CA-Gov, CA-10: Garamendi Considering Bid to Replace Tauscher

With Ellen Tauscher set to join the State Department soon, it seems that her soon-to-be-vacant seat is drawing interest from a major player in California politics — Lt. Gov. John Garamendi, who is currently making a bid for the Democratic gubernatorial nod in 2010. From the Contra Costa Times:

[…] Lt. Gov. John Garamendi is looking at it – he lives on the edge of District 10 in Walnut Grove.

Garamendi called Rep. George Miller, D-Martinez, a few days ago, although the congressman offered little encouragement. Miller reiterated his unflagging support for state Sen. Mark DeSaulnier of Concord.

Wait, isn’t Garamendi running for governor? Yeah, although reports of a faltering campaign circulated recently after one of his top campaign staffers quit.

In a statement late Friday, here is what Garamendi said: “A number of people suggested I consider this seat. Of course, I will check it out. As a former undersecretary of the interior, there is a lot of exciting work going on in Washington. Much is possible with Barack Obama.

“But I am focused on California and my campaign for governor.”

Sounds more like he’s focused on finding a ripcord.

SSP Daily Digest: 3/16

NH-Sen, NH-01: Carol Shea-Porter has announced she won’t seek the Senate nomination, giving Paul Hodes a clear path and also preventing us the trouble of holding an open seat.

PA-Sen: Ed Rendell told a local news affiliate that he, Bob Casey Jr., and Joe Biden have all tried to talk Arlen Specter into switching over to the Democratic Party, but he remains “bound and determined to stay a Republican.”

NH-02: Stonyfield Farms CEO Gary Hirshberg, a possible candidate to replace Paul Hodes, just wrote his first diary at Daily Kos (on coal power). Is he gearing up to take on a higher political profile? (D)

TN-Gov: Chris Cillizza fingers Mike McWherter, the son of former Gov. Ned McWherter, as the likely Democratic nominee for Tennessee’s gubernatorial election in 2010 according to “informed insiders”. McWherter, a businessman who has never held elected office, considered running for Senate last year, but ultimately decided to keep his powder dry. (J)

AL-Gov: Alabama’s AG Troy King plans to run for re-election, rather than pursue the governor’s seat as had been rumored. King may not even survive his re-election, though, what with a gambling-related federal investigation.

CA-Gov: Got a spare $50 million sitting around? Meg Whitman does, and apparently that’s how much she’s willing to spend out-of-pocket on her quest to become the Golden State’s next governor.

Demography (warning: big pdf): Ruy Teixeira comes through with yet more demographics-as-destiny wizardry. His new report on the state of the nation sees an America that’s no longer a majority white Christian nation within the next ten years (where four-fifths of growth is non-white), where culture war appeals have diminished force, and where the white working class becomes small enough to lose its iconic swing vote status.

CA-Gov: Brown, Whitman Lead Primary Packs

Field Poll (2/20-3/1, registered voters):

Dianne Feinstein (D): 38

Jerry Brown (D): 16

Antonio Villaraigosa (D): 16

Gavin Newsom (D): 10

John Garamendi (D): 4

Steve Westly (D): 2

Bill Lockyer (D): 1

Jack O’Connell (D): 1

Jerry Brown (D): 26

Antonio Villaraigosa (D): 22

Gavin Newsom (D): 16

John Garamendi (D): 8

Steve Westly (D): 2

Bill Lockyer (D): 2

Jack O’Connell (D): 2

(MoE: ±5.5%)

Meg Whitman (R): 21

Tom Campbell (R): 18

Steve Poizner (R): 7

(MoE: ±5.8%)

Lake Research (D) (2/17-2-19, likely voters):

Jerry Brown (D): 27

Antonio Villaraigosa (D): 20

Gavin Newsom (D): 14

John Garamendi (D): 8

Steve Westly (D): 3

Jack O’Connell (D): 1

(MoE: ±5.7%)

Jerry Brown (D): 43

Meg Whitman (R): 27

Jerry Brown (D): 41

Steve Poizner (R): 30

Gavin Newsom (D): 40

Meg Whitman (R): 25

Gavin Newsom (D): 38

Steve Poizner (R): 29

(MoE: ±3.5%)

Two polls are out in the 2010 California governor’s race, the big enchilada of all the gubernatorial seats. One is from Field, the gold-standard of California pollsters; the other is from Democratic internal pollster Lake Research (which doesn’t have a candidate in the race). Field polls both primaries but not the general; Lake polls the Dem primary and some general head-to-heads. Taken cumulatively, the most likely result seems to be that Governor Moonbeam may well ride again, in one of politics’ most surprising second (or third or fourth) acts.

The Field Poll does two different runs on the Democratic primary, and finds that were Senator Dianne Feinstein to run, she’d mop up the rest of the field. While she has been occasionally linked to this race, she hasn’t made any visible moves toward running. Without Feinstein in the mix, AG Jerry Brown has a bit of an edge over Los Angeles mayor Antonio Villaraigosa. One interesting tidbit from the Field Poll is that young voters have no idea who Jerry Brown is (he was governor in the 70s, long enough ago that he’s grandfathered out of California’s term limits laws, allowing him to come back for more). Only 8% of 18-to-39 year-old voters support Brown, and 30% have no opinion of him.

On the Republican side, Field gives a small lead to former eBay CEO Meg Whitman, who was a big McCain booster and seems to be staking out the party’s right flank. Ex-Rep. Tom Campbell (who lost the 2000 Senate race to DiFi and hasn’t sought office since then) does surprisingly well, considering how long he’s been out of the spotlight; apparently the moderate wing of the California GOP is still alive and kicking. Insurance Commissioner Steve Poizner is a distant third, although he may shoot up once his free-spending ways kick in, especially given that more than half the GOP voters are undecided.

Lake puts up very similar numbers in the primary as the Feinstein-free Field poll. As for the general, they run head-to-heads involving Brown and Newsom, and find the Dems in pretty good shape, winning each matchup by double digits. Undecideds are still high (in the 30% ballpark), as would be expected at this point, but a Dem pickup is looking like a real possibility, assuming the primary doesn’t get too bloody.

CA-Gov: Whitman Forms Exploratory Committee

Everyone thinks they’re Christopher Columbus nowadays:

It’s official: Meg Whitman, the former chief executive of eBay, is planning to run for governor of California.

She announced on Monday that she had formed an exploratory committee, the first step in seeking the Republican nomination for governor in the 2010 race. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger faces term limits and cannot run for re-election, leaving the field wide open for one of the nation’s most powerful governorships.

She’s lining up some heavy hitters in her corner, too:

She also announced that former California Gov. Pete Wilson would serve as the chairman of the campaign while Reps. Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) and Mary Bono Mack (R-Calif.) will serve as co-chairs.

On the staff side, Whitman has attracted high level talent — reflective of the national profile of California races not to mention Whitman’s significant personal wealth — that borrows from a number of the GOP presidential campaigns of 2008 including those of Arizona Sen. John McCain and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney.

Question #1 is whether she can escape a GOP primary with conservative jillionaire state Insurance Comm’r Steve Poizner. Whitman, of course, is worth a fortune, too. Should be a good fight.

CA-Sen, CA-Gov: Statewide Recruitment Thread

Our daily series of 2010 threads continues, and today the SSP Recruitment Express is running at full steam through the Golden State.

Republican Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger is term-limited, meaning that many, many Democrats are salivating over the opportunity to take back the Governor’s mansion in California. There are a lot of potential names out there for Democrats (including Lt. Gov. John Garamendi, who has already announced his candidacy), but who would you like to see reach for the ring? And for the Republicans, Insurance Commissioner Steve Poizner seems to be their likeliest candidate, but will more names join the fray? (Paging Tom McClintock…)

On the Senate side, will Schwarzenegger actually challenge Barbara Boxer? It seems a bit unlikely to me at this point, but I guess you never know. If not, will any Republicans of note step forward (and I’m not sure if this guy really counts)?

And here’s an interesting wrinkle. One of the rumored candidates for the gubernatorial election is none other than Diane Feinstein. Assuming she ran and won, she would be in the rare position of appointing her own replacement in the Senate. If such a scenario actually happens, whom would you like to see Feinstein appoint? There are a lot of choices on California’s bench out there.

Field & Zogby Polls

The latest California Field Poll has Shwarzenegger up by double digits but still under 50%. Feinstein also up by double digits, with slight slippage within the MOE. Unfortunetly no polling on the “down the ticket” or Congressional races.

11/1/2006 MOE 3.5% Both Polls

Gov:

Shwarzenegger 49 (44)

Angelides 33 (34)

Other 6 (7)

Undecided 12 (15)

Angelides is only leading in LA County-42% to 36% and tied in the SF Bay Area, not good news. Looks like the Gropenator will pull this out but interesting that he still hasn’t popped 50%. 78% believe Shwarzenegger will win.

Sen:

Feinstein 55  (57)

Mountjoy 33  (29)

Other  4 (6)

Undecided 8 (8)

No regional info. Interesting slip though its within the MOE and I only just saw my first Feinstein TV Ad today.

AZ-08


Zogby(Reuters). 10/24-29. Likely voters. MoE 4.5% (9/25-10/2 results)


Graf (R) 41 (37)

Giffords (D) 54 (45)


CO-07


Zogby (Reuters). 10/24-29. Likely voters. MoE 4.5% (9/25-10/2 results)


O’Donnell (R) 40 (34)

Perlmutter (D) 54 (45)


CT-02


Zogby (Reuters). 10/24-29. Likely voters. MoE 4.5% (9/25-10/2 results)


Simmons (R) 47 (44)

Courtney (D) 42 (41)


CT-04


Zogby (Reuters). 10/24-29. Likely voters. MoE 4.5% (9/25-10/2 results)


Shays (R) 44 (41)

Farrell (D) 51 (46)


IL-06


Zogby (Reuters). 10/24-29. Likely voters. MoE 4.5% (9/25-10/2 results)


Roskam (R) 40 (38)

Duckworth (D) 54 (43)


IN-02


Zogby (Reuters). 10/24-29. Likely voters. MoE 4.5% (9/25-10/2 results)


Chocola (R) 39 (39)

Donnelly (D) 52 (49)


IN-09


Zogby for Reuters. 10/24-29. Likely voters. MoE 4.5% (9/25-10/2 results)


Sodrel (R) 46 (38)

Hill (D) 48 (46)


IA-01


Zogby(Reuters). 10/24-29. Likely voters. MoE 4.5% (9/25-10/2 results)


Whalen (R) 42 (34)

Braley (D) 49 (47)


KY-04


Zogby(Reuters). 10/24-29. Likely voters. MoE 4.5% (9/25-10/2 results)


Davis (R) 42 (42)

Lucas (D) 45 (36)


MN-06


Zogby (Reuters). 10/24-29. Likely voters. MoE 4.5% (9/25-10/2 results)


Bachmann (R) 52 (46)

Wetterling (D) 42 (43)


NM-01


Zogby for Reuters. 10/24-29. Likely voters. MoE 4.5% (9/25-10/2 results)


Wilson (R) 44 (40)

Madrid (D) 53 (50)


NC-11


Zogby (Reuters). 10/24-29. Likely voters. MoE 4.5% (9/25-10/2 results)


Taylor (R) 43 (40)

Shuler (D) 48 (51)


OH-18


Zogby (Reuters). 10/24-29. Likely voters. MoE 4.5% (9/25-10/2 results)


Padgett (R) 33 (36)

Space (D) 58 (45)


PA-06


Zogby (Reuters). 10/24-29. Likely voters. MoE 4.5% (9/25-10/2 results)


Gerlach (R) 44 (41)

Murphy (D) 49 (43)


VIRGINIA (2nd CD)


Zogby (Reuters). 10/24-29. Likely voters. MoE 4.5% (9/25-10/2 results)


Drake (R) 51 (42)

Kellam (D) 43 (46)

By what margin will Bob Shamansky win?

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