Nassau

Pop 694,523  28% W, 16%Bl, 37% Hisp Obama 78%, McCain 21%

Current District:  Obama 79; McCain 20 (down 1 point)

Messy, but safely Democratic.

8. (Nadler) West side of Manhattan  (Upper West, Chelsea, Greenwich, Financial District) plus west Staten Island, made contiguous by the unbroken Jersey shore and by the Staten Island Ferry route.

Pop 694,080  72% W,  7 %Bl, 12% Hisp Obama 72%, McCain 27%

Current District:  Obama 74; McCain 26 (down 2 points that are needed elsewhere)

I’ve wanted for a long time to dilute GOP influence in Staten Island by dividing it. Nadler’s west side district is blue enough to absorb it easily, and it’s no more awkward than the existing district that goes into Brooklyn.

9. (Weiner) Centered in Weiner’s native Forest Hills; snakes southwest to Lindenwood, Georgetown, Gravesend, Breezy Point; and east to Utopia, Oakland Gardens, Glen Oaks and Central Nassau.

Pop 702,016  67% W,  3%Bl, 14% Hisp Obama 51%, McCain 49%

Current District:  Obama 55; McCain 44 (down 4 points)

Of all districts in this entry, this one satisfies me the least. It takes the biggest and most dangerous hit. Surrounded by the VRA-protected 6th, 10th, and 12th  , that gave Obama 70% or better, I had to struggle to get Weiner to a 51% district. There were some South Brooklyn districts that went for McCAIN  90%, and most of them went into the new 9th, the cost of keeping four majority-minority districts in the area and making the 13th safer.  It’s a bummer.  The possible saving grace is that the conservatives here are divided between orthodox Jews and racist Archie Bunker prototypes, and it’s hard to imagine both groups voting for a single candidate locally.  Also, Weiner is popular enough to survive and thrive here; still,  there are few excuses for forcing a district this marginal into New York City. If other entries make both this and the 13th  more blue-leaning, I’ll be impressed.

10.  (Towns) East NY; Bedford-Stuyvesant. Mostly unchanged from the existing Towns district.

Pop 693,765  18% W, 58%Bl, 17% Hisp Obama 90%, McCain 10%

Current District:  Obama 91; McCain 9 (down 1 point)

11. (Clarke) Crown Heights, Flatbush. Mostly unchanged from the existing Clarke district.

Pop 694,130  21% W, 60%Bl, 12% Hisp Obama 91%, McCain 9%

Current District:  Obama 91; McCain 9  (unchanged)

12. (Velasquez) Lower east side; Williamsburg; Bushwick, Park Slope; West coast of Brooklyn. Virtually no different from the old 12th. In fact, I had a hard time moving even one bloc without going beneath the 46% Hispanic threshold.

Pop 705,533  24% W, 9%Bl, 17% Asian, 47% Hisp Obama 86%, McCain 14%

Current District:  Obama 86; McCain 13 (almost unchanged)

13.  (McMahon) East Staten Island; Bensonhurst; Coney Island;  Sunset Park; Sheepshead Bay.

Pop 706,767  65% W, 6%Bl,  14% Asian, 12% Hisp Obama 52%, McCain 47%

Current District:  Obama 49; McCain 51 (UP three badly needed points, converting a McCain district to Obama)

I thought I was going to easily make the 13th more Democratic by dividing Staten Island with the 8th. I learned that a lot of the GOP leanings of the 13th came from the Brooklyn part of the district and that a lot of the neighboring parts of the old 8th and 9th had been put there to safely disperse Republicans in safe Dem districts. I needed to reach as far as I did from South Brooklyn and fill the population to the limit to get there, but the proposed 13th now has a Democratic lean.

I was almost sorry to have a Staten Island Democrat to protect. I had started out watning to bisect SI into the 8th and 14th.

14. (Maloney) East Manhattan from Stuyvesant Town to Yorkville; Roosevelt Island; Astoria.  Not much different from the existing 14th.

Pop 698,199 65% W, 6%Bl, 11% Asian, 15% Hisp Obama 78%, McCain 21%

Current District:  Obama 78; McCain 21 (unchanged)

15. (Rangel). Upper Manhattan. Harlen, Spanish Harlem, Wash. Hts, Southern edge of the Bronx at Port Morris.  Virtually no different from the old 15th.

Pop 694,620  16% W, 30%Bl, 49% Hisp Obama 93%, McCain 6%

Current District:  Obama 93; McCain 6 (unchanged)

16. (Serrano)  South Bronx. Almost unchanged from the old 16th, and very compact.

Pop 695,862  3% W, 31%Bl, 63% Hisp Obama 95%, McCain 5%

Current District:  Obama 95; McCain 5 (unchanged. I wonder who here voted for McCain?)

17. (Engel) North Bronx; Yonkers; Mt. Vernon; west edge of Westchester to Tarrytown; south Rockland County.

Pop 695,193  42% W, 29%Bl, 21% Hisp Obama 71%, McCain 28%

Current District:  Obama 72; McCain 28 (almost unchanged)

A little bluer due to packing in more Democrats from southern Westchester. North border follows the existing 17th exactly.

18. (Massa)  Chautauqua, Cattaraugus, Allagheny, Steuben, Chemung, Tioga, Broome, Schuyler, southwest part of Ontario.

Pop 706,906  93% W, 2%Bl, 2% Hisp Obama 48%, McCain 51%

Current District:  Obama 48; McCain 51 (unchanged)

I called the Southern Tier district the 18th for continuity’s sake. It might as well be called the 28th and go at the end; however, as the 18th, the only incumbent Democrats whose district numbers are changed are Lowey, Massa and Slaughter.

This is the only district in this redistricting plan that went for McCain (48-51); with the addition of Jamestown on the west and Binghamton on the east, it ought to be a little less red than before.  Without the Monroe County suburbs, though, it’s a wash. Well, at least I did not make it WORSE, even while I completely eliminated the GOP-heavy district next door.

19. (Hall) Southeast  Dutchess, Putnam, East Westchester (North Salem, Chappaqua, Brewster).  

Pop 700,295  76% W, 8%Bl, 11% Hisp Obama 55%, McCain 44%

Current District:  Obama 51; McCain 48 (UP 4 needed points)

More compact and Democratic than the old 22nd, this one should make the potentially vulnerable Hall safe. I was tempted to make the district more Westchester-centric, but Hall resides in the part of Dutchess that had to be included.

20. (Murphy) Upper Dutchess, Columbia Rensselaer, Warren, Washington, Saratoga, Essex

Pop 695,099  91% W, 4%Bl, 2% Hisp Obama 54%, McCain 45%

Current District:  Obama 51; McCain 48  (UP 3 needed points)

This was the easiest to make Dem friendly of all the marginal newly Dem districts upstate.  Poughkeepsie and the Albany suburbs of Rensselaer had been artificially removed to make the district Republican. Put them back, and the natural things to lop off are the Catskill tail at the bottom of the old 20th. The district is more compact and contiguous, and more Democratic. What could be better?

21. (Tonko)  Montgomery, Albany, Schoharie,Greene, Delaware, Sullivan, parts of Ulster, Orange and Herkimer.  

Pop 701,290  84% W, 7%Bl, 6% Hisp Obama 56%, McCain 42%

Current District:  Obama 58; McCain 40 (down 2 unneeded points)

The price of shoring up the 20th and 23rd was to make the Tonko district slightly   less safe by adding in a lot of conservative rural territory. But it’s still handily blue.

22.    (Hinchey)  Scarsdale, Peekskill, parts of Rockland, Orange and Ulster.

Pop 702,909  77% W, 7%Bl, 11% Hisp Obama 57%, McCain 42%

Current District:  Obama 59; McCain 39 (down 2 unneeded points)

This one changed a lot. This Borscht Belt district traditionally had Binghamton and Ithaca on the west and stretched to Poughkeepsie with as little in between as they could get away with. I put Binghamton and Ithaca in other districts that needed more Democrats, and compensated by extending a tail of the 22nd deep into Westchester, between the 17th and the 19th. The extent to north Ulster is due to Hinchey’s home base, near Woodstock.

23.    (Owens) Clinton, Franklin, Essex, Schenectady, Fulton, Hamilton, St Lawrence, Lewis, Jefferson, most of Oswego, West part of Saratoga.

Pop 707,028 92% W, 3%Bl,  2% Hisp Obama 52%, McCain 46%

Current District:  Obama 52; McCain 47 (up 1/2)

Made just a little more Dem friendly. The primary change was the addition of Schenectady and the removal of some conservative western land.

24. (Arcuri) Central New York State: Oneida, Cortland, Madison, Otsego, Chenango, Tompkins, Schuyler, Yates, North-central part of Ontario, southwest part of Herkimer

Pop 699,841  92% W, 3%Bl,  2% Hisp Obama 51%, McCain 47%

Current District:  Obama 51; McCain 48 (up 1 point, just like the 23rd.)

This district is made marginally safer for Arcuri, mainly due to the addition of Ithaca.

25. (Maffei)  Onondanga (Syracuse),  Cayuga, Seneca, Eastern part of Wayne and Ontario

Pop 701,716  87% W, 7%Bl,  2% Hisp Obama 57%, McCain 41%

Current District:  Obama 56; McCain 43 (up 2 points)

Slightly more safe for Maffei. The main change was taking the district away from Monroe County and adding some rural blocs. you’d think that would make it more Republican, but no.

26. (Slaughter) Rochester and suburbs, plus Livingston County and West edge of Wayne.

Pop 703,921 78% W, 13%Bl,  5% Hisp Obama 58%, McCain 40%

Current District:  Obama 69; McCain 30 (looks like a big dip, until you consider that we’re eliminating the pro-GOP 26th and making two good Dem districts)

Slaughter represented an area like this in the 1990s, and shouldn’t have any trouble keeping this one.  The current 28th was one of the big mistakes of the 2001 redistricting, protecting a Republican incumbent at the expense of a safe blue district. See District 28, below, for more. With Lee an insignificant minority party Freshman and the redistricting controlled by Democrats, hopefully they won’t make that mistake again.  Slaughter still has a 58% Dem district to work in here.

27. (Higgins, Lee. Strong advantage to Higgins) Entirely within Erie County; includes all of Erie except for the Northwestern part, most of which is in the current 28th.  Eliminates Chautauqua County.

Pop 695,556  83% W, 11%Bl,  3% Hisp Obama 56%, McCain 43%

Current District:  Obama 54; McCain 44  (up 2 points)

Lee could challenge Higgins here or try to move to the new 28th. Either way, he’d have a hard time holding on. This district is more partisanly Dem than the one Higgins now wins in.

28. (no incumbent) Northwest Erie/Tonawanda; all of Niagra, Genesee, Wyoming counties; NW Monroe.

Pop 694,502  87% W, 8%Bl,  2% Hisp Obama 52%, McCain 47%

Current District:  Obama 69; McCain 30  (I’m counting the current 28th as “current” in both this district and Slaughter’s proposed 26th, for lack of an alternative. This district has most of the territory; the proposed 26th has the incumbent; and the goal was the total breakup of the existing 26th, which has no counterpart in this proposal).

This district attempts to eliminate the other GOP-held district in NY and replace it with one approximating the district held by John LaFalce through the 1990s. The new 26th, 27th and 28th try to recreate what the three districts would look like if in 2001 they had eliminated the district now held by Lee instead of the LaFalce district.

OVERALL RESULT: All 28 districts are swing or better, all definitely winnable by Democrats, and all start out with an incumbent Democrat. Big winners include McMahon, Murphy, Maffei, and the Democrat who runs in the new 28th.  Owens and Arcuri are marginally better, and Massa is no worse off. Weiner is the only Democrat who is worse off enough to notice, and even he is still slightly blue leaning, in the middle of the city, where he’ll have a LOT of support. Both incumbent Republicans, meanwhile,  are…yes, I think “toast” is the operative word.

What do you think?

CT Sen- Dodd will retire

Chris Dodd will retire according to Chris Cillizza;

Embattled Connecticut Sen. Chris Dodd (D) has scheduled a press conference at his home in Connecticut Wednesday at which he is expected to announce he will not seek re-election, according to sources familiar with his plans.

[…]

State Attorney General Richard Blumenthal is widely expected to step into the void filled by Dodd and, at least at first blush, should drastically increase Democrats’ chances of holding the seat.

Blumenthal, who has served as state Attorney General since 1990, is the most popular politician in the state and has long coveted a Senate seat; he had already signaled that he would run for the Democratic nomination against Sen. Joe Lieberman (I) in 2012. (A sidenote: Assuming Blumenthal gets in to the race, Rep. Chris Murphy could be the long-term beneficiary as he is widely regarded as a rising star and would be at the top of the list of Democratic hopefuls to challenge Lieberman in 2012.)

PPP tweeted earlier that the seat would be safe if Blumenthal runs. No numbers yet, but we’ll see them soon.