VA-05: Perriello Just May Survive

PPP (pdf) (2/5-10, likely voters)

Tom Perriello (D-inc): 44

Robert Hurt (R): 44

Undecided: 13

Tom Perriello (D-inc): 41

Robert Hurt (R): 12

Virgil Goode (I): 41

Undecided: 6

Tom Perriello (D-inc): 44

Robert Hurt (R): 27

Generic Teabagger (I): 19

Undecided: 10

Tom Perriello (D-inc): 46

Ken Boyd (R): 42

Undecided: 12

Tom Perriello (D-inc): 45

Jim McKelvey (R): 37

Undecided: 18

Tom Perriello (D-inc): 45

Michael McPadden (R): 36

Undecided: 19

Tom Perriello (D-inc): 44

Lawrence Verga (R): 34

Undecided: 21

(MoE: ±3.2%)

Mainstream media pundits have pretty much already left Rep. Tom Perriello for dead. Between having the narrowest margin of victory of any Democrat in 2008 (900-odd votes over then-Rep. Virgil Goode) and sitting in a rural R+5 district that went strongly for Bob McDonnell in November’s gubernatorial race, he was already viewed as endangered — and when he cast theoretically risky votes for cap and trade and health care reform instead of hiding under a pile of coats with the Blue Dogs, well, it was an open and shut case, right? Guess again: PPP finds Perriello tied with his strongest Republican opposition, state Sen. Robert Hurt, and winning rather convincingly against the assortment of other random Republicans. (As a bonus, PPP promises GOP primary numbers tomorrow, so we can see if Hurt, an establishment figure who’s had a big target painted on his back by not just the teabaggers but also the CfG/Grover Norquist set, is getting hurt by the GOP schism.) Don’t pop the bubbly yet, of course: Perriello’s still well below the 50% safety mark.

One thing I love about PPP is how willing they are to try out every possible permutation, and they do that here, with a three-way against an unnamed tea party independent (although Generic Teabagger already has a name in this race… it’s Bradley Rees), where Perriello effectively rides the split to victory over Hurt, and a three-way with ex-Rep. Virgil Goode as an independent (something he’s threatened, although hasn’t taken steps towards). There, it’s actually a Perriello/Goode tie, with Hurt getting a woeful 12%. This is interesting, as Goode is basically functioning as a non-generic teabagger; if there’s one guy out there who seems tailor-made for the Tea Party movement, it’s Goode, who briefly served as an independent in between being a Dem (when first elected) and a GOPer, and whose odd, ideologically incoherent mix of libertarianism, populism, and xenophobic crackpottery seems like the teabagger template.

Also worth noting: Goode is the only person in the whole poll who’s in positive territory (58/29). Not Barack Obama (although he’s at a surprisingly not-bad 46/50), not Perriello (42/46),  not Hurt (15/15), and certainly not the other GOP odds and ends.

RaceTracker Wiki: VA-05

FL-21, FL-25: Lincoln Diaz-Balart Will Retire, Switcheroo in the Works

Remember this scenario? The one where Charlie Crist was supposed to tap GOP Rep. Lincoln Diaz-Balart to fill the seat of Sen. Mel Martinez, followed by Lincoln’s brother, 25th CD Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart running for Lincoln’s 21st seat in the special election?

Looks like something like that may actually happen, only Lincoln has decided to make a straight-up retirement. From HotlineOnCall:

Rep. Lincoln Diaz-Balart (R-FL) will announce later today he will not seek another term, CongressDaily reports this morning. […]

The district is heavily Hispanic, thanks to Miami’s large Cuban population. 73% of district residents call themselves Hispanic, while just 16% are white. Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) won a narrow 51%-49% victory in the seat.

First elected in ’92, Diaz-Balart has had little trouble holding on to his seat. His brother, Mario, represents another heavily-Cuban part of Miami. CongressDaily reports that Mario Diaz-Balart will abandon his district to run in Lincoln’s, which is seen as tilting more toward the GOP.

Now, unlike the recent retirements of Republicans like Steve Buyer, Vernon Ehlers, and George Radanovich, this open seat situation could potentially yield a pair of races worth watching.

Unlike Al Gore and John Kerry, Obama performed well in both the 21st and the 25th, picking up 49% in both districts. The 21st CD has been the stronger of the two districts historically for Republicans, and I’d expect that Mario’s candidacy would be a formidable stopgap for the GOP there. But if Mario does indeed make this move, his open seat in the 25th CD, where he only won 53% in 2008, could yield an interesting race to watch if Democrats can find a solid challenger.

UPDATE: Mario has confirmed that he’ll run for his brother’s seat.

RaceTracker Wiki: FL-21 | FL-25

SSP Daily Digest: 2/10

AZ-Sen: This has to be a bit of disappointment for J.D. Hayworth, as he mounts a right-wing primary challenge to John McCain: South Carolina Sen. Jim DeMint, who’s been active in endorsing insurgent candidates in GOP primaries and whose stamp of approval has become the gold standard for aspiring wingnuts, has declined to get involved in the Arizona primary.

CA-Sen: Bringing to the table the business acumen and keen understanding of the law that made her such a smashing success at Hewlett-Packard, Carly Fiorina put forth a worst-case scenario solution for the cash-strapped state of California: declaring bankruptcy. One slight problem here: while municipalities may, states can’t declare bankruptcy.

IN-Sen: Former Sen. Dan Coats made his official announcement during a radio interview today, saying he’s “answering the call” to challenge Evan Bayh. Coats said he’s “off and running,” and by running, that means his staffers are running madly around the state trying to round up at least 500 signatures in each congressional district before the Feb. 16 filing deadline; so far, he has turned in no signatures at all (and his efforts may be greatly hampered by this week’s spell of inclement weather). At a more general level, Politico has a story today titled “The Nuking of Dan Coats,” a retrospective of all the damage Coats has sustained last week as the Dems (gunshy about a repeat of their asleep-at-the-wheel Massachusetts election) pounced quickly and rolled out pushback-free hit after hit on Coats’s lobbying past and residency.

CA-Gov: Democratic gubernatorial candidate Jerry Brown is sitting on more than $12 million, which would be enough to annihilate everyone and everything in sight in most states. But in freakishly-expensive California and facing billionaire Meg Whitman, who can cut herself a $20 million check the way most of us reach into the change jar on the way to the store, he needs a little outside help. He’s getting that from “Level the Playing Field 2010,” a coalition of unions and wealthy donors who are launching a $20 million independent expenditure effort of their own, to keep Whitman from dominating the airwaves here in the slow season.

MI-Gov: This is kind of surprising, considering that she’d been getting a disproportionate share of the gubernatorial buzz, some not-so-subtle encouragement from inside the Beltway, and a primary lead in recent polling. Denise Ilitch, UM regent and one-time pro sports magnate & pizza baroness, decided today against a run for the Democratic nod. She pointed to the late date, saying there was too much catching-up to do at this point, although she said she’d be interested in running for something in the future. This means the Democratic field is likely to be centrist state House speaker Andy Dillon and populist Lansing mayor Virg Bernero going mano-a-mano.

NY-Gov: You can tell it’s not shaping up to be a good week when it starts out with having to point out that, no, you’re not resigning. David Paterson batted down rumors about forthcoming resignation in the face of an allegedly-emerging sex scandal (which so far has yet to emerge), but something even more ominous is looming on the horizon: federal prosecutors are starting to look into alleged misdeeds related to awarding gambling contracts at the Aqueduct racetrack in Queens. The angle may be that the recipient, Aqueduct Entertainment Group, includes ex-Rep. Floyd Flake, still a prominent black leader in Queens and one who’d been pondering endorsing Andrew Cuomo instead in a primary, and that the contract may have been intended to curry Flake’s favor.

PA-Gov: Scranton mayor Chris Doherty may be looking for an exit, although he maintains he’s staying in the Democratic primary field. Rumors have abounded that he’s looking to downshift to the Lt. Governor position, and the decision by two locally prominent pols (Wilkes-Barre mayor Tom Leighton and Luzerne Co. Commissioner Maryanne Petrilla) to back rival Dan Onorato instead may hasten his decision. Doherty is also getting urged to drop down to the state Senate, in order to hold the Scranton-area seat being vacated this year by Senate minority leader Robert Mellow (who just announced his retirement) after decades in the Senate. (However, SD-22 is Democratic-leaning and probably doesn’t need someone of Doherty’s stature to hold it.)

RI-Gov: I’m not exactly sure where the rumors that Democratic state treasurer Frank Caprio was considering a switch to an independent or even Republican run for governor (presumably in order to avoid an irritating primary with more liberal AG Patrick Lynch, although polls have given Caprio the edge in that primary) were coming from, but Caprio tamped them down, confirming he’s staying on board as a Democrat. At any rate, regardless of how things sort out, it looks like Rhode Island will have a governor next year who’s in favor of gay marriage: Caprio, Lynch, and independent candidate Lincoln Chafee have all pledged to sign it into law. (Republican candidate John Robitaille won’t, although even he’s in favor of civil unions; polls have shown him to be an electoral non-factor though.)

AL-05: Suddenly the floodgates are open in the 5th for Democratic challengers to former Dem Parker Griffith. Taze Shepard and Mitchell Howie both confirmed they’ll run yesterday, and now a third person has stepped forward: Steve Raby, a political consultant whose biggest claim to fame is a long stint as the chief of staff to Sen. Howell Heflin. A fourth possible candidate, former Huntsville school board president David Blair, however, said that he won’t get involved in the race. The filing deadline isn’t until April 2.

CA-11: The establishment seems to be coming together behind attorney David Harmer as their pick in the GOP primary in the 11th, where there’s a wide assortment of Republicans, some of whom can self-fund, but none with an electoral background. Harmer, you’ll recall, ran in the special election in the much-bluer 10th last year and overperformed the district’s lean against then-Lt. Gov. John Garamendi. Harmer just got the endorsement of Reps. Wally Herger and Buck McKeon, as well as CA-11’s 2008 loser, former Assemblyman Dean Andal.

CT-04: Ex-Rep. Chris Shays is starting to seem like he wants to run for something this year, seeing as how Republican fortunes are improving. He’d previously been linked with a gubernatorial run, but today’s rumor has him interested in a rematch against Rep. Jim Himes, who knocked him out in 2008. Shays would be a more imposing foe than the state Senators currently in the GOP field, but would still have an uphill run against the district’s D+5 lean.

MA-AG: If politicians had to have professional licenses in order to practice, Martha Coakley’s would have been revoked for gross political malpractice. Instead, though, she’s free to run for re-election… and that’s just what she’s announced that she’s doing.

OH-AG: A Republican internal poll from Newhouse gives ex-Sen. Mike DeWine a sizable edge over incumbent Democratic Richard Cordary in the Ohio AG’s race, 50-32. That’s actually plausible, as DeWine, who spent two terms as Senator, has much greater name recognition than Cordray, who filled in mid-term in the wake of Marc Dann’s resignation.

NY-St. Sen.: The state Senate actually sacked up and did it: they expelled Hiram Monserrate, several months after his assault conviction. The vote was 53-8. A special election has been called for March 16 (in which Monserrate plans to run anyway); the compressed timetable is largely because Monserrate’s absence means the Dems are down to only a 31-30 edge in the Senate, making it impossible for the Dems to move legislation on party lines (as bills need 32 votes to pass).

NY-St. Ass.: Bad news for suburban New York Democrats, who lost two separate Assembly seats in special elections last night (although one, in Suffolk County, is close enough that it could be salvaged through absentee ballots). The victory of Republican Robert Castelli in AD-89, centered on White Plains in affluent Westchester County, may be particularly alarming for Democrats, especially when coupled with the surprise loss of Westchester Co. Exec Andy Spano in November. It’s a bellwether-ish but generally Dem-leaning part of suburbia, and if it’s turning right, that could endanger state Sen. Andrea Stewart-Cousins (complicating Dem plans to expand the Senate majority) and possibly even NY-19 Rep. John Hall (who represents a further north, but more conservative, part of Westchester as part of his district). Assembly control, however, is hardly hanging in the balance: Dems now control the chamber 105-42-3.

TX-Gov: Bill White Polls Well for General Election

PPP (pdf) (2/4-7, likely voters)

Bill White (D): 42

Rick Perry (R-inc): 48

Undecided: 10

Bill White (D): 38

Kay Bailey Hutchison (R): 45

Undecided: 17

Bill White (D): 38

Debra Medina (R): 44

Undecided: 18

(MoE: ±2.8%)

PPP (which had surprising Republican primary numbers yesterday, showing Kay Bailey Hutchison imperiled as far as even making it to a runoff) has some pretty encouraging numbers for Democratic candidate Bill White in the general election. White’s losing, but by a 6 or 7 point margin, a good showing in a generally conservative state like Texas. (On the down side, there aren’t a lot of undecideds here, especially in the Rick Perry matchup, so you have to wonder where the last few votes that would get him over the top might come from.)

Interestingly, unlike a lot of other polls which have shown Hutchison, who passes for a “moderate” by Texas standards, outperforming in the general, PPP finds everyone performing about the same vis-a-vis White, not just the very conservative Rick Perry but even the around-the-bend conservative Debra Medina. Perry’s approvals, a woeful 33/50, seem to be holding him back; KBH is at least in positive territory at 40/37, while Medina and White benefit from not being as well-known, at 32/13 and 34/17 respectively.

In other news, White just got the endorsement of the Texas League of Conservation Voters, while his primary opponent, Farouk Shami got a noteworthy endorsement of his own: from the Mexican American Democrats, who liked how his personal story represents “what the American Dream is all about.” I don’t think either of those endorsements can compete with the one Rick Perry just pulled in, though: the mighty Home Scholers.

RaceTracker Wiki: TX-Gov

StephenCLE’s 2010 House Predictions – Part 2

Predictions Part 2 – The Mid-Atlantic

The Mid-Atlantic is a mostly democratic region, but it’s not as impenetrable as the Northeast.  There are even parts of it that are really quite Republican in nature, especially in Pennsylvania.  There are quite a few competitive seats in this region too, moreso than in the Northeast.  

New Jersey-1 – Robert Andrews/Democrat – We start here in Philadelphia’s eastern suburbs, and where Andrews is well entrenched in a solidly democratic district.  Nothing to worry about for him.

District PVI – D+12

Stephen’s Rating – Solid D

Prediction – Solid Dem Hold

New Jersey-2 – Frank Lobiondo/Republican – Having vacationed many a year on the south jersey coast, it annoys me that Lobiondo continues to skate in a D-leaning seat.  He won by 20% over David Kurkowski in 2008 while Obama beat McCain by 9 in this south jersey district.  Given that, and the fact that the Dems haven’t produced a top tier challenger, it’s doubtful Lobiondo is going anywhere.  It would’ve been nice if incoming governor Chris Christie picked him for Lt. Gov, which would’ve opened the seat up.

District PVI – D+1

Stephen’s Rating – Solid R

Prediction – Solid Rep Hold

New Jersey-3 – John Adler/Democrat – Adler picked this seat up in 2008 with a narrow 4% victory over Chris Myers.  He was a great fundraiser last cycle, allowing him to outspend Myers nearly 2-1, and he’s raised 1.4 million plus so far this cycle.  He caught a break when state senator Chris Connors didn’t run, but he still has to deal with NFL offensive tackle John Runyan.  A divisive primary is still possible though as local Republican committees in the 3rd are not on good terms with one another.  Ultimately I’m a bit skeptical of Republican chances here since rich athletes are often not well received by voters, though that’s not a hard and fast rule.  

District PVI – R+1

Stephen’s Rating – Leans D

Prediction – Moderate Dem Hold

New Jersey-4 – Christopher Smith/Republican – What’s happened in the 4th?  After Al Gore carried the district in 2000, the district has since trended Republican.  McCain won by 5% over Obama and the entrenched Christopher won by 34%.  Sorry, this one ain’t happening.

District PVI – R+6

Stephen’s Rating – Solid R

Prediction – Solid Rep Hold

New Jersey-5 – Scott Garrett/Republican – The 5th district is a traditional Republican stronghold in the north of the state, and Garrett’s 12% win in 2008 largely mirrored the presidential vote there.  Though he’s been around since 2002 I don’t think of him as entrenched, but he’s not a liability either, and I don’t see a first or second tier democrat out there to make this a race.

District PVI – R+7

Stephen’s Rating – Solid R

Prediction – Solid Rep Hold

New Jersey-6 – Frank Pallone/Democrat – The hideously shaped 6th, which runs from inland around Sandy Hook southward along the coast, is very Democratic.  It also has a well entrenched incumbent in Pallone.

District PVI – D+8

Stephen’s Rating – Solid D

Prediction – Solid Dem Hold

New Jersey-7 – Leonard Lance/Republican – Lance’s 8-point win in 2008 was a bit of a shock, as he had won by only 1 point in 2006.  Lance has been a moderate, independent voice for the most part, a rarity amongst house republicans.  The Democrats do have several options here.  Fanwood mayor Colleen Mahr is a possible candidate, and businessman Ed Potosnak is in.  2006/8 candidate Linda Stender might be back for another round as well.  Lance’s ability to straddle the middle effectively will make him a tough out though, no matter who wins the Dem primary.

District PVI – R+3

Stephen’s Rating  – Likely R

Prediction – Strong Rep Hold

New Jersey-8 – Bill Pascrell/Democratic – Heading inward toward the NYC suburbs now, Pascrell has been around quite a while and has a nice democratic district.  And so far, he has no confirmed opposition either.  

District PVI – D+10

Stephen’s Rating – Solid D

Prediction – Solid Dem Hold

New Jersey-9 – Steven Rothman/Democratic – This is another Dem-leaning district with a long standing incumbent.  A Republican challenge is probably not going to amount to much here.

District PVI – D+9

Stephen’s Rating – Solid D

Prediction – Solid Dem Hold

New Jersey-10 – Donald Payne/Democratic – This is the most Democratic district in New Jersey, and one of the most Democratic in the nation.  No republican can beat these odds.

District PVI – D+33

Stephen’s Rating – Solid D

Prediction – Solid Dem Hold

New Jersey-11 – Rodney Frelinghuysen/Republican – This is a mostly Republican district in the state’s northwest, and so far, the Democrats don’t even have a candidate against Frelinghuysen.  It’d be an uphill battle for sure against the entrenched incumbent.

District PVI – R+7

Stephen’s Rating – Solid R

Prediction – Solid Rep Hold

New Jersey-12 – Rush Holt/Democratic – Another snake-like district here, which seems like a majority of districts in New Jersey.  Holt is pretty well entrenched, but his district isn’t overly democratic.  The republicans have three challengers thus far, and the most notable of them is Michael Halfacre.  I’m not sure that any of these Repubs can make this a race, but given the PVI and the national environment, I can’t completely rule out the possibility.

District PVI – D+5

Stephen’s Rating – Likely D

Prediction – Solid Dem Hold

New Jersey-13 – Albio Sires/Democratic – This district isn’t quite as blue as NJ-10, but honestly, you’d need a cash in the freezer type of scandal to get a republican victory here.  

District PVI – D+21

Stephen’s Rating – Solid D

Prediction – Solid Dem Hold

Delaware-1 – Open/Republican – Lordy lordy, now isn’t this a sight?  Mike Castle’s departure here has opened up Delaware’s lone House seat, and with Lt Governor John Carney in the race, this seems like a slam dunk for the Democrats.  The only confirmed Repub in the race is insurance salesman Fred Cullis.  While the national environment and the possible pull of Castle at the top of the ticket in the Senate race prevents me from moving this to lock status, it’d be very difficult for the Repubs to hold.

District PVI – D+7

Stephen’s Rating – Likely D

Prediction – Strong Dem Pickup (1st overall)

Total Pickup Counter – Rep +2

Maryland-1 – Frank Kratovil/Democratic – Kratovil pulled an upset here in the first district in 2008 after Andy Harris knocked out incumbent Wayne Gilchrest in the primary.  The win total was less than 1%, in a district that went hard for McCain 58-40.  Harris is back, but he won’t have the primary for himself, as there are 3 other Repubs in the race.  Kratovil has raised 1.1 million so far, while Harris has topped 600k thus far, so unless Harris gets torpedoed, this is going to be knock-down drag out political warfare.  In the end, I think this district is simply too conservative for Kratovil.  Harris may not be able to rejoice even if he does win though, MD-1 is bound to become much more democratic in redistricting.

District PVI – R+13

Stephen’s Rating – Toss Up

Prediction – Weak Rep Pickup (4th overall)

Total Pickup Counter – Rep +3

Maryland-2 – C.A. Ruppersberger/Democratic – This district, which encompasses the northwestern shore of the Chesapeake Bay, is fairly democratic.  Ruppersberger won by 43% in 2008 and is well entrenched.

District PVI – D+7

Stephen’s Rating – Solid D

Prediction – Solid Dem Hold

Maryland-3 – John Sarbanes/Democratic – This is a hideously gerrymandered district, one of the worst in the nation, which spreads from Annapolis to Baltimore.  Sarbanes is fairly well entrenched here even though he’s only a sophomore.  Obama won by 20% here, so any Republican would face a very uphill battle.

District PVI – D+6

Stephen’s Rating – Solid D

Prediction – Solid Dem Hold

Maryland-4 – Donna Edwards/Democratic – This is the most democratic district in Maryland, and one of the most democratic in the nation, consisting of Washington D.C. suburbs mostly.  Nothing of interest to see here.

District PVI – D+31

Stephen’s Rating – Solid D

Prediction – Solid Dem Hold

Maryland-5 – Steny Hoyer/Democratic – This southern Maryland district is, like many others in the state, reliably democratic.  Hoyer is extremely well entrenched, as he hasn’t had a re-election with under 60% in over a decade.

District PVI – D+11

Stephen’s Rating – Solid D

Prediction – Solid Dem Hold

Maryland-6 – Roscoe Bartlett/Republican – This district, which encompasses the mountainous west of the crab state, is a very conservative stronghold within a liberal state.  Bartlett, who’s well entrenched but was held under 60% in 2008, shouldn’t have to sweat too much, this year.  2012 could be another matter as his district is sure to become much more democratic in redistricting.

District PVI – R+13

Stephen’s Rating – Solid R

Prediction – Solid Rep Hold

Maryland-7 – Elijah Cummings/Democrat – This Baltimore-based district is extremely democratic, and as such should be an easy hold for Cummings.  

District PVI – D+25

Stephen’s Rating – Solid D

Prediction – Solid Dem Hold

Maryland-8 – Chris Van Hollen/Democrat – The head of the DCCC, Van Hollen’s district is very safe, which should allow him a lot of leeway to help out other democrats in their re-elections.  As far as I know he is running unopposed thus far.

District PVI – D+21

Stephen’s Rating – Solid D

Prediction – Solid Dem Hold

District of Columbia-1 – Open/Independent – It’s a travesty that Washington D.C gets no representation in Congress.  Ridiculous.  

Pennsylvania-1 – Robert Brady/Democrat – We now move into what could be the most interesting state in the nation for House elections in 2010.  It’s just that the excitement won’t be here, as this Philadelphia-based district is one of the most democratic districts in the country.

District PVI – D+35

Stephen’s Rating – Solid D

Prediction – Solid Dem Hold

Pennsylvania-2 – Chaka Fattah/Democrat – One more major Democratic stronghold to go, this one also in Philadelphia.  Fattah won’t be up late at night worrying about his re-election, as this is the 4th most democratic district in the country.

District PVI – D+38

Stephen’s Rating – Solid D

Prediction – Solid Dem Hold

Pennsylvania-3 – Kathy Dahlkemper/Democrat – Dahlkemper scored a big win in 2008, defeating 7-term incumbent Phil English by 3%.  The presidential vote here was a virtually tie, but the district usually is slightly republican in nature.  The bad thing for the Repubs is that they don’t have any great options here, their primary is a free-for-all.  Businessman Paul Huber has assumed the fundraising lead on the R side, as he’s come down with almost 300k so far, but that pales in comparison to Dahlkemper’s 900k.  Ultimately, I think it’s very telling to take out a 7-term congressman on your first run for elected office.  Dahlkemper could be a rising star in the Democratic Party.

District PVI – R+3

Stephen’s Rating – Likely D

Prediction – Strong Dem Hold

Pennsylvania-4 – Jason Altmire/Democrat – Altmire was one of the Democrats in the class of 2006, when he defeated 3-term incumbent Melissa Hart.  Altmire beat Hart again in the 2008 rematch by 12% even though Obama struggled, losing by 11% to McCain.  Altmire has a record of voting independently in the House, as he has defected 20% of the time on key votes according to CQ.  The Republicans have a good shot here, but like in PA-3, they’ve struggled in recruitment a bit.  Former US Attorney Mary Beth Buchanan and former DHS employee Keith Rothfus are the primary Repub contenders.  Altmire has been on a fundraising tear, having raised 1.27 million thus far.  Like Dahlkemper, Altmire has the look of an up and comer in the democratic caucus.

District PVI – R+6

Stephen’s Rating – Likely D

Prediction – Strong Dem Hold

Pennsylvania-5 – Glenn Thompson/Republican – The 5th, which consists of north-central Pennsylvania, is mostly Republican territory.  Thompson won an open seat race in 2008 by 16% over Democrat Mark McCracken and has fundraised well this cycle.  So far the Democrats have not fielded a candidate either.

District PVI – R+9

Stephen’s Rating – Solid R

Prediction – Solid Rep Hold

Pennsylvania-6 – Jim Gerlach/Republican – This district, which encompasses the western portion of the Philadelphia metroplex, is a big partisan battleground that has trended democratic.  Gerlach had a tough re-election which he won by 4% over little known Bob Roggio.  Obama won here by 17% in 2008, which might explain why Gerlach decided to go for the governorship early this cycle before coming back to the House race.  Gerlach is facing a primary challenge largely because of his earlier exit, the prominent challenge is from businessman Steven Welch.  The Democrats have two prominent candidates here, physician Manan Trivedi and editorial writer Doug Pike.  Pike has been a fundraising bull, raising 1.36 million thus far to Gerlach’s 360k, which could blunt Gerlach’s advantage of incumbency if that matchup occurs.  Very difficult district to predict, but the Dems are in great shape.

District PVI – D+4

Stephen’s Rating – Toss Up

Prediction – Weak Dem Pickup (2nd overall)

Total Pickup Counter – Rep +2

Pennsylvania-7 – Open/Democratic – An open seat in a partisan battleground is always bad news for the incumbent party, and when Joe Sestak bolted to face Arlen Specter in the Dem Senate primary, that happened here.   Amazingly, both fields appear to have cleared here.  The Republicans got their first choice of candidates, former county district attorney and federal prosecutor Patrick Meehan.  On the Democratic side, state representative Bryan Lentz is the man.  Meehan so far has raised 791k, and Lentz has raised 515k.  One of the problems Meehan might face here is a candidacy from independent conservative Jim Schneller, who might divert votes away from Meehan in a close race.  Regardless, this seat, like the adjoining 6th, is going to be the sight of a major partisan battle.

District PVI – D+3

Stephen’s Rating – Toss Up

Prediction – Weak Dem Hold

Pennsylvania-8 – Patrick Murphy/Democratic – This Bucks County based seat in Philadelphia’s northern suburbs has trended democratic in recent years.  Patrick Murphy’s razor-thin 1% win in 2006 over Mike Fitzpatrick made him the first Iraq war veteran elected to Congress.  After a larger win in 2008, Murphy is gearing up for a rematch with Fitzpatrick, who recently declared.  The incumbent has been a great fundraiser, having raised nearly 1.5 million thus far.  It remains to be seen whether Fitzpatrick can shake off the rust, but his presence makes this a race.

District PVI – D+2

Stephen’s Rating – Leans D

Prediction – Moderate Dem Hold

Pennsylvania-9 – Bill Shuster/Republican – This district, which makes up most of south-central Pennsylvania, the part sometimes referred to as “Pennsyltucky”, is extremely Republican.  Shuster won’t have any trouble keeping his seat.

District PVI – R+17

Stephen’s Rating – Solid R

Prediction – Solid Rep Hold

Pennsylvania-10 – Chris Carney/Democrat – Chris Carney took out a scandal-tainted incumbent in 2006 to take hold of this seat, but it was his 13% win in 2008 that really turned heads.  This is a fairly reliably republican district that favored McCain 54-45 over Obama, but Carney has done a good job portraying himself as a centrist.  The best part about it is that the Republican primary field is jammed, with no clear favorite.  The NRCC is highest on former US attorney Tom Marino, but having just got in, he’ll have to make up ground in the fundraising and name ID game.  The conservatism of the 10th will help the Repub primary winner, but Carney has proven himself very capable.

District PVI – R+8

Stephen’s Rating – Leans D

Prediction – Moderate Dem Hold

Pennsylvania-11 – Paul Kanjorski/Democrat – Kanjorski was in a lot of trouble in his 2006 and 2008 re-elections, but the national tide helped keep his tenure alive.  He beat Hazleton mayor Lou Barletta by 3% in 2008, but underperformed Obama by 12 points, as the latter won by 15% over McCain.  2008 Repub candidate Barletta is back, but he faces a primary from attorney (noticing a trend here?) Chris Paige, a primary that is already becoming quite contentious.  Kanjorski is facing a primary as well, from Lackawanna County Commissioner Corey O’Brien.  Like PA-6, this district could come down to who makes it to the general election, but if it’s a Barletta-Kanjorski rematch, I don’t like our chances.

District PVI – D+4

Stephen’s Rating – Toss Up

Prediction – Moderate Rep Pickup (5th overall)

Total Pickup Counter – Rep +3

Pennsylvania-12 – Open/Democratic – Jack Murtha’s passing has rendered this seat open, but it’s far too early to discuss the possible electoral ramifications here.  Without going too far into detail, this is a locally democratic district that has started to trend rightward at the national level.  I’ll keep this in the Dem column for now.

District PVI – R+1

Stephen’s Rating – Toss Up

Prediction – Moderate Dem Hold

Pennsylvania-13 – Allyson Schwartz/Democrat – This suburban Philadelphia district, which encompasses most of Montgomery County, is reliably democratic these days.  The entrenched Schwartz shouldn’t have much of a problem here.

District PVI – D+7

Stephen’s Rating – Solid D

Prediction – Solid Dem Hold

Pennsylvania-14 – Mike Doyle/Democrat – PA-14, which encompasses the city of Pittsburgh and it’s very inner suburbs, is an extremely democratic district.  Doyle is safe.

District PVI – D+19

Stephen’s Rating – Solid D

Prediction – Solid Dem Hold

Pennsylvania-15 – Charlie Dent/Republican – The Lehigh Valley based 15th has been a long-running frustration for democrats, as they have been unable to find a good challenger for Dent, who won by 17% in 2008 even as Obama won by 13% over McCain.  But this cycle, the frustration might be over, as their #1 option, Bethlehem mayor John Callahan is in.  His entry cleared the primary field and has given democrats reason to believe they can knock off Dent, who’s either a centrist or a faux-moderate depending on which side you’re on.  So far Dent has raised 888k this cycle, and Callahan has raised 725k, though Callahan has spent much less and thus has more cash on hand.  The environment may help Dent, but regardless, this is going to be one heck of a fight.

District PVI – D+2

Stephen’s Rating – Leans R

Prediction – Moderate Rep Hold

Pennsylvania-16 – Joe Pitts/Republican – This district, which encompasses Lancaster and exurban Philly, was once hugely conservative, but is starting to trend democratic.  That being said, Joe Pitts is a fairly entrenched incumbent and should be able to hold the seat easily in 2010.  Look out though if this seat comes open later down the road, it could be in play.

District PVI – R+8

Stephen’s Rating – Solid R

Prediction – Solid Rep Hold

Pennsylvania-17 – Tim Holden/Democrat – Holden has been a thorn in the Republicans’ side since his 2002 election.  He’s been racking up fairly big margins despite the 17th’s overall conservatism.  He won by 27% in 2008 even though John McCain won the presidential vote by 3% over Obama.  Like the Dems in the 15th, the Repubs have been frustrated by their lack of recruiting here.  This cycle they are feeling a bit more upbeat due to the entry of state senator Dave Argall.  He’ll have to get by businessman Josh First and marine veteran Frank Ryan in the primary first though.  The environment and Holden’s lackluster fundraising thus far tells me that this race could be a big fight, but Holden’s past success says otherwise.  Hard to tell.  I’m going to skirt the middle of the two extremes with this pick.

District PVI – R+6

Stephen’s Rating – Likely D

Prediction – Strong Dem Hold

Pennsylvania-18 – Tim Murphy/Republican – This hideously drawn district in southwestern Pennsylvania is trending rapidly Republican, and Murphy is pretty well entrenched at this point.  In this environment he probably won’t see much of a challenge.

District PVI – R+6

Stephen’s Rating – Solid R

Solid Rep Hold

Pennsylvania-19 – Todd Platts/Republican – According to CQ, Platts might be in the running for the head job at the Government Accountability Office.  We’ll only see action here if this district opens up really, as Platts has dug himself in, and the district is very conservative in nature.

District PVI – R+12

Stephen’s Rating – Solid R

Predicition – Solid Rep Hold

Mid-Atlantic Recap – Here in the Mid-Atlantic there are plenty of seats worth watching, it’s a fun region.  Pennsylvania in particular is quite fascinating. Right now I seat 4 seats changing hands, 2 for each party, with the Repubs picking up PA-11 and MD-1, and the Dems picking up DE-1 and PA-6.  That leaves 5 total pickups for the Reps and 2 for the Dems, for a score so far of Rep +3 through two regions.  

Next stop, the Upper South…  

CA-33: Watson Will Retire

CQ:

Rep. Diane Watson (D-Calif.) is retiring at the end of this Congress, a Democratic source confirmed to CQ-Roll Call on Wednesday.

Watson, 76, is the second member of Congress to announce his/her retirement today. Rep. Vern Ehlers (R-Mich.) confirmed this morning that he would not seek a ninth term. […]

Speculation about possible successors has centered on former state Assembly Speaker Karen Bass, who would be a favorite to win a Democratic primary should she run. Republicans are not expected to compete for the seat.

In case anyone was worried about retaining this seat, CA-33 is tenth most Democratic district in the nation; it has a Cook PVI of D+35 and was won by Barack Obama by an 87-12 margin. Former state Assembly speaker Karen Bass sounds likely to get into the race, and would loom large over the Democratic field.

A special credit is due here to SSP diarist CarnahanDem, who broke this story on Friday, days before we got any follow-up from tradmed sources.

RaceTracker Wiki: CA-33

AR-Sen: The rumor is that Bill Halter is in…

The rumor is buzzing around Arkansas that Lt. Gov Halter will challenge Blanche Lincoln in the primary.

http://www.arktimes.com/blogs/…

Again, there is no confirmation on this as of yet.  But the Draft Halter facebook group (including yours truly) did a phone bomb this week on Halter’s office and got a rather enthusiastic response from the staff.  All of us that called from the Draft group got the impression that if Halter saw that the support was there he’d run, and if this is true our efforts may have pushed him over the edge.  Here’s to hoping!

If you’re on facebook, you can join the Draft group here:

http://www.facebook.com/group….

UPDATE:Halter spokesman Bud Jackson: “Nothing has changed.  The lieutenant governor continues to focus on his re-election while also considering the available options to best serve Arkansans.”

Sounds like a big non-denial to me.

Rasmussen Reports, You Decide, Vol. 4

Scotty don’t!

CO-Gov (2/4, likely voters, 1/6 in parens):

John Hickenlooper (D): 49 (42)

Scott McInnis (R): 45 (45)

Other: 1 (5)

Undecided: 6 (6)

(MoE: ±4.5%)

CT-Gov (2/1, likely voters):

Ned Lamont (D): 41

Michael Fedele (R): 33

Other: 8

Undecided: 18

Ned Lamont (D): 40

Tom Foley (R): 37

Other: 9

Undecided: 14

Dan Malloy (D): 36

Michael Fedele (R): 35

Other: 9

Undecided: 21

Dan Malloy (D): 37

Tom Foley (R): 36

Other: 10

Undecided: 28

(MoE: ±4.5%)

NV-Gov (2/3, likely voters):

Rory Reid (D): 33

Brian Sandoval (R): 45

Other: 11

Undecided: 12

Rory Reid (D): 44

Jim Gibbons (R): 35

Other: 13

Undecided: 8

Rory Reid (D): 40

Mike Montandon (R): 36

Other: 14

Undecided: 10

(MoE: ±4.5%)

OH-Gov (2/5-6, likely voters, 1/12 in parens):

Ted Strickland (D-inc): 41 (40)

Jon Kasich (R): 47 (47)

Other: 5 (4)

Undecided: 8 (8)

(MoE: ±4.5%)

OH-Sen (2/5-6, likely voters, 1/12 in parens):

Lee Fisher (D): 39 (37)

Rob Portman (R): 43 (44)

Other: 5 (4)

Undecided: 13 (14)

Jennifer Brunner (D): 38 (40)

Rob Portman (R): 42 (43)

Other: 5 (5)

Undecided: 15 (13)

(MoE: ±4.5%)

PA-Sen (D) (2/8, likely voters, 1/18 in parens):

Arlen Specter (D-inc): 51 (53)

Joe Sestak (D): 36 (32)

Other: 4 (4)

Not sure: 9 (11)

(MoE: ±5%)

Maryland population and demographic changes, 1990-2010

About a week ago, I was talking with someone about how the governor’s legislative redistricting plan was rejected in 2002. I began to wonder how different that plan was from that of the 1990s and before, so I did a search. I could not find legislative districts from before the 1990s, but I did find this: http://planning.maryland.gov/M… which shows what the 1990s era districts looked like. The idea then dawned upon me to try to recreate that map using Dave’s redistricting app and then examine how the state has changed since then. First, the map:





Then, here’s the data, which shows whether the 1990 configuration of the district is overpopulated or underpopulated, the %Obama received, the %white in 1990 and 2010, and the %black in 1990 and 2010. Dark blue districts had the white percentage decrease by over 20% or more, while light blue had the white percentage decrease by 10-20%.

http://spreadsheets.google.com…

Conclusions: The past 20 years has brought some sizable population changes to Maryland. Montgomery, Frederick, Charles, St. Marys, Howard, Harford, and Cecil Counties, have all increased relatively in population. Almost all of that has come from the demise of Baltimore City, which has seen uniform decline. Other areas which have seen declines are the Essex/Dundalk area of Eastern Baltimore County, Western Maryland west of Hagerstown, and inner Prince George’s County.

With the notable exception of the lower Eastern Shore, the vast majority of Maryland has been getting more diverse. Large swaths of Baltimore City, Baltimore County, Howard County, Montgomery County, PG County, and Charles County have all seen their white percentage decrease by over 20% in 20 years. The area with the greatest change may have been the Bowie-centered 23rd district, which was majority-white in 1990, but has since seen its white percentage cut in half.

In the traditional white-flight paradigm, areas that became more diverse also decreased in population. This is still visible in Maryland in parts of Baltimore City and PG County. However, recent trends show many areas with strong minority growth also growing rapidly. Areas like this in Maryland include most of Montgomery County, southern Frederick County, Howard County, outer PG County, Charles County, and the Owings Mills area of Baltimore County. While heavily-white and Republican St. Mary’s County and Bel Air (Harford County) did post some of the largest gains statewide, these changes are really offset by the gains elsewhere, and will not likely have much of an effect on Maryland politics.

These changes matter greatly when you consider how much more Republican Maryland was in 1990. Though hard to believe, Maryland did vote for Bush in 1988, with areas like Montgomery County only barely voting for Dukakis. In addition, Prince George’s County was only about 50% black in 1990, versus the 66% that it is now, so Dukakis surely did much worse than Obama did there. Bush even got 57% in Baltimore County, where areas like Randallstown were only about 55% black versus the upwards of 90% that they are now (look at the old 10 stats on that Maryland General Assembly website). Under the old demographics, it would’ve been impossible to draw District 1 so that it voted for Obama, something demonstrated multiple times here on Swing State Project.

Thus, while the Democratic Party’s fortunes nationwide may ebb and sway, there’s very little room for the Republican Party to grow in Maryland. Demographic changes have put Maryland out of reach for the Republicans in the past 20 years, and will likely continue to do so.