SSP Daily Digest: 1/21

CT-Sen: If you think the Chris Murphy/Susan Bysiewicz primary is an open-and-shut case, guess again: Ted Kennedy Jr.’s name seems to be getting a lot of mention now too. If the 49-year-old lawyer does get elected, if would bring the Kennedy-free interregnum in Congress to a close after only two years. Meanwhile, I don’t think anybody was expecting him to give up his leadership slot for a run, but Rep. John Larson has confirmed he’s not running for Senate, and isn’t endorsing… yet. Rep. Chris Murphy seems to know that this race, with its expensive media markets, is going to cost a lot of money; he’s putting a $10 million figure out there, although that of course could go even higher if he finds himself in a general election against Linda McMahon. Luckily for Murphy, MoveOn seems to be backing him up; while they didn’t explicitly endorse, they e-mailed their donor base on his behalf today. If he can corner the “netroots candidate” niche in the primary, obviously that’ll help him go a long way toward that money goal.

MI-Sen: Could Saul Anuzis, who just lost his RNC chair bid, wind up being the Michigan Senate nominee for the GOP in 2012? Apparently that’s an option on the table for him, although he tells Dave Catanese he hasn’t “ruled it out or in.” Anuzis is a primarily behind-the-scenes player, though, who’s never won an election before. At least that gives him that much in common with Tim Leuliette, the only other person to have expressed much interest so far. Also, this isn’t exactly Senate related, but here’s another Greg Giroux special: a database showing the Michigan governor’s race breakdown by current congressional district.

MN-Sen: Marty Seifert, the state Rep. who lost the 2010 Republican nomination to the further-right Tom Emmer, has declined to run for either the 2012 or 2014 Senate races, leaving the state GOP still casting about for anyone to go up against Amy Klobuchar. They’re still laying the groundwork for a hard run, though, already launching a new website trying to tar the often-moderate Klobuchar with the dreaded “liberal.”

NV-Sen: John Ensign confirms yet again that he’s running for re-election (at least for now), though he says he expects a primary challenge and will have difficulty regaining the voters’ trust. The main thing, though, he’ll have difficulty is regaining money… he raised only $19K last quarter for his campaign account. (His legal fees are another story: he raised $550K for his legal defense fund last quarter, and spending $97K of that on lawyers. Likely rival Dean Heller, for his part, said at a press conference that he’s keeping an eye on the race, but without a specific timetable for an announcement.

RI-Sen: One well-known name (at least locally) who does seem interested in the Senate race (which so far hasn’t drawn any takers) is Alan Hassenfeld, the former CEO of locally-based toymaker Hasbro. (Does that make him the real-life inspiration for Mr. Weed on the Family Guy?) At any rate, Hassenfeld is registered independent and contributed to and voted for the Moderate Party’s gubernatorial candidate last year, so he seems like he might be running on their line, not for the GOP.

VA-Sen: The rest of the Democratic A-list in Virginia seems to be shying away from the Senate race, meaning either Jim Webb is pretty certain to run again or else we’re in a world of hurt. Terry McAuliffe, who in the end acquitted himself well in the ’09 gubernatorial race, says he won’t run if Webb doesn’t (joining Tim Kaine in the “no thanks” pile). That’s not a surprise, in that McAuliffe’s interest in another whack at the gubernatorial race in 2013 is well-known.

LA-Gov: We’ve been seeing a lot of polls with strange configurations lately, and this one from Market Research Insight (not a pollster we seem to have any track record from) may take the cake. As one might expect, they find Bobby Jindal looking pretty safe for re-election, but they test him against both Mary Mitch Landrieu (as a D) and John Kennedy (as an R) in what, I assume, is supposed to be a jungle primary format (despite no indications from either Landrieu or Kennedy that they’re interested). At any rate, it’s Jindal 51, Landrieu 25, Kennedy 10. More generically, they find Jindal with a 49/40 re-elect number.

WV-Gov: Now this is highly unusual. Faced with a court mandate to hold a special election this year, acting Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin (the main person wanting to kick the election back to 2012), has declared that the special election won’t be in November as one might expect, but rather on Oct. 4! The primaries will be held on June 20.

KY-AG: After some last minute rumors this week that he wasn’t going to run again, Jack Conway announced today that he’s filing for re-election as Attorney General and putting together a new campaign team. Needless to say, that’s a relief for those of us who want to keep building a bench in and contesting Kentucky.

Chicago mayor: There’s a new Chicago Tribune/WGN poll out of the mayoral race, and like other recent polls, it shows Rahm Emanuel with a big lead and continuing to climb, but still short of the 50% mark at which he could avoid a runoff. The poll finds him at 44, with Carol Mosely Braun (last seen sniping at Bill Clinton, telling him he’s “turning his back” on minorities) at 21, Gery Chico at 16, and Miguel del Valle at 7. Emanuel is also announcing his financial haul, which, as you might guess, is huge (Senate-sized, really): $10.6 million raised through mid-January. With that in mind, he’s sparing no expense when it comes to advertising, rolling out a $150K ad buy during the Bears/Packers game this weekend.

Oregon Redistricting R+1?

Here is a possible scenario for redistricting in Oregon. I followed county lines and geographical areas as close as possible and something like this could actually pass the legislature.

Oregon1 19-43-26

CD1: PVI of D+4 – David Wu ultimately could have gone down in this configuration or barley squeaked by, if not in 2012 due to current events. I took out all of Multnomah County and added Tillamook County, which went for Dudley in the 2010 gubernatorial election. Dudley would have won this district by a small margin.

Oregon1

CD2: PVI of R+8 – This district is perfect for Greg Walden, it is a few points less Republican than before as the district includes east Lane County and Springfield. A tea partier might struggle if Walden decides to retire but this is still a solid GOP district for years to come.

oregon2

CD3: PVI of D+26 – This district is even more Democratic than before and contains only Multnomah County and parts of liberal Clackamas County (Gladstone, Milwaukie). There should be no shortage of electing Democrats in the future.

oregon3

CD4: PVI of EVEN – The district is a true swing district as I have eliminated Springfield and east Lane County from the district and added Jackson County and the the entire Benton County to it. As it stands Peter DeFazio would have to run against Greg Walden, but he could easily move to Eugene. Art Robinson would have possibly won in 2010 but would be in trouble in 2012 if it is a strong Dem year. A moderate like Rick Dancer would be win election after election if he chose to run.

oregon4

CD5: PVI of R+2 – This district includes the entire Clackamas County except with the poor parts of Gladstone and Milwaukie, but also includes a more liberal Lincoln County on the coast. Scott Bruun would have won against Kurt Schrader in 2010, and is no longer considered a swing district.

oregon5

My take on the GOP tide on Florida’s Legislative races

Here’s my belated analysis of last November’s results on selected Florida legislative races:

State Senate:

SD8 (Dem Target)

Deborah Gianoulis, the Dem candidate is well-known and decently funded.  However, Sen. John Thrasher is a household name in state GOP circles (he’s one time state house speaker and more recently, a caretaker state GOP chair), his incumbancy and the First Coast (St. Augustine, Jacksonville etc.) district’s GOP-lean is enough for him to hold on comfortably.

SD14 (Dem Target)

The Dem candidate here, Perry C. McGriff Jr. is a former one-term from state representative from  Gainesville.  He may be white and more moderate than Ed Jennings, the 2006 candidate and also from Gainesville.  However, incumbent Steve Olerich is a former Alachua County (Gainesville) Sheriff, and the district’s makeup mean that a Gainesville Dem is a liability in the rural portions of the district, unless he/she is a Rod Smith-type law-and-order candidate.  As the rural parts of the district (including rural Alachua outside Gainesville, which contributed to the ouster of an incumbent Dem County Commissioner, covered in a upcoming diary) turned hard right and the two candidates shared the Alachua County base, the Dem was held to a narrow victory there while losing some rural counties at a 2-1 margin, enabling Oelrich to hold on by 54%-46%

SD16 (GOP Target)

Sen. Charlie Justice’s ill-fated challange to US Rep. Bill CW Young for CD10 left this open seat highly vulnerable.  The GOP’s candidate, former Sen. Jack Latvala is relatively moderate, has high name ID and extremely well-funded (he’s the ex-husband of Pinellas County Commissioner Susan Latvala). He probably represented about the same area in his previous tenure (Please confirm this).  On the other hand, the Dem picked Nina Hayden, a young AA female and a first-term Pinellas County School Board member.  Her woeful fundraising capability, thin resume, race (sort of) and Alex Sink’s underperformance in the Tampa Bay area mean that Hayden never stood much chance.  And Latvala returned to the State Senate in the biggest landslide of all prominent State Senate races last year.

SD25 (Dem Target) and SD27 (GOP Target)

The Tea Party surge in coastal Palm Beach and Broward counties has probably undermined the Dem’s offensive effort at the legislative seats there. While this is the most GOP-friendly area in South Florida outside Cuban portions of Miami-Dade county, the GOPer’s tends to be strongly pro-business but socially moderate.  However, as fiscal issues became salient during last November, the GOP/Tea Party coalition were able to ride the popular dissent to unseat US Rep. Ron Klein in CD22 and undermine the supposedly solid effort from State Rep. Kelly Skidmore to take now-CFO Jeff Attwater’s open seat.  The GOP victor, Ellyn Bogdanoff, is admittedly a powerful State Rep. from coastal Broward and extremely well-funded as well.  More of the same happened in HD91 (Bogdanoff’s open seat) and Borard County Commission District 4 (more on that in a later diary).

As for SD27, this heavily gerrymandered seat formed with leftover parts of various counties happened to be the the most swingy State Senate seat. Campaigns there are mainly fought at two fronts, the Dem-heavy western Palm Beach County and the GOP-friendly eastern Lee County.  When Dave Aronberg (my former State Sen.)faced Lee County GOPer’s in his races, his is able to win the Palm Beach portion hands down (by 2-1 to 3-1) and hold the GOPer to a narrow margin in the Lee portion.  In last year, however, both candidate a bites are from the Palm Beach portion, thereby undercutting the advantage for the Dem candidate  (one-term State Rep. Kevin Rader)quite a bit (less than 2-1).  Coupled with the highly energized GOP

vote in SW Florida (Lee Conty), where the GOP candidate, former Wellington Councilwoman Lizbeth Benacquisto won by more than 2-1; and a controversial ad from Rader’s camp attacking Benacquisto’s opposition to abortion rights using her history as a rape victim that deemed to be off-putting for many female voters, the GOP was finally able to pick up this marginal seat that eluded two Lee County pols (County Commissioner Frank Mann and freshman State Rep. Matt Caldwell from HD73) with a Palm Beach candidate.

State House:

HD11 (GOP Target)

The Dem incumbent Debbie Boyd seemed to a victim of her HD’s hard turn to the right and suffered some spillovers from US Rep. Allen Boyd’s ouster from CD2 (In Suwannee and Lafayette Counties situated in HD11, where he got whipped by now US Rep. Steve Southerland)  She has, however, lost every county in the district (even in the Alachua county portion, supposedly the most Democratic part of that HD).  The right turn in rural Alachua, together with a GOP candidate with an elected office significant geographical base (Columbia County Commissioner Elizabeth Porter) cause a GOP pickup to materialize.

HD’s 44,47,57 and 60 (Dem Targets)

These three suburban Hillsborough County seats (plus one primarily Hernando County seat) are among the most prominent Democratic targets in the State House, and all feature semi-serious to serious Dem candidates.  Two of them (in HD’s 47 and 60), however, faced well-known/legacy GOP opponents and the third (HD57) has her own baggage, and a forth (HD44) faced an incumbent in more hostile territory than the other 3.

In HD44, former Hernando County Commissioner Diane Rowden is supposed to be a formidable candidate with strong local roots.  However, the circumstances behind her ouster in 2008 has probably left a bitter taste in the voters’ mouth, and Hernando County’s turn to the hard right under GOP’s chair Blaise Ingoglia’s influence is a huge drag on her campaign.  Together with portions of Sumter (itself a hard-right county dominated by older voters) and Pasco (also undergoing a rightward turn), incumbent Rep. Robert Schenck didn’t have to sweat for a 3rd term.

In HD47, the GOP candidate James Grant is the son of former State Sen. John Grant and he is able to take advantage of this connection (and the district’s GOP-tilt?) to carry the day over the supposedly well-funded Dem Michael Steinberg.

In HD57, connection to a local political scion seem to work the other way.  Stacy Frank, the Dem candidate is the daughter of well-liked former County Commissioner and current Clerk of the Circuit Court in Hillsborough County Pat Frank.  She is well funded and is supposedly competitive in a open-seat situation in a swing district.  Her work as a lobbyist behind the construction of cell phone towers on school grounds, however, seems to attract a dedicated cadre of opponents.  Together with the backlash against the “(Democratic) legacy candidate label” and Alex’s Sink under performance in the county, all these contribute to her loss to Dana Young, a GOP stay-at-home mom.

In HD60, the GOPer is former Tampa City Councilman Shawn Harrison.  He has the name recognition, elected political experience and geographical base to his advantage in his race against Dem Russ Patterson, and holds the open seat for his party comfortably.

(Can jncca, author of the bellweather county diary featuring Hillsborough County, Florida look up which towns do HD’s 47, 57 and 60 contain and help me to determine the political complexion there?  Thanks!)

HD’s 51 and 52 (GOP Targets)

This pair of neighboring Pinellas swing seats are the most remarkable of the 5 GOP’s pickups (all by defeating incumbents) in the state house, as they occur in territories probably carried by Alex Sink in her gubernatorial race.  Both Dem incumbents have two terms under their belt, but each committed a cardinal sin to enable GOP pickups.  

In Rep. Janet Long’s case (HD51), a controversial ad featuring her son, a decorated veteran, questioning GOP candidate Larry Ahern’s military credentials seems to have backfired, while Rep. Bill Heller’s campaign in HD52 seems to be caught asleep until it’s too late to stem GOPer Jeff Brandes surge.

HD’s 69 (GOP Target) and 73 (Dem Target)

In this pair of SW Florida seats, Rep. Keith Fitzgerald’s ouster from Sarasota’s HD69 proved to be the most painful for the House Dems, as his is an extremely smart professor from the New College of Florida and is pretty well-regarded for a Dem in a GOP-heavy (albeit politically moderate)region.  His GOP opponent, Ray Pilon, is no slouch either; as he is a former Sarasota County Commissioner.Pilon’s experience, geographical base together with Rick Scott’s coattail in SW Florida worked to pip him to the top by the 2nd narrowest margin among the GOP pickups (only Jeff Brandes’s is narrower, and HD52 is believed to be a tilt Dem district, while HD69 is tilt GOP)

In Cole Peacock, the Dems has the most serious State House candidate for a Lee County seat in years.  However, the Scott coattail and Lee County’s GOP lean proves too much for even a business-friendly Dem like Peacock to overcome, allowing Dave Aronberg’s 2008 GOP opponent in the SD27 race, Matt Caldwell to become the new Rep. after Nick Thompson vacated the least Republican seat in Lee County to pursuit a Circuit Court Judgeship.

HD’s 81 (GOP Target) and 83 (Dem Target)

In this pair of Treasure Coast/Northern Palm Beach swing seats, both Dems (incumbent Rep Adam Fetterman in HD81 and open seat challeger Mark Marciano in HD83) are well-funded.  In HD81, however, the foreclosure crisis seems to enable the rise of Tea Party sentiment and former State Rep. Gayle Harrell was able to capitalize on the GOP lean of the Martin County portion to regain her old seat, inflicting one of the only 2 double-digit defeats among the 5 Dem incumbent ousted (Only Debbie Boyd’s margin of loss is larger)

In HD83 vacated by Carl Domino due to his unsuccessful State Senate candidacy, the GOP candidate Pat Rooney is independently wealthy.  Hailing from the family owning Pittsburgh Steelers and being a brother of US Rep. Tom Rooney from CD16 (which overlaps with parts of HD83) don’t hurt either, and all these translates into a easy GOP hold.

HD’s 87 and 91 (Dem Targets)

These marginal coastal Palm Beach-Broward seats are supposedly ripe for Dems’ pickling in open situations.  However, the Dem’s frequet change of candidates in HD87 (due to the pursuit of neighboring, more Democratic HD86 by their original challenger Lori Berman due to Ted Deutsch election to CD19 and Maria Sach’s ascent to SD30); coupling with an experienced GOP candidate (former Boca Raton City Councilman Bill Hager); translates this into another easy GOP hold.

In HD91, while both GOPer George Moraitis and Dem

Barbra Anne Stern are political newcomers and serious candidates, the coattails from CD22 and SD25 proved to be enough for Moraitis to breeze through.

HD’s 112, 115, 117, 119 (Dem Targets)

Any path for the Dems to achieve relative parity with the GOP in the State House runs through open Hispanic-held seats in Miami Dade County; and they have to bank on generational shifts among Cuban Americans, as younger Cubans may be less obsessed with hard-line policies on Cuba and more focused on economic justice issues faced by many Hispanics.  In last November, Marco Rubio’s US Senate candidacy seems to cause these Democratic efforts to become naught, as he seems to cause the Hispanic voter turnout in Miami Dade to tilt older, Cuban and more conservative.

At least in HD112, the Dems has a candidate with elected experience in Doral City Councilwoman Sandra Ruiz, and she actually carried the Broward portion of the district.  However, her GOP opponent Jeanette Nunez dominated in the far more populous Miami Dade portion of this HD by about 2-1 and carried the day by the virtue of this margin.

Lisa Lesperance in HD117 is decently funded, but she runs in one of the most Republican Hispanic district outside Hialeah, and GOPer Michael Bileca held the seat vacated by Julio Robaina easily.  The same can be said for Jeffrey “Doc” Solomon in HD115, plus he has an ethnicity problem by running as a white candidate in a 65% Hispanic (2000 census figure) district, allowing Jose Felix Diaz to breeze through as the GOP candidate.

The most heart-breaking loss among these Democratic offensive efforts falls to Katie Edwards, a youthful executive director of the Dade County Farm Bureau.  She ran a well-funded campaign in the least Hispanic and least Republican seats held by a Hispanic GOP Rep (HD119).  However, she also ran into ethnicity problem in a 64.5% Hispanic district (2000 figures)  by being a white candidate, allowing GOPer Frank Artiles to succeed Juan Zapata, the first Colombian-American in the Florida State House.

HD’s 107 and 120 (GOP Targets)

Former State Rep. Gustavo A. Barreiro falls barely short in his effort to wrest his old seat from his successor, incumbent Dem Rep. Luis Garcia.  Garcia is probably saved by his least Republican Hispanic -Majority HD in Miami Dade, his extensive civic bond  in Miami Beach and his Cuban ethnicity.

The GOP tried to claim the scalp of the incoming Democratic leader Ron Saunders with former Key West Mayor Morgan J. McPherson.  Their efforts falls well short, as Saunders carried Monroe County handily even though he lost the Miami Dade County portion.  His political savvy from his previous service at the State House also helps.

One last not-so-competitive, but interesting race:

The Dems targeted HD26 opened up by Pat Patterson’s failed CFO candidacy by running  former deputy superintendent of Volusia County schools Tim Huth, banking on his civic ties to create a pickup opportunity.  However, in Ormond Beach Mayor Fred Costello, the GOP got its trump card with a candidate who has a political base locally and easily holds this open seat.

Conclusion:

It seems that in the recession-plagued Sunshine State, fiscal issues and job creation are in the forefront of voters’ minds, and the average Florida suburbanite’s anti-tax and pro-business sensibilities seem to prevail over concerns about the anti-immigration, service-cutting and socially conservative rhetorics form November’s crop of GOP legislative candidates, giving the GOP veto-proof majorities for the 1st time since Reconstruction.  

My only complaints are that voters seems to be ignorant to hypocritical when it comes to check and balance; as they seem to exercise that desire only against the party they oppose (National Dems) and see no problems when the party they favor dominates at the state and/or local level (Florida’s GOP).  Can anyone explain this irony? And please with my lengthy diary.  Thanks!

31, Asian American male, Dem-tilting Independent, FL-19 (former), MS-02 (present)

3 Majority-Minority Districts in Arizona

Arizona is gaining a ninth congressional district this year, and it is certain to be based in the Phoenix suburbs where the population has exploded recently. Generally it is believed that the new district will be Republican-leaning as are most of the Phoenix burbs, but it is actually possible to draw a compact new majority-minority district in the Phoenix area.

Phoenix Metro Area:

The new 9th district (light blue) is 39% White and 50% Hispanic. It encompasses east Phoenix areas drawn mainly out of the 2nd and 3rd districts with a little taken out of the 4th and 7th as well. To make up for that population loss in other districts, the 4th has taken on Tempe, which increases the white percentage in the district to 29% but those are mostly liberal white voters so it should be okay. The 3rd takes on some areas that had previously been in the 5th, and the 5th grabs Chandler from the 6th, evening out the population in the Phoenix area. Some other minor changes have taken place across the state to even out population changes, but nothing major that would change the partisan balance of power in these districts.

This new plan actually includes some things that conservatives could like. After losing Tempe and gaining Chandler, the previously swingy 5th district is now probably solidly conservative. The 2nd and 3rd have lost a considerable portion of their Hispanic populations, making them much safer for the GOP (this should help scandal-tainted rep Ben Quayle). And the new 9th is probably competitive for the GOP in a good year. I would consider it slightly leaning D, but with the gap in turnout between white and hispanic voters and the fact that SB 1070 may have changed the racial demographics slightly here since the census was taken mean that in a low-turnout midterm election this district may be close to a tossup. The only reason that the GOP would have reason to fight this district is that there is a possibility Rep Trent Franks has been redistricted into the 9th district under this map. He lives in Glendale, most of which is in this new 9th district. I highly doubt he would want to run in a majority-minority district, so he would probably fight this plan heavily. If this was a VRA-obligation, however, that might not matter.

As to whether the VRA requires this district, it may be open to interpretation. Important to note is that Arizona is one of the states that requires section 5 preclearance by the DOJ, so the Obama admin has a good chance to argue for the creation of a new majority-minority district if they wanted to. This district is pretty compact, but I think that Arizona could still make the case that you have to go out of your way to draw something like this. Overall I’m not sure if the Obama admin wants to challenge this in court, and I’m not sure if the Roberts court would be receptive to arguments for a new VRA district in Arizona, but I hope that the Obama admin at least tries here, because there is a chance they could succeed.  

Random Antics: Hypothetical Connecticut Redistricting

Well, I started thinking about ways the Connecticut Democratic Party can get Ted Kennedy, Jr., into politics without potentially screwing over Rep. Chris Murphy of CT-05, the bold young soul in a bid for the Senate seat held by retiring independent Sen. Joseph Lieberman. And I thought, “Well, what about starting him off with a nice House seat?” And that evolved into wondering about exactly how to negate the fact that CT-05 represents a pickup opportunity for the Republicans, provided they field a good candidate, now that Murphy is moving on to (hopefully) bigger and better things.

I came up with this map.

What I’ve done here is I’ve basically cracked the existing CT-05, giving pieces of it to CT-01 (pink), CT-04 (red), and the new south-central-based incarnation of CT-05 (blue). I can’t guarantee Rep. Jim Himes in CT-04 is going to be thrilled, considering he had a closer-than-expected reelection campaign against Dan Debicella (drawn into Rep. Rosa DeLauro’s CT-03 [purple] on this map); Rep. John Larson in CT-01 should be fine, considering the sizable Democratic tilt of Hartford. I think Democrats will have to concede one district as “fair fight” and hope the state’s strong Democratic proclivities and a mediocre Republican bench are enough to keep it in friendly hands, and I think they’d rather trust an incumbent member of Congress to hold it down rather than the likes of First Selectman Mary Glassman, whose ticket didn’t even come close to prevailing in the Democratic gubernatorial primary last year. Having two close districts, as they did last year, is a bit uncomfortable when the Republicans remain capable of winning statewide at least on the state government level.

I’m not too knowledgeable about Connecticut politics in particular. My idea here is that by drawing CT-03 a bit west, CT-04 a bit north, CT-01 over into the northwestern corner of the state (making it much more compact in the process), and CT-02 more into the north-central than the south-central part of the state, I could create a new, open-seat CT-05 without jeopardizing the Democrats’ control of the congressional delegation. This CT-05 is specifically drawn for Kennedy, who lives in Branford (just east of the new boundary with CT-03, in the vicinity of New Haven). With a seat tailor-made for his political debut, Kennedy might be less tempted to upset the apple cart by making a damn-the-torpedoes run at the Democratic nomination-a scenario the Democratic establishment in Connecticut and the DSCC would surely like to avoid.

SSP Daily Digest: 1/20

CA-Sen: Does Meg Whitman seriously not have anything better to do with her money? Rumors are bubbling up that she’s actually considering a return to politics… which, if it’s going to be in 2012, would mean a run against Dianne Feinstein (which, of course, would mean a run against the state’s most popular politician in a presidential year, instead of an open seat run in a down year for Dems).

MT-Sen: Republican businessman (and one-time LG candidate) Steve Daines did some serious fundraising in the last few months since announcing his candidacy, hauling in $225K since his announcement, with the majority of that money coming from in-state. The main target he’s probably trying to scare with that money isn’t Jon Tester (who has about $500K CoH), but Republican Rep. Denny Rehberg, who’s usually the GOPer most associated with this race but has sounded noncommittal so far; I’m sure Daines would like to see Rehberg stay out of the Senate primary. Rehberg has $594K. One other Montana Senate item, although it hopefully won’t be an issue any time soon: the Montana legislature is considering whether, in the event of a Senate vacancy, to switch over from gubernatorial appointment to a fast special election instead.

OH-Sen: Quinnipiac has a poll today of the Ohio Senate race, but, like their Pennsylvania poll last month, the lack of an obvious Republican opponent means the matchup is just against Generic R. Sherrod Brown does pretty well against G.R., especially considering that actual named candidates tend not to do as well as generics at least at this stage in the game; Brown leads 45-33, and has an approval of 45/25. This is definitely a race where we shouldn’t start celebrating short of the end zone, though, considering that PPP recently found Brown in much more of a pickle, and even Qpac points out he’s far from the 50% mark and in “decent but not overwhelming” shape. The Cleveland Plain Dealer’s writeup of the poll spends a lot of ink talking up Rep. Steve LaTourette as a possible GOP candidate; while he’d bring some geographic strengths to the race that other GOPers might not, there hasn’t been any indication so far that he’s interested.

RI-Sen, RI-Gov: Sheldon Whitehouse looks like he’s dodged at least one credible candidate in 2012; John Robitaille, who came close in the 2010 gubernatorial race (although that was only because of the center-left vote split between Lincoln Chafee and Frank Caprio) and has expressed interest in running for something else, now seems focused on a retry in the 2014 gubernatorial race. Partly, he admits, that’s because running statewide as a Republican in Rhode Island in a presidential year would be a kamikaze mission.

WV-Gov: SoS Natalie Tennant has gotten endless mentions as a likely gubernatorial candidate, but with the clock ticking to the now-only-nine-months-away special election, she’s made her candidacy official as of yesterday.

FL-25: OK, here’s a trivia question for you all (which I genuinely don’t know the answer to)… which House freshman holds the record for the shortest partial term, before having to resign in shame? (I’m wondering if Eric Massa actually holds the record, but I’d bet there’s some historical example of someone accomplishing it in less than one year.) The reason I ask is that things seem to be moving into a new phase in the investigation into David Rivera, and whether piles of money paid from a dog track that he helped, to his mother’s marketing company, found their way into his pockets. The Miami-Dade County’s state’s attorney, Katherine Fernandez Rundle, just turned the case over to the Florida Dept. of Law Enforcement. Although that sounds ominous, some observers are seeing the move as a downgrade, though, as the FDLE may not devote the same level of resources to it; Rundle has been viewed as a possible Dem challenger in this district, and may be punting the case to avoid it becoming a liability for her later.

MI-15: Rep. John Dingell (84 years old) says he’ll be back for an unprecedented 30th term in the House, running again in 2012. One important detail, though: whatever district he’s running in, it won’t be the 15th next time, as Michigan is about to lose a seat. Dingell has survived multiple bad redistrictings over the decades, including beating fellow Democratic Rep. Lynn Rivers in a 2002 primary mashup. (Thanks to Greg Giroux, we know now that Dingell will pass Robert Byrd in all-time legislative service in June of 2013.)

Mayors: Two mayoral races are in the news today, although both aren’t up for grabs until 2012. Two-term incumbent Buddy Dyer (who used to be the Democratic leader in the Florida state Senate) says he’s going to run for another term as mayor of Orlando. He also mentioned some vague gubernatorial aspirations. Also, Portland, Oregon will elect a new mayor in ’12; all the action will be in the Democratic primary, where it’s not certain that Sam Adams (damaged by a sex scandal several years ago) will run for a second term. One interesting possibility mentioned: former Senate candidate Steve Novick, who gained a lot of netroots attention during his ’08 Dem primary run, is seriously considering a run.

Votes: As you’re probably already aware, the Dems held the defections down to three on yesterday’s HCR repeal vote. It was the three likeliest suspects, given the combination of their dark-red districts and previous statements on the matter: OK-02’s Dan Boren, NC-07’s Mike McIntyre, and AR-04’s Mike Ross. UT-02’s Jim Matheson has the reddest district of any “no” vote, but he’s a member of leadership and may be sanguine about getting a better district out of redistricting next year (or just figuring that the worst is past).

Redistricting: Arizona legislative Republicans sort of succeeded with their quest to get three members of the state redistricting panel kicked off (on the grounds that they were serving in other political offices); however, it was a partial success because only two of the three challenged members got kicked off by the state supreme court and the one they were really targeting the most didn’t get kicked off. Also, if you’re in Virginia and you’re a college student, the state is having a redistricting contest. No word on whether you absolutely have to be part of a team or can do it individually, but the winners get a cash prize and get to present the design for new congressional and legislative maps to the Governor’s entirely-nonbinding advisory panel. (Actually, it looks like it’s too late to start a team if your college doesn’t already have one, but your college probably already has a team which you might be able to join. See here for the details.)

Quick Bipartisan CT Map

Connecticut is (I think) a bipartisan commission state, so I decided to draw a bipartisan/court map really quickly. This is a rough draft I whipped up in 5 minutes in response to a comment in a thread, but it follows 3 principles:

1) Make 4 solid D seats

2) Make 1 winnable seat for the Republicans

3) Split towns as little as possible and follow obvious natural and governmental boundaries.

This is a very rough draft, so please comment!

Statewide:

CT

1. John Larson (D-East Hartford)

CT_1

Counties: Parts of Hartford

Larson’s district shrinks a bit to just the Hartford Metro, gets more reasonably shaped, and probably becomes even more Dem. Adds New Britain and loses the tail into NW Conn. Guess: D+15.

2. Joe Courtney (D-Vernon)

CT_2

Counties: New London, Tolland, and Windham; Parts of Hartford and Middlesex

The big change here is that I wanted to use the Connecticut River as a natural boundary, and that lops off some more rural areas East of New Haven in exchange for some areas closer in to Hartford. Probably about the same. Guess: D+7.

3. Rosa DeLauro (D-New Haven)

CT_3

Counties: Parts of New Haven and Middlesex

Trades out a little bit of the Gold Coast for Meriden and some areas east of New Haven. Guess: D+8.

4. Jim Himes (D-Greenwich)

CT_4

Counties: Parts of Fairfield

Loses some of its Northeast (which I think is somewhat more conservative) and expands a little east of Bridgeport, but otherwise there’s not much to do here. Guess: D+6.

5. OPEN

CT_5

Counties: Litchfield; Parts of Fairfield, Hartford, and New Haven.

Loses New Britain and Meriden and adds some more rural pieces in the Northwest and North of the Gold Coast. Mary Glassman and Sam Caliguiri live here. Guess: EVEN.

More Mississippi Party Switching

Looks like the Democratic Party’s fight in Mississippi just got a little more difficult today.  Two State House members switched to the Republicans, bringing the Democrats majority to only 16 seats.  One seat in the House is still vacant, as Steven Palazzo vacated his State House seat to succeed Congressman Gene Taylor in Mississippi’s 4th Congressional District.

http://www.clarionledger.com/a…

CT-Sen: Murphy is In

It’s on:

Rep. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.) jumped into the 2012 Senate race Thursday, saying in a statement that he decided to run to offer “a fresh, progressive voice.” …

“I’ve decided to run for the United States Senate in 2012 because I believe that I can be a stronger voice for the issues that matter to Connecticut, like creating good jobs and ending these costly wars, in the Senate,” Murphy’s statement read.

Murphy said entering the race was a “tough decision” but that ultimately, “what I’ve heard is that people feel that the Senate simply doesn’t work anymore — it’s become an unjustifiable barrier to positive change, and Connecticut needs a fresh, progressive voice there that will push for both policy and institutional reform.”

Murphy, a great friend of SSP, joins ex-SoS Susan Bysiewicz in the Democratic primary fray. We’re still waiting to hear whether 2nd District Rep. Joe Courtney, who is also reportedly interested in a run, will throw down, as well.

UPDATE: Here’s Murphy’s announcement video, referencing his relentless door-knocking habits:

There’s also word today of a poll giving Murphy a 47-35 lead over Bysiewicz in the Dem primary, although we haven’t seen a memo yet. This article says it’s an internal poll from Murphy, but a source on the campaign tells us the numbers aren’t theirs.

While we’re girding for a major Dem primary, it’s sounding like there’s going to be some mortal combat on the GOP side too, with potentially as many as four retreads slugging it out. Ex-Rep. Rob Simmons, who lost to Linda McMahon in last year’s Senate primary, is already firing shots across her bow, although it’s unclear whether he intends to run or is just trying to kneecap her so someone else gets a try. And while former Gov. candidate Tom Foley’s interest has been known, now the guy he defeated in his primary, former Lt. Gov. Michael Fedele, is also saying he’s considering the Senate race too.

Finally, there’s the little matter of CT-05, which, unless Murphy abruptly reverses course, is our first confirmed open seat of 2012. While this district (which includes culturally-conservative blue-collar cities like Waterbury and New Britain, plus a lot of wealthy second-home territory in the state’s northwest corner) is a Dem-leaning seat, it’s the closest Connecticut comes to a swing seat, at D+2. The GOP sounds like they’d like a return engagement from former state Sen. and Waterbury mayor Sam Caligiuri, who got within 8 points of Murphy last year. Potential Dem candidates mentioned include state House speaker Chris Donovan and Simsbury First Selectwoman (and Ned Lamont’s LG candidate) Mary Glassman.