Texas congressional house candidates – an update

Candidate filing in Texas closes on January 2; less than a week away and we still have a number of congressional districts with no Democratic candidate!

*** SOME GAPS FILLED BUT MORE CANDIDATES NEEDED ***

Once again go and take a look at the  

2008 Race Tracker Wiki.

Below the fold for details………….

Texas has 32 Congressional House districts. 13 are held by Democrats of which 10 have officially filed as follows: (Note that I have included the Cook PVI scores for each district also.)

TX-09 – D+21,

TX-15 – D+3,

TX-16 – D+9,

TX-17 – R+18,

TX-22 – R+15,

TX-23 – R+4,

TX-27 – R+1,

TX-28 – R+1,

TX-29 – D+8,

TX-30 – D+26,

The following 3 Democratic incumbents haven’t filed yet but are expected to do so.

TX-18 – D+23,

TX-20 – D+8,

TX-25 – D+1,

That leaves 19 Republican held districts and 7 of these have filed candidates:

TX-06 – R+15,

TX-07 – R+16,

TX-10 – R+13,

TX-13 – R+18,

TX-26 – R+12,

TX-31 – R+15,

TX-32 – R+11,

5 further districts have confirmed candidates that are yet to file officially:

TX-03 – R+17,

TX-04 – R+17,

TX-08 – R+20,

TX-11 – R+25,

TX-24 – R+15,

And two further districts have unconfirmed candidates:

TX-05 – R+16,

TX-21 – R+13,

That leaves 5 districts with no candidate!

And here they are:

TX-01 – R+17,

Not a peep of a candidate here!

TX-02 – R+12,

Conrad Allen announced that he was forming an exploratory committee, set up a campaign website (now defunct) and disappeared off the face of the earth.

TX-12 – R+14,

Not a peep of a candidate here!

TX-14 – R+14,

We had a candidate then he switched parties!

(2006 candidate is out.)

TX-19 – R+25,

Not a peep of a candidate here!

Less than a week to go and we need 5 candidates – do you know anyone that could run?

Texas filing closes soon – a call for candidates

Candidate filing in Texas closes on January; a mere week and a bit away and we still have a number of congressional districts with no Democratic candidate!

Once again go and take a look at the  

2008 Race Tracker Wiki.

Below the fold for details………….

Texas has 32 Congressional House districts. 13 are held by Democrats of which 9 have officially filed as follows: (Note that I have included the Cook PVI scores for each district also.)

TX-09 – D+21,

TX-15 – D+3,

TX-16 – D+9,

TX-17 – R+18,

TX-22 – R+15,

TX-23 – R+4,

TX-27 – R+1,

TX-28 – R+1,

TX-29 – D+8,

The following 4 Democratic incumbents haven’t filed yet but are expected to do so.

TX-18 – D+23,

TX-20 – D+8,

TX-25 – D+1,

TX-30 – D+26,

That leaves 19 Republican held districts and 6 of these have filed candidates:

TX-06 – R+15,

TX-07 – R+16,

TX-10 – R+13,

TX-13 – R+18,

TX-26 – R+12,

TX-31 – R+15,

Four further districts have confirmed candidates that are yet to file officially:

TX-03 – R+17,

TX-04 – R+17,

TX-08 – R+20,

TX-32 – R+11,

And two further districts have unconfirmed candidates:

TX-05 – R+16,

TX-11 – R+25,

That leaves seven districts with no candidate!

And here they are:

TX-01 – R+17,

Not a peep of a candidate here!

TX-02 – R+12,

Conrad Allen announced that he was forming an exploratory committee, set up a campaign website (now defunct) and disappeared off the face of the earth.

TX-12 – R+14,

Not a peep of a candidate here!

TX-14 – R+14,

We had a candidate then he switched parties!

(2006 candidate is out.)

TX-19 – R+25,

Not a peep of a candidate here!

TX-21 – R+13,

Not a peep of a candidate here!

TX-24 – R+15,

According to a comment at Daily Kos a real estate mogul Bill Eden has filed. He hasn’t yet filed with the TDP or the FEC.

Less than a month to go and we need 7 candidates – do you know anyone that could run?

I’m Running

Dear Friends,

Today I announce my candidacy for United States Congress. The 7th District is one of the best educated and hardest working in America and it’s time the citizens of this District had a representative who reflects that. I will bring new energy to Washington to work to turn things around and get this country back on track. I need your support to do that.

I came from Ireland with my family when I was a child. We had only $200 to our name and few possessions, but that didn’t matter because my family believed that if you worked hard, played by the rules and got a good education, you could succeed. So that’s what I did – I studied hard, went to college and got a business degree from Harvard.

I built a wind energy company from the ground up, turning a two-man operation into a multi-billion dollar business. The energy-related challenges we face cut across almost every aspect of our lives. From global warming and air quality to national security, I will use my expertise to work with both parties to solve our nation’s greatest challenges. I’ve been blessed with opportunities to succeed and I made the most of them. I’m running for Congress to make sure everyone has those opportunities.

When it comes to the change we need in our nation, the current war in Iraq tops the list. While the war was being poorly managed, John Culberson was signing off on a blank check with no accountability. That’s no way to run a foreign policy, a business, or a family budget. It is time to bring things to a close in Iraq and start looking at ways to bring our troops home.

We have a choice to make this November. We can once again send to Washington a career politician who’s never met a problem he couldn’t make worse. Or we can send an entrepreneur with a record of getting things done and solving problems.

You will hear a lot about my candidacy in the coming weeks, but I wanted you to hear it from me first. Please take a moment to visit my Web site – www.SkellyforCongress.com – and help me bring new energy to Congress.

Thank you,

Michael Skelly
Candidate for Texas’ Seventh Congressional District

Ohio call to action – Congressional candidates needed.

Last week it was Texas, this week Ohio.

Candidate filing in Ohio closes in less than a month – 4th January – and we still don’t have confirmed candidates in a number of Congressional House districts!

Once again go and take a look at the  

2008 Race Tracker Wiki.

Below the fold for details………….

Ohio has 18 Congressional House districts. 7 are held by Democrats who are all at this stage running again as follows: (Note that I have included the Cook PVI scores for each district also.)

OH-06 – D+0,

OH-09 – D+9,

OH-10 – D+6,

OH-11 – D+33,

OH-13 – D+6,

OH-17 – D+14,

OH-18 – R+6,

That leaves 11 Republican held districts.

There are confirmed challengers in 7 of those 11 districts:

OH-01 – R+1,

OH-02 – R+13,

OH-07 – R+6,

OH-12 – R+0.7,

OH-14 – R+2,

OH-15 – R+1,

OH-16 – R+4,

That leaves four districts with no confirmed candidate

And here they are:

OH-03 – R+3,

Charles Sanders, Jane Mitakides and Dave Esrati are collecting signatures but they are not yet confirmed.

OH-04 – R+14,

Not a peep no candidate here.

OH-05 – R+10,

Is Robin Weirauch running again?

OH-08 – R+12,

Not a peep no candidate here.

Less than a month to go and we need 4 candidates – do you know anyone that could run?

Call to action – Congressional House candidates needed in Texas

Candidate filing in Texas closes in less than a month – 2nd January – and we still don’t have confirmed candidates in a large number of Congressional House districts!

Once again go and take a look at the  

2008 Race Tracker Wiki.

Below the fold for details………….

Texas has 32 Congressional House districts. 13 are held by Democrats who according to the Texas Dems website are all running again as follows: (Note that I have included the Cook PVI scores for each district also.)

TX-09 – D+21,

TX-15 – D+3,

TX-16 – D+9,

TX-17 – R+18,

TX-18 – D+23,

TX-20 – D+8,

TX-22 – R+15,

TX-23 – R+4,

TX-25 – D+1,

TX-27 – R+1,

TX-28 – R+1,

TX-29 – D+8,

TX-30 – D+26,

That leaves 19 Republican held districts.

Again according to the Texas Dems website there are challengers in 4 of those 19 districts:

TX-04 – R+17,

TX-10 – R+13,

TX-26 – R+12,

TX-31 – R+15,

These four districts thus have candidates that have officially filed. That leaves 15.

Five further districts have confirmed candidates that are yet to file officially:

TX-03 – R+17,

TX-07 – R+16,

TX-08 – R+20,

TX-13 – R+18,

TX-32 – R+11,

That leaves ten districts with no confirmed candidate – yep more than half of the GOP held districts have no Democratic candidate at this point!

And here they are:

TX-01 – R+17,

Not a peep of a candidate here!

TX-02 – R+12,

Conrad Allen announced that he was forming an exploratory committee, set up a campaign website (now defunct) and disappeared off the face of the earth.

TX-05 – R+16,

Not a peep of a candidate here!

TX-06 – R+15,

Not a peep of a candidate here!

(our 2006 candidate is definitely not running either.)

TX-11 – R+25,

After Brad Vincent withdrew earlier this year Floyd Crider has apparently been collecting petition signatures but has yet to file with the TDP or the FEC and does not yet have a campaign website. Any further news on him?

* This is one of ten districts we did not contest in 2006!*

TX-12 – R+14,

Not a peep of a candidate here!

TX-14 – R+14,

We had a candidate then he switched parties!

(2006 candidate is out.)

TX-19 – R+25,

Not a peep of a candidate here!

TX-21 – R+13,

Not a peep of a candidate here!

TX-24 – R+15,

According to a comment at Daily Kos a real estate agent Bill Eden has filed. He hasn’t yet filed with the TDP or the FEC.

Less than a month to go and we need 10 candidates – do you know anyone that could run?

IN-06: Help Celebrate Barry Welsh’s Birthday!

I thought I'd share with you the latest e-mail from Sherri Welsh, Barry's wife:

I am writing to let you in on a secret: Barry Welsh (my husband) will be turning 49 years young on December 10th. I've always been proud of Barry and his hard-working dedication to helping all those in need. I want him to take that dedication to Congress as Indiana's 6th District Representative.  So, I'm organizing a special occasion for him that includes you!

Since Barry and I have been married, he has always liked my baking, especially my cookie recipes. I'd like to ask you to help us celebrate his birthday by contributing $12.10 to his campaign. If we could all come together with this small amount, it could add up to making a big difference to the campaign.

Click here to contribute.

In exchange for your participation, every person that contributes $12.10 by Barry's birthday will receive my recipe for Double Chocolate Drop cookies. This is Barry's favorite cookie recipe, and the family loves it when I bake them at this time of year.

Click here to contribute.

Let's give Barry a birthday he will remember!

Sincerely,
Sherri Welsh
www.barrywelsh.org

Calling All Millionaires!

“We have been very fortunate in our recruiting efforts.  There will be a number of credible Republican challengers running for Congress next year that happen to have access to personal financial resources. They are in position to run strong, well-financed grass-roots campaigns next year in some of our top targeted districts.”

Ken Spain, National Republican Campaign Committee spokesman

When the polls don’t look so hot and when the money runs out, who do you turn to in order to rebuild?  Why, the grassroots, of course.

Facing a potentially crippling financial disadvantage against their Democratic counterparts, the NRCC is turning to their “base” — of insanely wealthy people — in order to kill two birds with one stone: plug some crucial recruiting holes where more established candidates have taken a pass, and help lessen the committee’s load by opening up their own bank accounts in a gambit to make these seats competitive.

Let’s take a look at some of these brave rank-and-file Republicans, who put down their ruby-studded walking sticks and answered the NRCC’s call to wage caviar-powered grassroots campaigns against Democrats this next year.

  • NJ-03: In any other year, Republicans may have fielded Diane Allen, a popular state Senator, to replace retiring Rep. Jim Saxton in this swing district.  Here’s the problem: Allen came a-knockin’ on the NRCC’s door, hoping to score $2 million in outside assistance in order to buoy her chances.  The cash-starved GOP must’ve came up short, because Allen pulled the plug on her bid last week.
  • So who is the NRCC looking to tap here?  Look no further than the defense industry, a key “grassroots” constituency in the Republican Party.  Their ranks have produced Christopher Myers, a vice president at Lockheed Martin and “a real man’s man“.  Allen may have had the moderate creds and a proven ability at winning blue areas in a district that Al Gore won by 11 points in 2000, but Myers has the fat stacks of war booty that he can put to good use.  A no-brainer.

    • CT-05: Put yourselves in the NRCC’s shoes here.  Let’s say you’ve already recruited a fresh-faced state Senator, David Cappiello, considered a up and comer in local circles, to take on freshman Democratic Chris Murphy.  He’s raised some respectable cash and seems presentable.  The only snag?  

    TX-10 – Dan Grant makes it official: “I’m in it to win it!”

    The candidate filing period opened today – and Dan was there to make it official, saying he hoped to signal his understanding of how eager Central Texas voters are to get started on changing Washington.

    “I’m in this race to win this race,” Dan said.

    Dan’s newspaper column on Iraq earns praise

    Last Saturday, the Austin American-Statesman published Dan’s latest column on the “mournful legacy” of his opponent’s allies in the Bush-Cheney administration.

    “The sixth anniversary of the terrorist attacks on our nation has come and gone, the second anniversary of Hurricane Katrina has come and gone, the White House surge in Iraq has come and gone, and soon another holiday season will have come and gone, too,” Dan wrote in the piece. “As these milestones pass, we are no closer to getting it right… Enough is enough.”

    Dan lays out a smart strategy for immediately ending U.S. involvement in Iraq’s civil war through a three-pronged approach to “redefine our mission, reduce our troop levels, and reinvigorate U.S. diplomacy around the world.” Click here to read the whole column – and to see why Dan’s campaign is gaining national momentum.

    Pocket change for positive change

    Dan’s ongoing donation program, Ten for Dan, is a unique opportunity for you and 10 of your friends to make a difference. A simple contribution of $10.10 from each of you can make the difference. It will help us keep our TV spot on the air – and bring positive change to Washington.

    Click here to give $10.10 – pocket change for positive change.

    And click here to see Dan’s TV spot.

    Projection: Democrats Would Pick Up 25 More House Seats

    (Fascinating stuff; be sure to check below the fold for the full analysis.  What’s your take? – promoted by James L.)

    Based on recent generic ballot polls and the current distribution of Republican incumbent and open seats, Democrats would pick up about 25 more House seats in the 2008 election if it were held today.  Republicans might pick up a couple to offset that.

    And that’s before we account for future Republican retirements and the massive fundraising advantage Dems have this year.

    Of course, the generic ballot numbers will probably change over the next year, one way or the other.  Here’s how the number of House seats Democrats would win varies as the Democrats’ generic ballot advantage changes so you can keep track at home (based on retirements known as of November).  

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    Click to enlarge.

    The colored bands show the maximum and minimum calculations, but the actual numbers are most likely to be close to the solid lines.  Currently the average Democratic generic ballot advantage is about 12; the max I’ve seen this year is 18, the min is 7.

    Below, the explanation and the fine print.

    Cross posted at DailyKos and Open Left.

    Bonus Fun Calculation

    If  Democrats in 2006 had had the same wealth of seats available to them to contest as Republicans did in 1994, they would have picked up an estimated 59 seats!  This means the election of 2006 was just as big a win for Democrats in terms of performance as the election of 1994 was for Republicans.

    The Fine Print

    1.  These calculations are based on the average generic ballot advantage in the final week of the campaign, which we don’t know yet.  All we know are what the current polls say.  So if Democrats maintain their current generic ballot advantage through the end of the campaign season, then we would expect 25 more Democratic seats.

    2.  The calculations are based on the current known Republican retirements in the House.  The more Republican retirements, the better for Democrats.  I will post an update later in 2008 once retirements have settled out.

    3.  I assume that the campaigns and party strategies in 2008 will be similar enough to those in 1994-2006.  This assumption could be wrong, if, for example, Democrats work just as hard at challenging incumbents as they do at going for open seats.  In that case, the current estimates would be a few seats too optimistic (but the generic ballot advantage would likely increase by a large amount and more than offset that).

    4.  Strictly speaking, we wouldn’t want to make any predictions for a generic ballot advantage greater than what we saw in 2006, because it is beyond the range of previous experience.  I wouldn’t worry too much about going a little beyond the generic ballot advantage of 2006, but once we get up into the 18 point generic ballot advantage range, things get uncertain.  And at that point, who cares about predictions?  It would be celebration time….

    Predicting the House

    The relationship between generic ballot numbers and the numbers of seats won by Democrats is not that great.

    Why not?  After all, the generic ballot number takes into account every major and minor factor in individual races, including the national mood.  

    The problem is that the number and distribution of seats held by each party varies over time.  For example, in 1994, Republicans had a rich field of conservative and moderate districts held by Democrats to try to take.  Today, there are far fewer.  (Another problem may be changing political habits over long periods of time.)  Previous calculations that took the distribution of seats into account for the 2006 election were almost exactly right.

    In this diary, I use the eight most recent elections to create a way to calculate the number of incumbent or open seats won by either party.  The only numbers needed for this calculation are the Democrats’ generic ballot advantage (from polls), the percent support for Bush in 2000 in each district, and the status of each race (incumbent Democrat, open seat held by Democrat, incumbent Republican, or open seat held by Republican).  Note that the best way make these calculations is to run thousands of simulations and count up the outcomes, something I did not do.

    The Details

    So, how does partisan makeup of a district relate to the chance of a seat switching parties, on average?  In 2006 we had a lot of seats switch from Republican to Democrat – so we can try to answer this question for the R to D switch at least.

    Here’s a graph showing the percent chance that a seat switched when the incumbent was a Republican.  The data are divided into categories with a range of 3 points in Bush’s 2000 vote.  Please note:  this graph, or any of the following, is not useful for predicting the chance of a specific seat changing parties in the 2008 elections.

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    Click to enlarge.

    There’s a regular and not unsurprising pattern here.  Democrats were more likely to win in the more moderate districts.  Looking at the data another way (not shown) leads me to believe this is pretty close to the shape of a common type of curve, so we can model it:

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    Click to enlarge.

    The ‘center’ of the curve shows us where Democrats were able to win 50% of the Republican seats: in districts where Bush received 44% of the vote.  Now let’s add in open seats held by Republicans:

    Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.us

    Click to enlarge.

    With far fewer open seats, the data points look far less organized.  Note that the curve for open seats shifts 8 points to the right.  This shows us the total advantage of being a Republican incumbent.  Of this advantage, 2 points can be accounted for by the inherent incumbency advantage identified after taking fundraising into account (name recognition and so forth); the rest is probably attributable to stronger opponents with more money running for open seats.

    These curves have two numbers that are used to describe them: one tells us where the center is – what the level of Bush support was in 2000 in districts where Democrats won 50% of the time – and the other tells us how steep the curve is.  The steepness is about the same for incumbents and open seats.  

    At this point we could quit and go home and use these curves alone, because as it turns out, the generic ballot for 2008 is sitting right about where the generic ballot for 2006 was.  But we’d like to get some idea of the possible range we might see for a given generic ballot number, and what happens if the generic ballot numbers change.  

    The only other recent year with a fair number of Democrats winning Republican seats is 1996, but it’s still not enough to get a very accurate curve.  Even so, when you look at the numbers, the steepness is not significantly different from the 2006 curves.  The center is shifted 7 points to the left.

    But what about the other years?  It turns out we have another way to estimate the center.  We can plot the percent that voted for the Republican in each district versus the percent Bush had in 2000, and with a regression curve, estimate where half the Republicans lose (fall below 50%), which is our number for the center of the curve.  Several different types of regressions lead to similar numbers.

    If we assume the curves all had the same steepness in every year, we can check our estimates by seeing if we can predict how many Republican seats Democrats won in each year by multiplying the number of districts with a given support of Bush in 2000 by the chance that districts with that level of support were won by Democrats.  This is repeated for incumbent seats and open seats.  The center is shifted 8 points to the right for open seats.  As it turns out, these estimates work great.  

    Repeating the process for Democratic-held seats, using the 1994 election as a basis, is a little trickier because Democrats seem to be a lot better at holding on to seats in conservative districts.  The upshot is the estimates of Republican wins of Democratic seats have a lot more error associated with them.  Fortunately, right now the generic ballot is in the range where even a large relative error in the number of seats picked up by Republicans doesn’t make much difference – 1 plus or minus 300% is still only a few seats.  But, what we can do now is generate some rough curves for Democratic seats in 2006, even though no Democrats lost their seats.  And for fun, let’s look at 1994 too.

    Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.us

    Click to enlarge.

    One thing that jumps out is that Democrats seem to have a much bigger total incumbency advantage than Republicans.  This, again, may be related to the tendency of Democrats who represent conservative districts to retain their seats.  Or, the Republicans maybe have a bigger actual total incumbency advantage than the 8 points found above.

    Now, the key question: can we predict where the center of these curves will be from polling data?  Here’s a graph of the estimated or modeled center versus the final week’s generic ballot advantage for Democrats running against Republican incumbents:

    Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.us

    Click to enlarge.

    Looks good.  Two points are hollow – 1994 and 1996 – because I am not sure I have all the polling in the average (the other years came from pollingreport.com).  The line is about the same with or without those two points though.  The dashed lines show the range we expect the center to be in 95% of the time, given a known generic ballot advantage.  So now we have a way to relate the generic ballot to the center of our curves up above, and we can use the curves to estimate the number of Republican seats won by Democrats:

    Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.us

    Click to enlarge.

    Not too shabby.  If you split it up between open and incumbent seats, the calculations for incumbents are usually a little too optimistic, and the calculations for open seats are a little too pessimistic.  This might mean the actual total incumbency advantage for Republicans is more like 10-12 points than the 8 points calculated above for 2006.    

    Repeating the exercise with Democratic-held seats results in a much greater error, as there was more error in generating the curves for each year, but again, this doesn’t matter much at the current generic ballot range.

    Thus Ends the Adventure

    This is the last in a short series related to House elections.  Other diaries discuss the current political climate nationally and factors such as retirements, recruitment, and fundraising in the House races; the the changing landscape in the House since 1994 as far as the seats controlled by each party; the change in voting behavior at the presidential level from 1988 to 2004 (with an eye towards the next redistricting session); and finally, two more diaries showing how much various factors (money, incumbency, party, scandal) hurt or help candidates for the House on average.

    How many House Candidates are there – DEM? (2 of 2)

    Well 6 more districts now have candidates:

    CA-49 – R+10,

    FL-07 – R+3,

    KY-05 – R+8,

    MO-02 – R+9,

    TX-03 – R+17,

    TX-07 – R+16,

    And candidate filing season has started with Illinois filings which closed with us filling all 19 races a great start.

    But one race now no longer has a confirmed Democratic candidate:

    MT-AL – R+11 (our candidate withdrew owing to ill health),

    Once again go and take a look at the  

    2008 Race Tracker Wiki.

    **I have included Cook PVI numbers where possible after blogger requests to do so!**

    Below the fold for all the news……

    359 races filled! This of course includes 233 districts held by Democratic Congresscritters.

    But we also have 126 GOP held districts with confirmed Democratic opponents.

    So here is where we are at (GOP Districts):

    Districts with confirmed candidates – 126

    Districts with unconfirmed candidates – 2

    Districts with rumoured candidates – 25

    Districts without any candidates – 49

    1) The GOP held districts with confirmed Democratic challengers are as follows:

    AL-01 – R+12,

    AL-03 – R+4,

    AL-04 – R+16,

    AK-AL – R+14,

    AZ-01 – R+2,

    AZ-02 – R+9,

    AZ-03 – R+6,

    AZ-06 – R+12,

    AR-03 – R+11,

    CA-03 – R+7,

    CA-04 – R+11,

    CA-21 – R+13,

    CA-24 – R+5,

    CA-26 – R+4,

    CA-40 – R+8,

    CA-41 – R+9,

    CA-42 – R+10,

    CA-44 – R+6,

    CA-45 – R+3,

    CA-48 – R+8,

    CA-49 – R+10,

    CA-50 – R+5,

    CA-52 – R+9,

    CO-04 – R+9,

    CO-06 – R+10,

    CT-04 – D+5,

    DE-AL – D+7,

    FL-01 – R+19,

    FL-05 – R+5,

    FL-07 – R+3,

    FL-08 – R+3,

    FL-09 – R+4,

    FL-10 – D+1,

    FL-12 – R+5,

    FL-13 – R+4,

    FL-14 – R+10,

    FL-15 – R+4,

    FL-24 – R+3,

    GA-01 – R+?,

    GA-09 – R+?,

    GA-10 – R+?,

    ID-01 – R+19,

    IL-06 – R+2.9,

    IL-10 – D+4,

    IL-11 – R+1.1,

    IL-13 – R+5,

    IL-14 – R+5,

    IL-15 – R+6,

    IL-16 – R+4,

    IL-18 – R+5.5,

    IL-19 – R+8,

    IN-03 – R+16,

    IN-04 – R+17,

    IN-06 – R+11,

    IA-04 – D+0,

    IA-05 – R+8,

    KS-04 – R+12,

    KY-04 – R+11.7,

    KY-05 – R+8,

    LA-01 – R+18,

    MD-01 – R+10,

    MD-06 – R+13,

    MI-02 – R+9,

    MI-07 – R+2,

    MI-09 – R+0,

    MI-11 – R+1.2,

    MN-02 – R+2.7,

    MN-03 – R+0.5,

    MN-06 – R+5,

    MO-02 – R+9,

    MO-06 – R+5,

    MO-09 – R+7,

    NV-03 – D+1,

    NJ-03 – D+3.3,

    NJ-04 – R+0.9,

    NJ-05 – R+4,

    NJ-07 – R+1,

    NJ-11 – R+6,

    NM-01 – D+2,

    NM-02 – R+6,

    NY-13 – D+1,

    NY-23 – R+0.2,

    NY-25 – D+3,

    NY-26 – R+3,

    NY-29 – R+5,

    NC-03 – R+15,

    NC-05 – R+15,

    NC-06 – R+17,

    NC-08 – R+3,

    NC-09 – R+12,

    NC-10 – R+15,

    OH-01 – R+1,

    OH-02 – R+13,

    OH-05 – R+10,

    OH-07 – R+6,

    OH-12 – R+0.7,

    OH-14 – R+2,

    OH-15 – R+1,

    OH-16 – R+4,

    OK-05 – R+12,

    PA-03 – R+2,

    PA-09 – R+15,

    PA-15 – D+2,

    PA-16 – R+11,

    PA-18 – R+2,

    TX-03 – R+17,

    TX-04 – R+17,

    TX-07 – R+16,

    TX-08 – R+20,

    TX-10 – R+13,

    TX-13 – R+18,

    TX-26 – R+12,

    TX-31 – R+15,

    TX-32 – R+11,

    VA-01 – R+9,

    VA-05 – R+6,

    VA-06 – R+11,

    VA-10 – R+5,

    VA-11 – R+1,

    WA-04 – R+13,

    WA-08 – D+2,

    WV-02 – R+5,

    WI-01 – R+2,

    WI-05 – R+12,

    WI-06 – R+5,

    WY-AL – R+19,

    2) The following GOP held districts have a candidate that is expected to run but is yet to confirm:

    KY-02 – R+12.9,

    SC-04 – R+15,

    3) The following GOP held districts have rumoured candidates – please note that some of these “rumours” are extremely tenuous!

    AL-02 – R+13,

    FL-06 – R+8,

    FL-21 – R+6,

    GA-03 – R+?,

    GA-06 – R+?,

    GA-07 – R+?,

    GA-11 – R+?,

    ID-02 – R+19,

    MS-03 – R+14,

    MT-AL – R+11,

    NE-02 – R+9,

    NE-03 – R+23.6,

    NV-02 – R+8.2,

    NJ-02 – D+4.0,

    NY-03 – D+2.1,

    OH-03 – R+3,

    OK-03 – R+18,

    OK-04 – R+13,

    PA-06 – D+2.2,

    TN-07 – R+12,

    TX-02 – R+12,

    TX-11 – R+25,

    TX-24 – R+15,

    UT-03 – R+22,

    VA-02 – R+5.9,

    4) And last but not least the following districts have not a single rumoured candidate:

    AL-06 – R+25,

    CA-02 – R+13,

    CA-19 – R+10,

    CA-22 – R+16,

    CA-25 – R+7,

    CA-46 – R+6,

    CO-05 – R+15.7,

    FL-04 – R+16,

    FL-18 – R+4,

    FL-25 – R+4,

    IN-05 – R+20,

    KS-01 – R+20,

    KY-01 – R+10,

    LA-04 – R+7,

    LA-05 – R+10,

    LA-06 – R+7,

    LA-07 – R+7,

    MI-03 – R+9,

    MI-04 – R+3,

    MI-06 – R+2.3,

    MI-08 – R+1.9,

    MI-10 – R+4,

    MS-01 – R+10,

    MO-07 – R+14,

    MO-08 – R+11,

    NE-01 – R+11,

    OH-04 – R+14,

    OH-08 – R+12,

    OK-01 – R+13,

    OR-02 – R+11,

    PA-05 – R+10,

    PA-19 – R+12,

    SC-01 – R+10,

    SC-02 – R+9,

    SC-03 – R+14,

    TN-01 – R+14,

    TN-02 – R+11,

    TN-03 – R+8,

    TX-01 – R+17,

    TX-05 – R+16,

    TX-06 – R+15,

    TX-12 – R+14,

    TX-14 – R+14,

    TX-19 – R+25,

    TX-21 – R+13,

    UT-01 – R+26,

    VA-04 – R+5,

    VA-07 – R+11,

    WA-05 – R+7.1,

    Praise to those states where we already have a full slate of house candidates – Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Iowa, Maine, Massachusetts, Maryland, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New Mexico, North Carolina, North Dakota, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Vermont, West Virginia, Wisconsin and Wyoming.

    It is also interesting to note that we have only one race left to fill in Colorado, Idaho, Indiana, Kansas, Nevada, Montana, New Jersey, New York, Oregon and Washington. Thats 22 states with a full slate, and 10 states with one race to fill! That is more than half the states with a full or nearly full slate of candidates 12 months before election day, an impressive feat indeed!

    Please note that in some races others at the racetracker site have confirmed candidates that I haven’t. This is because to satisfy me a confirmed candidate has either filed with the FEC, The Sec of State or has an active campaign website, or even if they come and blog and say yep I am running. Others are not so rigorous.

    It is also great to see candidates in AZ-06, CA-42, FL-12, VA-06, and WI-06; 5 of 10 districts we did not contest in 2006!

    We are well on track to beat the 425 races we contested in 2006.

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