Polls from IN-Sen, WI-Sen, RI-Gov, RI-01 & TX-Gov

The polls are coming so fast and furious these days, we have no choice but to throw weird random assortments at you at all hours of the day.

IN-Sen: EPIC-MRA for WISH-TV (9/29-10/1, likely voters, no trendlines):

Brad Ellsworth (D): 33

Dan Coats (R): 51

Rebecca Sink-Burris (L): 5

(MoE: ±4.4%)

WI-Sen (PDF): Marist for McClatchy Newspapers (9/26-28, likely voters, no trendlines):

Russ Feingold (D-inc): 45

Ron Johnson (R): 52

Undecided: 3

(MoE: ±4.5%)

RI-Gov, RI-01: Brown University (9/27-29, registered voters, 6/27-30 in parens):

Frank Caprio (D): 30 (28)

John Robitaille (R): 14 (8)

Lincoln Chafee (I): 23 (27)

Undecided: 30 (32)

(MoE: ±4.1%)

David Cicilline (D): 39

John Loughlin (R): 21

Undecided: 31

(MoE: ±6%)

TX-Gov: Public Strategies for KENS 5 and Texas Belo TV (9/26-10/2, likely voters, no trendlines) (crosstabs – PDF):

Bill White (D): 36

Rick Perry (R-inc): 50

Undecided: 9

(MoE: ±3.7%)

SSP Daily Digest: 10/6 (Morning Edition)

  • KY-Sen: Jack Conway has succeeded in getting a false and misleading ad by the “First Amendment Alliance” pulled off at least one television station, Louisville’s Fox 41.
  • WI-Sen: On the other side of the equation, Russ Feingold is being forced by the NFL to alter an ad which featured some footage of embarrassing end zone victory dances, including Randy Moss taunting Green Bay Packer fans. Could this really have been a mindless goof by Feingold’s media team? The Hotline’s Tim Alberta had the same thought I did: This sure was a good way to get plenty of free media coverage for this ad. (Judging by the number of Twitter mentions, at least, this ploy worked – if it was indeed the plan.)
  • AZ-08: The Smart Media Group is reporting that the DCCC has cancelled all of their ad buys in Tucson except for the final week of October. I suppose there are three ways you can interpret this news. The first is that Gabby Giffords is cruising and doesn’t need much help. The second I’ll call “panzers reconsolidating”: She’s basically doomed. And the third lies between the two: The D-Trip is performing triage, figuring that Giffords is strong enough to have a chance on her own, while other more fragile campaigns are in greater need of help. Choose your own adventure!
  • NY-24: Mike Arcuri is a lucky man. As you may recall, he created a new third party just so that he could have an extra ballot line to run on (and perhaps draw in a few votes from people who like him personally but can’t stomach the thought of pulling the lever for a Democrat). The problem: He called it the “New York Moderates” party, but state law forbids any party name from including the words “American,” ‘United States,” “National,” “New York State,” “Empire State,” or any abbreviation of those. Fortunately, a court ruled that he was able to retain the line by renaming it just the “Moderates” party.
  • Fundraising:

    • MO-Sen: Robin Carnahan: $2.1 million raised, “on par with” Roy Blunt
    • PA-Sen: Joe Sestak (D): $3.2 million raised, Pat Toomey (R): $3.8 million raised
    • CO-Gov: John Hickenlooper (D): $361K raised from 9/16-29, Dan Maes (R): $28K raised, Tom Tancredo (ACP): $149K
    • OH-Gov: Ted Strickland (D): $1.6 million raised from 9/3-10/4
    • OH-15: Steve Stivers (R): $757K raised, Mary Jo Kilroy (D): $603K raised

    Independent Expenditures:

    • CT-Sen: Sources tell Aaron Blake that the DSCC has added $1.2 million to its buy here
    • OH-01: The Campaign for Working Families throws down $125K for ads to help Steve Chabot (R)
    • OR-05: CULAC the PAC chips in $34K for mail on behalf of Rep. Kurt Schrader (D)

    SSP TV:

    • NV-Sen: Harry Reid’s latest is actually half-positive/half-negative, and concludes by calling Sharron Angle “a foreign worker’s best friend”; Angle’s newest is a race-baity spot that – jeez – features footage of scary brown people sneaking through a fence (wish I were kidding)
    • PA-Sen: The DSCC also has an ad out that’s fairly race-baity, talking about Pat Toomey’s support for sending jobs to China – complete with Asian-style gong noises that were embarrassing even when John Hughes brought us Long Duk Dong more than a quarter-century ago
    • GA-Gov: In a reversal of the usual roles, Republican Nathan Deal paints himself as the friend of teachers (and education in general) in his first attack ad
    • NY-Gov: Andrew Cuomo continues to sound like an anodyne Republican in his ads (cut wasteful government, blah blah), and says that Carl Paladino’s “anger is not a governing strategy”
    • AL-05: Steve Raby goes back to his mailbox to criticize Mo Brooks for being a DC tool (and then litters)
    • CA-45: In this Steve Pougnet ad, little kids singing bowdlerized versions of the “Miss Mary Mack” (Mary Bono Mack, get it?) schoolyard rhyme are annoying
    • CO-07: In an ad with weak production values, Ryan Frazier attacks Ed Perlmutter for supporting the stimulus and cap-and-trade
    • FL-12: Dennis Ross recites some conservative pabulum
    • FL-25: In a minute-long spot, Joe Garcia uses news coverage to revisit the David Rivera ramming-a-delivery-truck-carrying-his-opponents-flyers incident
    • ID-01: Walt Minnick can’t resist hitting the illegal immigration theme again – and he, too, features footage of Hispanic-looking people. Just uck
    • MN-06: A Tarryl Clark ad with really low production values stands out only because the otherwise serious-sounding female announcer declares: “Michele Bachmann: Not doing [bleep] for the people of the sixth district” (yes, there’s an actual bleep sound) [UPDATE: Gah, it’s just a fucking web ad.]
    • NC-02: Bob Etheridge hits one of my favorite attack ad topics: Renee Ellmers’ support of a 23% national sales tax
    • NV-03: As she did in her last ad, Dina Titus compares Joe Heck to Sharron Angle, this time attacking his record on education
    • NY-13: Big fucking surprise: Despite voting against healthcare reform, Mike McMahon is getting attacked on it anyway – for not supporting repeal, and for just generally siding with Pelosi & Obama. Will Democrats never learn? Don’t answer that
    • NY-20: Chris Gibson attacks Scott Murphy for supporting the stimulus. Man, it was a damn long time ago, but remember how much traction Murphy got last year by attacking Jim Tedisco (lol) for opposing the stimulus? (Not surprised to see the ad in that link has since been removed)
    • OH-18: Oh man. Clearly polls must be showing Dems that attacks on Republicans for wanting to send jobs overseas must be especially potent, ’cause here’s another one, from Zack Space. No gong in this one, though – instead, he features a prototypical Chinese dragon, and then even has the announcer say a mock “thank you” in Chinese! I really can’t wait for this election to be over

    Whereas I hit a new bottom in my House and Senate predictions

    Tonight I am coming to grips with what I think is the emerging reality of what we face on November 2nd, and it’s a little uglier than what I previously envisioned.

    First, the House:  I posted my diary using a rudimentary Cook-based model to “predict” a net loss of 49 seats.  Until tonight I have spent the last month in rising hope that maybe we could buck the tide just enough to keep the House by the skin of our teeth.  But further readings and taking a step back and considering the state of whatever House race polling we have, I am now surrendering once again my hope of keeping the House.  I’d hit a bottom on Labor Day weekend with all the rock-bottom generic ballot numbers that popped up around then.  But then September gave us more positive information, and things started to look better.  But going through StephenCLE’s diary tonight left me resigned.  He pegs our net losses in the mid-30s, and I count several more losses that he sees still ending up our way.  I now think also our pickups, to offset GOP gains, will be limited to the Big 4 of beating Cao and Djou and taking DE-AL and IL-10.  I don’t completely write off the possibility of one or two upsets somewhere by Garcia or Bera or Goyle or someone else, but the odds are long at this point, I think.  Garcia is our best bet, I still give him a 50-50 shot, but I suspect the bad economy tips the scale against us.  That Sink has fallen behind Scott, and Rubio has taken firm command of the Senate race, both hurt him.  All this is to say that while I have been saying the odds of a GOP takeover are “just” 55-60%, I now push those odds all the way up to 80%.

    Now, the Senate:  this is where depression is kicking in more heavily tonight.  I’ve conceded for awhile 2 separate tiers of 3 seats each.  Tier I is ND, AR, and IN.  Tier II is CO, WI, and PA.  But I now am counting a couple Tier III seats, WV and IL, as losses.  Even in IL, Obama’s job approval has slipped to mere mortal levels.  Yes I see Brady has gained ground and Alexi is still in a legitimate pure tossup and it’s a Democratic state and the Chicago machine still can come through.  I don’t write off IL, nor do I write off Manchin’s chances of turning around WV.  And PPP today gave us hope in CO.  But all that said, if I have to make bottom-line predictions, I now have to call all these seats losses in a very strong anti-Democratic wave.  If we’re really going to lose more than 40 House seats, then it’s likely the Senate seats, too, will be on the higher side of what’s realistically possible rather than the lower side.  So I’m now seeing a loss of 8 Senate seats, with no takeovers.

    My one Senate wildcard:  I now think our best chance of a takeover is actually AK.  The major party candidates are little-known, it’s a late-developing race, and it’s a complicated 3-way where voter preference can change quickly and unpredictably.  That contrasts to ALL other races where we’re fighting for our lives; in all other hardly-fought races, there has been a lot of heavy campaigning by both sides for a long time, and voters are pretty familiar with the candidates and just not likely to shift our way in just the last month absent some unexpected external event driving them.

    It’s going to be a tough night, and I don’t write off the possibility that things could be better than this.  But I’m bracing emotionally for a depressing night.  The only positive takeaways I forsee is that still barely holding the Senate and controlling the floor is worth A LOT and nothing I take for granted, and that Obama’s reelection chances really will be enhanced by voters having gotten their pound of flesh and finally settling down.  There’s something to be said for the argument that if we hang on to both the House and Senate, we’re still tagged with all the blame for whatever follows, and voters will feel they weren’t heard by our retaining our majorities and might take it out on us even more strongly in 2012.

    There really is an emerging Democratic majority, but it’s emerging slowly.  I think a lot of us let 2008 mislead us because Obama effectively accelerated, through the power of his own persona, a process of changing the electorate that otherwise would happen naturally only much more slowly.  The 2008 electorate was what we’d see in 2016 or 2020 if it wasn’t for Obama.  We might see no growth in Democratic-favoring demographic groups in the electorate in 2016, as Obama is succeeded probably (not necessarily but the odds support this) by a white male as the Democratic Presidential nominee.  For this year, we’re going to see any natural uptick in Democratic-favoring turnout from demographic change over the past 4 years offset, and perhaps more than offset, by depressed turnout from the unfavorable environment and lack of urgency among key voters.

    I’m very interested in all of your thoughts on this subject.

    DE-AL, PA-10: Carney Leads, Times Two

    Fairleigh Dickinson Univ. (9/27-10/3, likely voters, no trendlines):

    John Carney (D): 51

    Glen Urquhart (R): 36

    Undecided: 10

    (MoE: ±3.5%)

    The open seat in Delaware, graciously left behind by Mike Castle, has always seemed like one of the Dems’ two best pickup opportunities… and if this poll and yesterday’s PPP poll of LA-02 are to be believed, this one probably takes the lead. Not only does ex-Lt. Gov. John Carney lead by a 56-32 margin in New Castle County, he’s also running even in Sussex and Kent Counties (the rural parts of the state, where a GOPer would have to completely dominate in order to win statewide).

    Lycoming Coll. (9/26-30, likely voters, no trendlines):

    Chris Carney (D-inc): 43

    Tom Marino (R): 40

    Undecided: 16

    (MoE: ±5.1%)

    It looks less likely that two-term Dem incumbent Chris Carney will be in the Carney Caucus next year, although he’s still holding his own fairly well against former US Attorney Tom Marino. On the one hand, he’s in an R+8 district and should be especially vulnerable this year, but on the other hand, he’s still pretty personally popular (over 50% favorable) and is up against a guy with a boatload of sketchy connections.

    NM-Gov, NM-01, NM-02: Martinez, Heinrich, Pearce Lead

    Research & Polling Inc. for the Albuquerque Journal (9/27-29, likely voters, 8/23-27 in parentheses):

    Diane Denish (D): 42 (39)

    Susana Martinez (R): 49 (45)

    Undecided: 9 (16)

    (MoE: ±3%)

    House numbers:

    Martin Heinrich (D-inc): 48 (47)

    Jon Barela (R): 41 (41)

    Undecided: 11 (12)

    Harry Teague (D-inc): 45 (45)

    Steve Pearce (R): 46 (42)

    Undecided: 9 (13)

    (MoE: ±5%)

    Here’s another state where things are staying pretty consistent over the last month. Over the course of September, Susana Martinez’s lead over Diane Denish has remained at 7, as they’ve both made gains from undecided, but Martinez is getting dangerously close to 50. (The basic story of this election is: what sounds better on your resume, “district attorney” or “Bill Richardson’s #2?”)

    Likewise, things barely budged in the 1st, where Martin Heinrich added one point to his already decent-but-not-decisive lead. (It’s looking more and more like that SurveyUSA poll that gave a lead to Jon Barela a few months ago was quite the outlier.) The needle moved only a little more in the 2nd, where the polls have shown a true tossup… but the movement was enough to drop Dem incumbent Harry Teague from a surprising 3-point lead to a 1-point deficit (exactly where he was in a PPP poll a few weeks ago, too).

    CA-Gov, CA-Sen: Both Dems Lead in Two Polls

    SurveyUSA for KABC-TV (9/30-10/3, likely voters, 9/19-21 in parentheses):

    Jerry Brown (D): 47 (46)

    Meg Whitman (R): 43 (43)

    Other: 8 (8)

    Undecided: 2 (3)

    Barbara Boxer (D-inc): 46 (49)

    Carly Fiorina (R): 43 (43)

    Other: 9 (6)

    Undecided: 2 (2)

    (MoE: ±3.9%)

    SurveyUSA finds very little movement on the polling front, with Barbara Boxer losing a few points to “undecided,” and Jerry Brown gaining a smidgen of ground. (This poll was in the field after the Meg Whitman housekeeper story had broken, although it continued to evolve; unlike Rasmussen, they seem to find it barely affecting the numbers with everyone pretty much already having made up their minds.) SurveyUSA has some other odds and ends, as per usual: they find Gavin Newsom still leading Abel Maldonado in the Lt. Governor race, 42-37, and Proposition 19 for the legalization of marijuana still passing, 48-41.

    Ipsos for Reuters (10/3-4, likely voters, 6/25-27 (using RVs) in parentheses):

    Jerry Brown (D): 50 (45)

    Meg Whitman (R): 43 (39)

    Undecided: 7 (14)

    Barbara Boxer (D-inc): 49 (45)

    Carly Fiorina (R): 45 (41)

    Undecided: 6 (13)

    (MoE: ±4.6%)

    Ipsos’s trendlines also suggest that nothing much has changed, although it has because they’ve been out of the California picture for four months and they entirely missed Meg Whitman’s August spike and subsequent swoon. (This poll was also taken after housekeeper-gate, but 72% say that has no effect on their vote.) Reuters finds little enthusiasm gap in California, with 75% of Dems reporting they’re certain to vote, and on top of that, Brown and Boxer both lead among independents. Among RVs, Boxer and Brown both lead by an identical 48-42. Interestingly, that’s two polls in one day finding Brown polling better than Boxer, which we’ve rarely seen all cycle.

    Ipsos finds 53-43 support for Prop 19 (pot), 37-49 support for suspending the state’s greenhouse gases law, and support a simple majority for budget passage by 58-29.

    GOP operative Mike Murphy is also tweeting that the Meg Whitman camp has an internal showing her within two points, 43-41. It also has Gloria Allred (representing Meg Whitman’s former worker) with an unfavorable of 68%!!!1! (Uh, too bad Gloria Allred isn’t running for anything.)

    SSP Daily Digest: 10/5 (Afternoon Edition)

    AK-Sen: It’s never a dull moment with Joe Miller in the race. Hot on the heels of the news that he believes that federal unemployment insurance is unconstitutional, today comes the news that his wife went on unemployment after leaving a job in 2004, and that Miller did not disown his wife for betraying the Founding Fathers. But wait, it just gets more interesting: the job Miller’s wife left was working for… Miller himself. He hired his wife as a part-time clerk when he was working for several years as a magistrate judge for the federal district court (y’know, for the federal government he just hates so much). Local gadfly (and Lisa Murkowski ally) Andrew Halcro is, in fact, suggesting that Miller was forced to fire his wife because the blatant nepotism may have been a violation of court policies. (Of course, Miller’s response was that Murkowski’s not one to talk about nepotism.)

    And on top of that, now it’s come out that Miller is a full-on Seventeenther. In other words, part of the new crop of right-wingers who want you to vote for him so he can take away your rights to vote for him in the future.

    HI-Sen: Term-limited GOP Gov. Linda Lingle is saying she’ll “take a look” at a Senate bid in 2012. That seat’s current occupant, Dan Akaka, is 86 years old, so it’s not clear whether he’ll run for another term or not. Lingle is probably the only Republican on the bench in Hawaii with enough juice to make a Senate race, especially an open seat one, competitive.

    IL-Sen, IL-Gov: Mark Kirk is out with an internal poll (from Fulcrum), giving him a much larger lead than, well, anyone else, considering that most pollsters have seen this within a point or two either way. His poll says he leads Alexi Giannoulias 42-33, with 2 for the Green Party’s LeAlan Jones. (The same poll also shows Bill Brady leading Pat Quinn 39-27 in the Governor’s race.) Sitting on a big cash advantage, Kirk has reserved most of his entire kitty ($5.2 million) on ad buys for the remaining month.

    WI-Sen: Russ Feingold seems determined to follow Nancy Boyda down the path of integrity/obscurity. He’s telling the DSCC (who haven’t advertised yet on his behalf) to back off and let him fight the election himself. Says Feingold: “I consider it to be outside help of a kind that is uncontrolled and tends to believe in a philosophy of slash-and-burn politics. That’s frankly not who I am. I don’t want to win that way.”

    NH-Gov: Univ. of New Hampshire (9/23-29, likely voters, July in parentheses):

    John Lynch (D-inc): 51 (54)

    John Stephen (R): 34 (29)

    (MoE: ±4.3%)

    Considering that UNH’s sample had Paul Hodes down by 15 and Carol Shea-Porter losing too, it’s pleasantly surprising to see John Lynch hanging in there with little trouble (in contrast to several other recent polls, such as UNH’s in-state rival for weird results, ARG).

    WV-Gov: I guess the 2010 election is over already? Because the conversation today already seems to be changing to 2012. Republican state Sen. Clark Barnes (whom you might remember for briefly getting in and then getting out of the field in WV-01 last year) says he’ll run for governor two years from now.

    NY-20: Finding himself on the very wrong end of both a Siena poll and a Scott Murphy internal, Chris Gibson offers up a POS internal of his own, taken 9/27-28, showing that he’s still within striking distance. He says he trails Murphy 42-38.

    VA-05: Here’s one more Dem poll from the 5th that shows Tom Perriello is narrowly trailing, but not officially dead yet. Rob Hurt leads Perriello 44-43 in a poll sponsored by the League of Conservation Voters and the SEIU (no word on who the pollster is, though). (UPDATE: The pollster is David Dougherty, and the memo is here. The sample was taken 9/20-23 with a 4.4% MoE.)

    American Crossroads: Remember back when we all laughed at American Crossroads for not raising any money, apparently because they were waiting for the million-dollar checks from their half-a-dozen billionaire donors to clear? Ha ha, boy, those were simpler times. Anyway, Democracy 21 and the Campaign Legal Center are going to the IRS to ask for an investigation of Crossroads GPS, one tentacle of the group that’s organized as a non-profit “social welfare organization” or 501(c)(4). The larger Crossroads is a PAC, but GPS itself isn’t supposed to participate in campaigns. Rather than take it up with the FEC, which has fallen into chaotic uselessness because of empty seats on the commission, they’re going straight to the IRS, alleging tax law violations instead.

    Fundraising:

    MO-Sen: Roy Blunt raised $2 million in 3Q, no CoH given

    PA-07: Pat Meehan raised $725K, giving him $1.5 million CoH

    SSP TV:

    AK-Sen: Two different ads, one a coordinated spot between the Joe Miller camp and the NRSC that’s a bio spot for Miller, the other a Tea Party Express one-minute extravaganza that calls Lisa Murkowski a liar, a fraud, and various other things

    IN-Sen: Here’s a link to that Brad Ellsworth ad we mentioned yesterday, where he literally calls Dan Coats a sellout over that all-covers album he released outsourcing

    KY-Sen: The DSCC rolls out an ad hitting Rand Paul on his proposed $2,000 Medicare deductible, while Paul’s newest ad returns to the Jack Conway=Obama theme

    MO-Sen: Robin Carnahan goes back to the theme of Roy Blunt’s cozy DC insider relationships

    NY-Sen-B: Joe DioGuardi’s first ad is an intro spot, as well as bemoaning the dwindling American Dream

    WA-Sen: The DSCC revisits Dino Rossi’s days as a state Senator, including support for cutting unemployment benefits and the minimum wage

    WI-Sen: Russ Feingold takes the GOP to task for prematurely celebrating short of the end zone

    WV-Sen: John Raese follows the NRSC’s lead with his own ad doing the Joe Manchin=Obama thing

    FL-Gov: The DGA’s out with a Florida ad with various law enforcement officials bashing Rick Scott’s Medicare fraud

    NH-Gov: Here’s the ad of the day: John Lynch leaps out of the gate and punches John Stephen in the nose over scandals at New Hampshire’s HHS Dept.

    OH-Gov: Ted Strickland, bedecked in camo, reminds the state’s hunters who got the NRA’s backing

    PA-Gov: Well, at least Tom Corbett isn’t saying Dan Onorato = Obama, but he is saying Onorato = Ed Rendell

    RI-Gov: The DGA hits Lincoln Chafee from the right? Their new ad says that vulnerable Rhode Islanders can’t afford all the new taxes Chafee wants

    FL-24: Suzanne Kosmas hits Sandy Adams over the Paul Ryan roadmap

    PA-04: Oh, good… more kids complaining about how their allowance isn’t big enough to cover all the debt they’re going to have to pay off, courtesy of Keith Rothfus

    Rasmussen:

    AZ-Sen: Rodney Glassman (D) 33%, John McCain (R-inc) 54%

    CA-Sen: Barbara Boxer (D-inc) 49%, Carly Fiorina (R) 45%

    CO-Gov: John Hickenlooper (D) 43%, Dan Maes (R) 16%, Tom Tancredo (C) 35%

    CO-Sen: Michael Bennet (D-inc) 45%, Ken Buck (R) 50%

    Rasmussen (appearing as Fox/Pulse):

    CT-Gov: Dan Malloy (D) 47%, Tom Foley (R) 41%

    CT-Sen: Richard Blumenthal (D) 52%, Linda McMahon (R) 42%

    MO-Sen: Robin Carnahan (D) 42%, Roy Blunt (R) 50%

    NV-Sen: Harry Reid (D-inc) 46%, Sharron Angle (R) 49%

    OH-Gov: Ted Strickland (D-inc) 43%, John Kasich (R) 49%

    OH-Sen: Lee Fisher (D) 37%, Rob Portman (R) 53%

    WV-Sen: Joe Manchin (D) 43%, John Raese (R) 48%

    HI-01: Dead Heat on a Merry-Go-Round

    Public Policy Polling for Daily Kos (10/2-3, likely voters, no trend lines):

    Colleen Hanabusa (D): 48

    Charles Djou (R-inc): 47

    Undecided: 5

    (MoE: ±3.9%)

    It looks like Charles Djou and Colleen Hanabusa are in a game of jump ball here, which is a better result than I had been expecting for Team Blue here. If turnout were at 2008 levels, as Jed L. says, Hanabusa would be leading by 54-40.

    Bonus finding: In the gubernatorial race portion of this poll, Duke Aiona and Neil Abercrombie are tied at 48-48. Considering this is Abercrombie’s old district, this could mean that the Governor’s race is a lot closer than previous polls indicated.

    StephenCLE’s House Ratings – October 5

    Well, we’re only 4 weeks away from the 2010 congressional and gubernatorial elections, crunch time if you will.  I have new picks for the Senate and Governor races, those you’ll probably get tomorrow or Thursday.  

    House of representatives:

    The generic ballot appears to have stabilized, as a lot of favorable numbers for Team Red have come out in the last week.  Newsweek had the Dems up 5, Gallup the Reps up 13, so those two basically cancel.  The majority of polling has the Reps up about 3-5% or thereabout, ahead of the 2-3% last week, so several house races moved into the red column as a result, and many more moved into the red direction.  The house balance is now teetering more than it was a week ago, with the Republicans just barely away (which if you think about it, could be Team Blue’s worst nightmare, as Bobby Bright, Walt Minnick, Dan Boren, or any few conservadems could move to force Pelosi out of the speakership).  The full rating changes and big board are below.  Beginning this week, I have divided my toss up column into toss up/tilt republican and toss up/tilt democratic, a split that will remain until the election.  

    Old House – 256 Democrats, 179 Republicans

    New House – 220 Democrats, 215 Republicans

    National Swing – Republicans +36

    Democratic Pickups (5) – DE-1, FL-25, IL-10, LA-2, HI-1

    Republican Pickups (40) – AR-1, AR-2, AZ-1, AZ-5, CO-3, CO-4, FL-2, FL-8, FL-24, IL-11, IL-14, IN-8, KS-3, LA-3, MD-1, MI-1, MI-7, MS-1, NH-2, ND-1, NY-19, NY-29, OH-1, OH-15, OH-16, PA-3, PA-7, PA-8, PA-10, PA-11, SC-5, TN-6, TN-8, TX-17, TX-23, VA-2, VA-5, WA-3, WV-1, WI-7

    Pickup Changes from last month:

    Democrat to Republican – AZ-1, CO-3, GA-8, OH-16, TX-23, WV-1, WI-7

    Republican to Democrat –

    Net Seats Changing By Region:

    Northeast (New England & Mid-Atlantic) – R+8

    Southeast (Border South & Deep South) – R+13

    Midwest (Great Lakes & Plains) – R+10

    West (Rocky Mountains & Pacific Coast) – R+4

    The Map:

    US House Map - October 5

    Ratings changes for period September 28-October 4:

    1.Minnesota-8 – Solid Dem to Likely Dem – A poll came out a few days ago from POS that showed this race a 3-point affair.  While I’m sure this poll was somewhat slanted, I don’t doubt that this district is competitive in a year in which incumbency isn’t as great an advantage as normal.  Plus, the district is only D+3 and moving rightward.  Oberstar had better watch out.  

    2.New York-20 – Solid Dem to Likely Dem – DCCC polling has this as a 13-point race, which moves it back onto the board a week after it became safe for Scott Murphy.  Still, I don’t feel as if he’s all that endangered.  

    3.Maine-1 – Likely Dem to Solid Dem – Backed by a multitude of polling showing her in safe territory, Chellie Pingree appears to be out of the woods.

    4.California-47 – Likely Dem to Lean Dem – Some poor campaigning and increased turnout projection in the Vietnamese bloc of this district has put Loretta Sanchez into an uncomfortable position.  I still think she’s ahead, but she can’t make any more gaffes.  

    5.Georgia-2 – Likely Dem to Lean Dem – Same deal for Sanford Bishop, but instead of bad comments made, for him it’s a potential ethics issue that is hurting his candidacy.  I don’t know a lot about the scholarship deal, but this is the kind of year where any kind of stench can defeat a democrat, especially in a swing district like this one.  

    6.North Carolina-7 – Likely Dem to Lean Dem – With Richard Burr pulling way ahead of Elaine Marshall, plus SUSA showing this race very close, I have no choice but to downgrade this one.  McIntyre had better be on his best game here the rest of the way because this one has the potential to move way rightward before election day.  

    7.Arizona-1 – Lean Dem to Toss Up/Tilt Republican – This is a move I should have made last week, as polling came out showing Ann Kirkpatrick locked in a very tight contest with Paul Gosar.  The atmosphere in Arizona right now has stayed very republican, contrary to what I thought would happen after SB1070.  McCain and Brewer are going to romp here, so Kirkpatrick is in a tough spot despite weak opposition.

    8.Iowa-1 – Likely Dem to Lean Dem – The atmosphere in Iowa is perhaps one of the single most toxic for democrats in the whole country, and independent republican groups just decided to drop a cool million against Bruce Braley as the head of AFF is running for state senate in Iowa here, or something like that.  The money puts this one into greater viability, but I’m moving this one more because of Grassley and Branstad’s potentially huge coattails.  

    9.Iowa-2 – Likely Dem to Lean Dem – Same deal with Dave Loebsack, who is actually not leading by much if you believe internal polling from Marianne Miller-Meeks, his republican opponent.  This is the most democratic district in Iowa though.

    10.Indiana-9 – Leans Dem to Toss Up/Tilt Democratic – This one is more a national move and a hunch than anything else.  The news from the ground in IN-9 concerns me a bit.  I figure polling here would show a very close race here anyhow.  Dan Coats is going to romp here in the Senate race, which will help Young out against Hill.  

    11.Wisconsin-8 – Leans Dem to Toss Up/Tilt Democratic – The environment in Wisconsin didn’t look too bad until about 2 weeks ago, when the bottom totally fell out on Russ Feingold in the Senate race.  That’s hurt Kagen, who will have to deal with the upballot coattails of Ron Johnson and Scott Walker as well as his republican opposition.

    12.Alabama-2 – Toss Up/Tilt Democratic to Leans Dem – Six months ago, I thought Bobby Bright was dead in the water in this R+16 district, but with him basically voting like a republican and him campaigning on his voting with Boehner 80% of the time, I guess that’s good enough for the voters there.  Oh well, I guess a 20% democrat is better than 0%.

    13.Colorado-4 – Toss Up/Tilt Republican to Leans Rep – With the Senate race moving away from Team Blue, I’m more convinced that CO is just like NH, with it’s highly independent electorate destined to go republican this year and that the governor’s race is good just because it isn’t a 1v1.  For Markey, who’s stuck in largely republican territory, that means big trouble.  

    14.Florida-24 – Toss Up/Tilt Republican to Leans Rep – Obama’s plan for NASA I think really screwed over Kosmas as this district is very much dependent on that particular agency.  It’s hard to imagine her getting around that in this kind of environment, one that seems to be moving rightward in Florida thanks to Marco Rubio’s growing lead in the Senate race.

    15.New Hampshire-2 – Leans Rep to Toss Up/Tilt Republican – Kuster has been running fairly strongly since winning the democratic nomination, and the last few polls only have her a few points behind Bass.  This could end up being a close one in the end.  Ayotte will probably win here, but so will Lynch, so coattails will cancel each other.

    16.Pennsylvania-6 – Likely Rep to Leans Rep – Something strange is going on in Pennsylvania, and I can’t put my finger on it.  The state looks bad as a whole, but some republican incumbents like Dent and Pitts are struggling, and with as strong a campaign as Minan Trivedi is running, it wouldn’t surprise me if this race has moved a bit on Gerlach.  I’d like to see some polling here for sure.  

    17.Washington-8 – Likely Rep to Leans Rep – Susan Delbene has closed the gap on Dave Reichert in polling, prompting this rating change.  The district leans democratic as a whole, so even in a year like this, Reichert has to be on his toes.  

    18.Colorado-3 – Toss Up/Tilt D to Toss Up/Tilt R – This is a cliffhanger race right now, but I think with Colorado moving somewhat rightward in the last two weeks, that Scott Tipton is now barely favored over John Salazar.  This is definitely one to watch.

    19.Ohio-16 – Toss Up/Tilt D to Toss Up/Tilt R – Here’s another district where the race has been hard-fought and dirty between two relatively strong-armed candidates in Boccieri and Renacci.  With the Senate race falling out for Team Blue I’m putting Renacci in the lead, but again, this is going to be a fight all the way to the end.  

    20.Texas-23 – Toss Up/Tilt D to Toss Up/Tilt R – The republicans did a good job in the primary here, nominating a Hispanic that seems to have his stuff in order.  Canseco has been running relatively strong in polling as well, and with the governor’s race looking more of a longshot, I’m moving this one into the red column as well.  

    21.West Virginia-1 – Toss Up/Tilt D to Toss Up/Tilt R – It seems as though I move this seat every stinking update.  This move is prompted by Joe Manchin’s implosion in the Senate race.  WV is going to probably be a solid red state before too long the way things are going  there.

    22.Wisconsin-7 – Toss Up/Tilt D to Toss Up/Tilt R – This was probably the toughest move of all.  I think Duffy is probably ahead right now, but in this democratic district come election day, I just don’t see undecideds going for the reality tv linchpin over the extremely competent state senator.  I do expect Lassa to close strong and win here, but to the red column for now.  

    23.Georgia-8 – Toss Up/Tilt D to Toss Up Tilt R – This is more of a national move than anything else, but this is a district that is increasingly likely to flip as it appears that the democratic brand in Georgia is fairly toxic outside of Roy Barnes, who would be beating Nathan Deal for sure if it were not for the pesky “D” by his name.  

    2010 House Big Board (as of October 5 update)

    Solid Dem – 151 seats:

    AL-7, AZ-4, AZ-7, CA-1, CA-5, CA-6, CA-7, CA-8, CA-9, CA-10, CA-11, CA-12, CA-13, CA-14, CA-15, CA-16, CA-17, CA-23, CA-27, CA-28, CA-29, CA-30, CA-31, CA-32, CA-33, CA-34, CA-35, CA-36, CA-37, CA-38, CA-39, CA-43, CA-51, CA-53, CO-1, CO-2, CT-1, CT-2, CT-3, FL-3, FL-11, FL-17, FL-19, FL-20, FL-23, GA-4, GA-5, GA-13, HI-2, IL-1, IL-2, IL-3, IL-4, IL-5, IL-7, IL-8, IL-9, IN-1, IN-7, KY-3, MD-2, MD-3, MD-4, MD-5, MD-7, MD-8, MA-1, MA-2, MA-3, MA-4, MA-6, MA-7, MA-8, MA-9, ME-1, MI-5, MI-12, MI-13, MI-14, MI-15, MN-4, MN-5, MN-7, MS-2, MO-1, MO-3, MO-5, NV-1, NJ-1, NJ-6, NJ-8, NJ-9, NJ-10, NJ-13, NY-2, NY-4, NY-5, NY-6, NY-7, NY-8, NY-9, NY-10, NY-11, NY-12, NY-14, NY-15, NY-16, NY-17, NY-18, NY-21, NY-22, NY-27, NY-28, NC-1, NC-4, NC-12, NC-13, OH-9, OH-10, OH-11, OH-17, OK-2, OR-3, OR-4, PA-1, PA-2, PA-14, RI-1, RI-2, SC-6, TN-5, TN-9, TX-9, TX-15, TX-16, TX-18, TX-20, TX-25, TX-27, TX-28, TX-29, TX-30, VT-1, VA-3, VA-8, WA-1, WA-6, WA-7, WV-3, WI-2, WI-4

    Likely Dem – 30 seats:

    Arkansas-4 (Ross)

    Arizona-8 (Giffords)

    California-20 (Costa)

    Connecticut-4 (Himes)

    Delaware-1 (Open)

    Georgia-12 (Barrow)

    Illinois-12 (Costello)

    Indiana-2 (Donnelly)

    Louisiana-2 (Cao)

    Maine-2 (Michaud)

    Massachusetts-5 (Tsongas)

    Minnesota-1 (Walz)

    Minnesota-8 (Oberstar)

    North Carolina-2 (Etheridge)

    North Carolina-11 (Shuler)

    New Jersey-12 (Holt)

    New Mexico-3 (Lujan)

    New York-20 (Murphy)

    New York-25 (Maffei)

    Ohio-6 (Wilson)

    Oregon-1 (Wu)

    Pennsylvania-4 (Altmire)

    Pennsylvania-13 (Schwartz)

    Pennsylvania-17 (Holden)

    Virginia-9 (Boucher)

    Virginia-11 (Connelly)

    Utah-2 (Matheson)

    Washington-9 (Smith)

    Wisconsin-3 (Kind)

    Lean Dem – 28 seats:

    Alabama-2 (Bright)

    California-18 (Cardoza)

    California-47 (Sanchez)

    Colorado-7 (Perlmutter)

    Connecticut-5 (Murphy)

    Georgia-2 (Bishop)

    Hawaii-1 (Djou)

    Idaho-1 (Minnick)

    Iowa-1 (Braley)

    Iowa-2 (Loebsack)

    Illinois-10 (Open)

    Illinois-17 (Hare)

    Kentucky-6 (Chandler)

    Massachusetts-10 (Open)

    Michigan-9 (Peters)

    Mississippi-4 (Taylor)

    New Jersey-3 (Adler)

    New Mexico-1 (Heinrich)

    New York-13 (McMahon)

    New York-23 (Owens)

    North Carolina-7 (McIntyre)

    North Carolina-8 (Kissell)

    Ohio-13 (Sutton)

    Ohio-18 (Space)

    Oregon-5 (Schrader)

    Pennsylvania-12 (Critz)

    South Dakota-1 (Herseth)

    Tennessee-4 (Davis)

    Toss Up/Tilt Democratic – 13 seats:

    California-11 (McNerney)

    Florida-22 (Klein)

    Florida-25 (Open)

    Indiana-9 (Hill)

    Iowa-3 (Boswell)

    Missouri-4 (Skelton)

    Nevada-3 (Titus)

    New Hampshire-1 (Shea-Porter)

    New Mexico-2 (Teague)

    New York-1 (Bishop)

    New York-24 (Arcuri)

    Washington-2 (Larsen)

    Wisconsin-8 (Kagen)

    Toss Up/Tilt Republican – 26 seats:

    Arizona-1 (Kirkpatrick)

    Arkansas-1 (Open)

    Arizona-5 (Mitchell)

    California-3 (Lungren)

    Colorado-3 (Salazar)

    Florida-2 (Boyd)

    Florida-8 (Grayson)

    Florida-12 (Open)

    Georgia-8 (Marshall)

    Illinois-14 (Foster)

    Kansas-3 (Open)

    Maryland-1 (Kratovil)

    Michigan-7 (Schauer)

    Mississippi-1 (Childers)

    New Hampshire-2 (Open)

    New York-19 (Hall)

    North Dakota-1 (Pomeroy)

    Ohio-15 (Kilroy)

    Ohio-16 (Boccieri)

    Pennsylvania-3 (Dahlkemper)

    Pennsylvania-8 (Murphy)

    Pennsylvania-10 (Carney)

    South Carolina-5 (Spratt)

    Tennessee-8 (Open)

    Texas-23 (Rodriguez)

    West Virginia-1 (Open)

    Wisconsin-7 (Open)

    Lean Rep – 20 seats:

    Alabama-5 (Open)

    Arizona-3 (Open)

    California-45 (Bono Mack)

    Colorado-4 (Markey)

    Florida-24 (Kosmas)

    Illinois-11 (Halvorson)

    Indiana-8 (Open)

    Kansas-4 (Open)

    Michigan-1 (Open)

    Minnesota-6 (Bachmann)

    Ohio-1 (Driehaus)

    Pennsylvania-6 (Gerlach)

    Pennsylvania-7 (Open)

    Pennsylvania-11 (Kanjorski)

    Pennsylvania-15 (Dent)

    Virginia-2 (Nye)

    Virginia-5 (Perriello)

    Texas-17 (Edwards)

    Washington-3 (Open)

    Washington-8 (Reichert)

    Likely Rep – 12 seats:

    Arkansas-2 (Open)

    California-44 (Calvert)

    Indiana-3 (Open)

    Louisiana-3 (Open)

    Michigan-3 (Open)

    Missouri-8 (Emerson)

    Nebraska-2 (Terry)

    New York-29 (Open)

    Ohio-12 (Tiberi)

    Pennsylvania-16 (Pitts)

    South Carolina-2 (Wilson)

    Virginia-1 (Wittman)

    Solid Rep – 155 seats:

    AL-1, AL-3, AL-4, AL-6, AK-1, AZ-2, AZ-6, AR-3, CA-2, CA-4, CA-19, CA-21, CA-22, CA-24, CA-25, CA-26, CA-40, CA-41, CA-42, CA-46, CA-48, CA-49, CA-50, CA-52, CO-5, CO-6, FL-1, FL-4, FL-5, FL-6, FL-7, FL-9, FL-10, FL-13, FL-14, FL-15, FL-16, FL-18, FL-21, GA-1, GA-3, GA-7, GA-9, GA-10, GA-11, ID-2, IL-6, IL-13, IL-15, IL-16, IL-18, IL-19, IN-4, IN-5, IN-6, IA-4, IA-5, KS-1, KS-2, KY-1, KY-2, KY-4, KY-5, LA-1, LA-4, LA-5, LA-6, LA-7, MD-6, MI-2, MI-4, MI-6, MI-8, MI-10, MI-11, MN-2, MN-3, MS-3, MO-2, MO-6, MO-7, MO-9, MT-1, NE-1, NE-3, NV-2, NJ-2, NJ-5, NJ-4, NJ-7, NJ-11, NY-3, NY-26, NC-3, NC-5, NC-6, NC-9, NC-10, OH-2, OH-3, OH-4, OH-5, OH-7, OH-8, OH-14, OK-1, OK-3, OK-4, OK-5, OR-2, PA-5, PA-9, PA-18, PA-19, SC-1, SC-3, SC-4, TN-1, TN-2, TN-3, TN-6, TN-7, TX-1, TX-2, TX-3, TX-4, TX-5, TX-6, TX-7, TX-8, TX-10, TX-11, TX-12, TX-13, TX-14, TX-19, TX-21, TX-22, TX-24, TX-26, TX-31, TX-32, UT-1, UT-3, VA-4, VA-6, VA-7, VA-10, WA-4, WA-5, WV-2, WI-1, WI-5, WI-6, WY-1

    NY-23: Hoffman Drops Out, Name Will Stay on the Ballot

    Disappointing news:

    Doug Hoffman has dropped out of the race to represent New York’s 23rd Congressional District. Hoffman’s name will still appear on the ballot on the Conservative line; however, Hoffman said Tuesday morning that he wants his supporters to vote for Republican Matt Doheny.

    “Our nation is at a crossroads, and it is imperative that on Election Day we wrest control of Congress from Nancy Pelosi and the Democrat majority,” Hoffman said in a prepared statement.

    Of course, Doug Hoffman could still end up having a serious impact on the race, whether he campaigns or not. Recall that John Powers, whose name appeared on the NY-26 ballot as the Working Families Party nominee, still collected 5% of the vote despite his wholehearted endorsement of Democratic nominee Alice Kryzan and his subsequent efforts to remove his name from the ballot.

    Still, it’s very sad to see the cat actually escape from the dryer…