Month: September 2010
WA-03: Gap Narrows, But Herrera Up 9
SurveyUSA for KING-TV (9/12-14, likely voters 8/21-22 in parentheses)
Denny Heck (D): 43 (41)
Jaime Herrera (R): 52 (54)
Undecided: 4 (5)
(MoE: ±4.3%)
SurveyUSA takes its second look at the open seat race in WA-03 to replace retiring Dem Brian Baird, and they find that Denny Heck has narrowed the gap slightly, though Herrera’s already over 50%. This could be via better name rec for Heck via continued presence on the airwaves, or just float within the narrow band established by their last poll (and the cumulative Dem/GOP results (54 GOP-42 Dem) of the Top 2 primary).
This being SurveyUSA (and this being Washington, where their age skew always seems especially pronounced), you’re probably wondering how those young people feel about this race. Well, it seems like they’re really eager to take Herrera out for a malted and then to the sock hop, because she leads Heck 56-38 among the 18-34 crowd. Oldsters want Herrera to turn down that racket, though: Heck actually leads 48-46 among the 65+ crowd.
OH-Gov, OH-Sen: The Suckeye State
Quinnipiac (9/9-14, likely voters, 6/22-27 (RVs) in parens):
Ted Strickland (D-inc): 37 (43)
John Kasich (R): 54 (38)
Undecided: 7 (15)
(MoE: ±3.6%)
Quinnipiac (9/9-14, likely voters, 6/22-27 (RVs) in parens):
Lee Fisher (D): 35 (42)
Rob Portman (R): 55 (40)
Undecided: 9 (17)
(MoE: ±3.6%)
Given that every other pollster has seen a very bumpy ride for Democrats as they make the transition from a registered voter model to a likely voter model, I was already expecting a steep drop for the Dems in Quinnipiac’s Ohio polling (they’re the last of the major pollsters to make the switch to LVs). But, dang, that is one unbelievably steep drop, not consistent with the 5-point-ish RV-to-LV difference seen elsewhere (including Qpac’s Connecticut polling this week, or PPP’s latest round of Ohio polling). Take the Senate race, for example: I have absolutely zero doubt that Lee Fisher is trailing in reality, and probably by at least 10, but the 20-point reversal plus these favorables suggest a decidedly GOP-ish sample (Fisher 29/36, Portman 44/20, and Obama 38/60).
SurveyUSA for WCMH (9/10-13, likely voters, no trendlines):
Ted Strickland (D-inc): 40
John Kasich (R): 52
Other: 5
Undecided: 3Lee Fisher (D): 40
Rob Portman (R): 49
Other: 7
Undecided: 4
(MoE: ±4%)
Opinion Research for CNN/Time (9/16, likely voters, no trendlines):
Ted Strickland (D-inc): 44
John Kasich (R): 51
Undecided: 1Lee Fisher (D): 41
Rob Portman (R): 52
Undecided: 2
(MoE: ±3.5%)
I hate to be that guy who cherrypicks polls, but SurveyUSA and particularly CNN/Time’s polls seem more plausible here. Neither of them have trendlines, but CNN/Time is instructive because it looks at an RV model as well as an LV model. Among registered voters, they find Kasich leading 49-46 (a 4-point variance from the LV model) and Portman leading 49-42 (a 3-point variance). That’s much more consistent with usual enthusiasm gap findings, so it’s a good bet to assume that the Republicans are “only” leading in the 7-11 point range. Yay!
Well, Ted Strickland knows how to fight back. He rolled out an internal poll showing a 3-point lead… for John Kasich?!? (It’s from the Feldman Group, and the toplines are 48-45). Given the Raul Labrador rule, and on top of that, the fact that Strickland is the incumbent, that internal poll doesn’t leave me feeling any more confident than before. The Strickland camp is rolling out two new ads and is also benefiting from a huge AFL-CIO direct mail blitz on their behalf, but given the national climate, it looks like money alone isn’t going to fix these races.
SSP Daily Digest: 9/17
• AK-Sen: All signs are now pointing toward a Lisa Murkowski write-in bid, although nothing is official yet. But she’s inviting supporters to a “campaign kickoff” tonight, which are certainly not the words of someone ready to go gently into that good night. She seems undeterred by the fact that the Tea Party Express already fired a shot across her bow yesterday, warning her to be a “good team member” and saying they’ll resume spending money against her if she does. Meanwhile, hilarious and slightly damning news on the Joe Miller front, as it turns out that he, like so many other teabagger candidates this year, was a recipient of $14K in farm subsidies over the decade for a thousand acres of land he owned near Fairbanks. Y’know, subsidies from the federal government that he hates so much, in order to pay for the otherwise-unprofitable way of life that he chose. (Can you even grow anything near Fairbanks? That may be the most surprising part of the story to me.)
• DE-Sen: Christine O’Donnell and Chris Coons faced off in their first appearance together, and O’Donnell seemed to be doing a lot of rhetorical distancing from the O’Donnell that had existed up until Tuesday. Meanwhile, O’Donnell is now facing the wrath of multiple ex-aides, all willing to dish to Politico on the trainwrecks that were previous O’Donnell campaigns.
• IL-Sen: Illinois-based Republican-linked robo-pollster We Ask America is out with their second poll of the IL-Sen race, giving Mark Kirk a 39-36 link over Alexi Giannoulias. That’s better than their previous offering, which gave Kirk a 6-point edge.
• WI-Sen: Russ Feingold’s “Cheddarbomb” sounds like it was very successful, bringing in at least $435K in one day’s worth of contributions.
• AR-Gov: With yesterday’s PPP NH-Gov poll, I think it’s now safe to say that Mike Beebe is officially the nation’s safest Democratic incumbent governor this year. The gubernatorial half of yesterday’s Mason-Dixon poll on behalf of Arkansas News Service is out, and Beebe leads Republican challenger Jim Keet by 21 points, 54-33. (One other very important detail: currently, Beebe has $2.5 million CoH, while Keet has $9,000.) Given the state’s turn to the red this cycle, Dems should be glad that they aren’t defending an open seat here, though, as in the open Lt. Governor race, Dem state Sen. Shane Broadway is barely leading Some Dude (Mark Darr) 36-34.
• CA-Gov: Well, my cynicism has been eased a bit, I guess: Bill Clinton will be giving Jerry Brown the full endorsee treatment and not just throwing him a bone, including stumping on his behalf (and Gavin Newsom’s behalf too) in mid-October.
• HI-Gov: It feels like the primary season wrapped up on Tuesday, but there’s one last race that needs to be previewed: the Democratic gubernatorial primary in Hawaii, which will be settled in their regularly scheduled election tomorrow. The race pits ex-Rep. Neil Abercrombie against former Honolulu mayor Mufi Hannemann in what’s literally a clash of titans (the 72-year-old Abercrombie can bench-press 272 lbs., while former basketball player Hannemann is 6’7″). Hannemann seems to running a bit to Abercrombie’s right, at least on social issues, and Abercrombie seems to have the late momentum based on polling and fundraising. The linked WaPo article points to some intriguing behind the scenes drama (with Dan Inouye behind Hannemann and Ed Case behind Abercrombie) and the racial resentments stirred by the race (Abercrombie is white, Hannemann is Samoan).
• NM-Gov: The DGA is keeping the pressure on in New Mexico, hitting Susana Martinez again on staff bonuses and sweetheart deals. Bill Clinton, who’s increasingly turning out to be the #1 Dem surrogate on the stump this cycle, is also now scheduled to stump on Diane Denish’s behalf on Oct. 14 in the heavily-Latino northern town of Espanola.
• NY-Gov: This may be the dumbest idea in the history of political advertising: send intentionally bad-smelling mailers to people’s houses. Carl Paladino is trying to make the point that “something smells” in Albany, but there has to be a smarter way to do it than invading people’s houses to intentionally physically sicken them.
• CO-04: Hot on the heels of the NRA backing John Salazar next door in the 3rd, now they’re also endorsing Democratic freshman Betsy Markey in the similarly rural, reddish 4th.
• MI-09: There’s a poll out in the 9th from a previously unknown (to us) pollster (The Rossman Group/Team Telcom) giving Rocky Raczkowski a small lead over Dem freshman Gary Peters, 45-41. Thanks to Paleo in the comments, we know that the Rossman Group is a PR firm associated with state-level GOP operative Audrey Perricone, so salt this one as you see fit.
• NY-23: All that hoping paid off, and now the cat is now officially in the dryer! A replay of the special election is on, as Doug Hoffman, who narrowly lost the GOP primary to Matt Doheny, is saying that he is going to stick with the Conservative Line no matter what. (More accurately, Conservative party chair Michael Long, who’s basically been Hoffman’s puppetmaster for the last year, is the one saying that.)
• TN-04: Sure, we’ve all been accused of harassment, intimidation, and physical abuse, but… oh, wait. We haven’t? Well, Republican candidate Scott DesJarlais was accused by his ex-wife of all of that, in divorce filings from a decade ago. It’s unclear how much this’ll affect the direction of the race, though; buried deep in the Roll Call article is word of a late August internal poll on Lincoln Davis’s behalf (released in response to a DesJarlais internal showing him within 4 of Davis), giving Davis a 51-40 lead. (No word on who Davis’s pollster is.)
• Mayors: Primary-defeated Dem incumbent Adrian Fenty somehow won the Republican mayoral primary. There wasn’t a candidate, and Fenty got more write-in votes than anyone else. It didn’t sound like Fenty was interested in turning coats and running again under the GOP aegis, and now the DC BoE is arguing that he couldn’t anyway, as he would have had to be a member of the Republican Party as of the election date.
• IE Tracker:
• MO-Sen: $124K from Commonsense Ten against Roy Blunt
• WV-01: $439K from American Future Fund against Mike Oliverio
• NC-02, VA-09: $341K from Americans for Job Security against Bob Etheridge, $431K against Rick Boucher
• AL-02: $414K from AFF against Bobby Bright
• SC-05: $191K from AFF against John Spratt
• NJ-03: $170K from AFF against John Adler
• MI-01: $304K from AFF against Gary McDowell
• GA-08: $346K from AFF against Jim Marshall
• MI-07: $501K from AFF against Mark Schauer
• SSP TV:
• PA-Sen: The DSCC rides to Joe Sestak’s rescue with an ad tying Pat Toomey to George Bush’s deficit-swelling tax policies, while the Club for Growth tries to walk a delicate balance, thanking Sestak for his military service before laying into his voting record
• AZ-Gov: Terry Goddard’s out with not one but three different ads using footage of Jan Brewer’s tongue-tied performance at last month’s debate, one of which focuses on her unproven allegations about headless bodies in the desert (and ending with the tagline “Is this the best Arizona can do?”)
• KS-Gov: The Kansas Moderate Majority PAC runs an anti-Sam Brownback ad hitting him on the flat tax, while Brownback is out with two ads of his own
• MI-Gov: Virg Bernero’s on the air, hitting Rick Sndyer for outsourcing jobs while he was head of Gateway
• ID-01: Walt Minnick actually hits Raul Labrador for being too soft on illegal immigrants, saying it’s “good business” for Labrador’s immigration law practice
• MI-01: 2 ads from Gary McDowell, one about cleaning up the Great Lakes and one hitting Dan Benishek on Social Security privatization
• TX-17: Chet Edwards is doing the distancing-from-DC-Democrats game in his newest ad
• WA-08: Suzan DelBene’s first TV ad starts negative against Dave Reichert, hitting him on his financial reform vote and on earmarks, of all things
• Rasmussen:
• IN-Sen: Brad Ellsworth (D) 34%, Dan Coats (R) 50%
• MA-Gov: Deval Patrick (D-inc) 45%, Charlie Baker (R) 42%, Tim Cahill (I) 5%
• WI-Sen: Russ Feingold (D-inc) 44%, Ron Johnson (R) 51%
GA-Gov: Dead Heat in the Peach State
InsiderAdvantage for WSB-TV (9/16, likely voters, 8/18 in parens):
Roy Barnes (D): 42 (41)
Nathan Deal (R): 42 (45)
John Monds (L): 5 (5)
Undecided: 11 (9)
(MoE: ±3.6%)
These are some very nice numbers for ex-Gov. Roy Barnes, who’s being aided in this open seat race by Deal’s airport trolley-sized collection of baggage related to his family’s auto-salvage business and his personal finances – issues that Deal has testily refused to give full disclosure about to the media. They also stand in stark contrast to SurveyUSA’s recent poll that gave Deal an 11-point lead, and confirm the DGA’s recent decision to send a $1 million check to the Georgia Democratic Party as a smart play.
The Senate numbers, however, tell a different story:
Michael Thurmond (D): 34 (35)
Johnny Isakson (R-inc): 52 (47)
Chuck Donovan (L): 5 (7)
Undecided: 9 (11)
(MoE: ±3.6%)
Isakson appears to be shoring himself up well with a series of re-introductory ads (an important task for him, given the fact that he’s not exactly a household name in Georgia). These numbers line up with SUSA’s pretty well.
MN-Gov: SUSA’s Wild Ride Continues
SurveyUSA (9/12-14, likely voters, 8/2-4 in parens):
Mark Dayton (DFL): 38 (46)
Tom Emmer (R): 36 (32)
Tom Horner (I): 18 (9)
Other: 5 (n/a)
Undecided: 4 (13)
(MoE: ±3.9%)
For a sec I thought, “That was one hell of a primary bounce!” But no – SUSA’s last poll was taken before the DFL primary. And man is there a lot of churn here. Among the named candidates, we’re looking at 21 points of net delta, and that doesn’t even account for the 9-point drop in undecideds. Has the race really changed so much in month-and-a-half, to go from D+14 to D+2? Or was that earlier Dayton lead just way too gaudy?
Well, for starters, things are back to “normal” – at least, normal for SUSA-land – which is to say, the kids love them some Tom Emmer, with the youngest cohort supporting him at 46-30 clip, the only group among which he leads. In August, by contrast, Dayton led this bracket 43-35. It’s also worth pointing out that there were huge gyrations among all age groups. The good news is that Dayton does better with his own party than Emmer does with his, winning Dems 74-7 (vs. Republicans going 72-11 for Emmer).
Given that SurveyUSA’s June poll of the race showed a three-point Dayton lead, it’s tempting to write the middle poll off as an outlier. But the poll before that gave Emmer an eight-point lead. So wild swings seem to be the order of the day for SUSA – 11 points, then 11 points again, and now 12 points. I don’t really think this race is that volatile – do you?
NY-20: Murphy Leads by 17
StephenCLE’s Senate Ratings – September 17
StephenCLE’s Senate Rankings for September 17:
Outside of two races in Delaware, the math for the Senate got much more negative within the last month. 7 race ratings changed to the right, only one to the left. The funny thing is though, the overall pickup numbers haven’t changed at all, with the exception of Florida, which is now back in the republican column.
Basically, here’s the lay of the land:
Republicans are leading in all of their own seats, although some seats like New Hampshire, Missouri, and Kentucky are just outside of Toss Up range based on the last polling updates.
In Democratic seats, North Dakota and Arkansas are basically gone. Indiana looks bad, but not impossible. Pennsylvania isn’t looking great, but could be a late developer based on the way the race has gone. Then you have three races that are total, complete coin flips, Nevada, Illinois, and Colorado. At present, I have Team Blue prevailing in 2 of those. Really you could flip the call on any of those three, giving the GOP anywhere between 4-7 pickups. After that, you have California, a race that is barely in the toss up column with Boxer generally leading by 3-4 points. Wisconsin is a weird one, we haven’t had a non-Rassmussen poll there since July 12th, so my intuition is actually that Feingold is leading, and that those early Rass polls are propping Johnson up. The last two races on the fringe of what the Republicans can get are Washington and Connecticut, where Team Blue is clearly leading by a bunch.
The Map:
Senate Math:
Current Senate – 59 Democrats, 41 Republicans
New Senate – 54 Democrats, 46 Republicans
Swing – Republicans +5
Pickups (listed in order of likelihood)
Dem pickups – none
Rep pickups – North Dakota, Arkansas, Indiana, Pennsylvania, Colorado
GOP best case scenario – lose none, pickup ND, AR, IN, PA, CO, NV, IL, CA, WI, CT, WA – 52 republicans, 48 democrats assuming no post-election switches
DEM best case scenario – lose ND, AR, IN, pickup NH, KY, MO, FL, AK – 62 democrats, 38 republicans assuming Crist caucuses with the Democrats
Ratings Changes for August 16-September 16:
1.Pennsylvania – Toss Up to Lean Rep – This is not the way I thought this race would go, at all. But Pat Toomey has taken the lead on Joe Sestak, actually he took the lead about 2-3 weeks ago. Sestak appears to be using the same rope-a-dope strategy that he used against Arlen Specter in the primary and unleash a late onslaught. Given how many races have broken in the final 1-2 weeks throughout the primary season, that’s not a bad idea, but given the implosion of the whole democratic ticket in Pennsylvania, it’s going to be tough to pull off. Sestak is a good candidate though, he’s proved it already.
2.Ohio – Toss Up to Lean Rep – I considered moving this one straight through to Likely, but the polls don’t quite get that far yet. Bottom line, the Democrats nominated the wrong candidate here. Fisher hasn’t done anything, he’s running a horrible campaign, and he’s not doing anything that will drive base turnout here in the Buckeye State. Again, Rob Portman is on the air, but he’s not flooding the zone by any means. The way things are going right now, it looks like he’s going to win easily. The breaking of the Cuyahoga County corruption case is coming at a bad time for Fisher as well.
3.Connecticut – Likely Dem to Lean Dem – Richard Blumenthal’s lead here has fallen a bit thanks to a major ad blitz from Linda McMahon. Ultimately though, Blumenthal is still over 50 and is going up against a very unpopular challenger in a blue state. I’m not nearly as concerned about this one as many.
4.Kentucky – Toss Up to Lean Rep – I have to move this race into the Lean R column as well, as Rand Paul has been able to STFU, to be quite frank. Conway has run a pretty good campaign and might have a shot to pull this one out late, but for now Paul inches ahead.
5.Delaware – Likely Rep to Likely Dem – FAIL. The republicans in Delaware just cost themselves a Senate seat by nominating Christine Odonnell over Mike Castle. Best idea since boner in sweatpants.
6.Florida – Lean Ind to Lean Rep – What many thought would eventually happen here has happened. Kendrick Meek got a major bounce following the Democratic primary, while Marco Rubio has shored up republican support as their base is generally in lockstep this cycle. That has put Rubio into the lead and made things much more difficult for Charlie Crist, who is now getting squeezed on both sides.
7.North Carolina – Lean Rep to Likely Rep – We’ve seen a lot of really positive numbers lately for republican Richard Burr in his race against Elaine Marshall. A lot of that is because of the successful ad campaign that Burr is running, involving similar messaging that the DCCC used in 2008. Sadly, this one seems to be slipping away a bit as well.
8.California – Lean Dem to Toss Up – This is another race that just shocks me. No way did I think that Carly Failorina would be running so strongly against Barbara Boxer. Honestly, despite what the polls say, I hardly see a path to victory for Fiorina. She would have to run a perfect campaign the rest of the way as pretty much all remaining undecideds are either democrats or democratic-leaning independents. Fiorina’s in a similar situation as Mark Kirk in Illinois, in that she needs to hope for really low democratic turnout to carry her over the finish line. Boxer’s always had a good GOTV operation, and the presence of Prop 19 on the ballot should help provide coattails for Boxer too.
9.Alaska – Safe Rep to Likely Rep – This is a race to keep an eye on. Incumbent Lisa Murkowski was knee-capped unexpectedly by Alaska Republicans, giving Joe Miller the nomination. Immediate post-primary polling shows that democrat Scott McAdams might have an outside shot at turning this seat blue. We’ll have to watch this one as Miller is running against spending and pork, an issue that he is surely not on the right side of public opinion on in AK.
2010 Senate Big Board (as of September 17)
Solid Dem – 6 seats
New York (Schumer)
Vermont (Leahy)
Maryland (Mikulski)
Oregon (Wyden)
Hawaii (Inouye)
New York (Gillibrand)
Likely Dem – 2 seats
West Virginia (Manchin)
Delaware (Open)
Lean Dem – 3 seats
Connecticut (Blumenthal)
Washington (Murray)
Wisconsin (Feingold)
Toss Up – 4 seats
California (Boxer)
Nevada (Reid)
Colorado (Open)
Illinois (Open)
Lean Rep – 7 seats
Florida (Open)
Indiana (Open)
Kentucky (Open)
Missouri (Open)
New Hampshire (Open)
Ohio (Open)
Pennsylvania (Open)
Likely Rep – 6 seats
Alaska (Open)
Georgia (Isakson)
Arkansas (Lincoln)
Iowa (Grassley)
Louisiana (Vitter)
North Carolina (Burr)
Solid Rep – 9 seats
Arizona (McCain)
South Carolina (Demint)
Alabama (Shelby)
North Dakota (Open)
South Dakota (Thune)
Kansas (Open)
Oklahoma (Coburn)
Utah (Open)
Idaho (Crapo)
NH-Gov: Lynch Has Double-Digit Edge on Stephen
Public Policy Polling (9/11-12, likely voters, 7/22-25 in parentheses):
John Lynch (D-inc): 51 (51)
John Stephen (R): 39 (34)
Undecided: 10 (15)
(MoE: ±2.2%)
Despite the fact that the odds are probably against the Dems in the Senate race, and that they face down-to-the-wire blockbusters in both House retentions (and also are probably at risk of losing the state Senate because of retirements), there’s one relatively bright spot for Granite State Dems: Governor John Lynch, seeking an unusual fourth term.
He’s kind of on the cusp of the race being competitive and not, though: he’s over 50 in PPP’s first post-primary poll, but up 12 on a more credible opponent than the last couple he’s faced (former state HHS director, and losing NH-01 primary candidate in 2008, John Stephen). That’s a somewhat smaller gap than PPP found in July, but bigger than the 11-point gap they had in April, so things have looked pretty stable here all along. The financial race within the race is a dead heat, though: as of pre-primary reports several weeks ago, Lynch had $745K CoH, while Stephen, who’s spent very little so far, has $794K. Given that and the nature of the year, it’s a race worth keeping an eye on.
KS-04: SUSA Says Pompeo Leads by 10, Goyle Poll Claims Otherwise
SurveyUSA for KWCH-TV (9/14-15, likely voters, 8/9-11 in parens):
Raj Goyle (D): 40 (42)
Mike Pompeo (R): 50 (49)
David Moffett (L): 3 (4)
Susan Ducey (RP): 4 (1)
Undecided: 4 (5)
(MoE: ±4.3%)
SUSA strikes again, finding Dem Raj Goyle trailing Mike Pompeo by 10 points in this deep red district. Pompeo is helped by an implausible 66-22 lead among 18-to-34 year-olds (up from 48-26 in August). Eventually, SUSA will have to seriously examine why their methodology is conducive to this problem while other IVR pollsters, like PPP, haven’t been plagued by the same issue. Another issue is a bit of procedural sloppiness – SUSA tested Libertarian David Moffett, despite the fact that he dropped out of the race and was substituted for Shawn Smith a week ago. Meanwhile, the Goyle campaign has released their latest internal poll:
Gerstein | Agne for Raj Goyle (9/8-9, likely voters, 8/10-11 in parens):
Raj Goyle (D): 44 (47)
Mike Pompeo (R): 46 (50)
Shawn Smith (L): 4 (-)
Susan Ducey (RP): 2 (-)
Undecided: 4 (3)
(MoE: ±4.4%)
Their full polling memo is available below the fold. One area of concurrence between SUSA and Goyle’s pollster is that Goyle is running quite strongly among independents: SUSA gave Goyle a 7-point lead among that bloc, while Gerstein has Goyle up by 8.