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KY-Sen: Mmm, I love a good R-on-R dogfight, especially when the less palatable Republican has the upper hand. Trey Grayson, way behind in the polls to insurgent nut-winger Rand Paul, is getting the “weirdo” meme started nice and early, planting the seed that will compromise Paul’s electability in a general election. In a new ad, Grayson accuses Paul of having “weird ideas” on foreign policy that include the shut-down of Guantanamo and the deportation of “Al-Qaeda terrorists back to their home countries”. Paul has fired back with an ad of his own, accusing Grayson of supporting Bill Clinton in the ’90s and — gasp! — “issuing a welcoming statement” to Barack Obama after his inauguration. (JL)
NY-Sen-B: This isn’t really new news, I guess, since his name had already been floated. But it looks like GOPers in NY and elsewhere are putting increased pressure on former deputy White House Press Secretary Dan Senor to jump into the race against Kirsten Gillibrand. Personally, I love the idea of a former Bushbot running statewide in NY.
NY-Gov: AG Andrew Cuomo wisely handed off his investigation of Gov. David Paterson’s alleged misdeeds to an independent counsel, in this case the universally respected former chief judge of the state of New York, Judith Kaye. Speaking of which, how come no one is talking impeachment? New York law provides for it, even if it hasn’t been done in a hundred years.
MN-06: Alert! Alert! Crazybomb set to detonate in Minnesota on April 7! Sarah Palin to stump for Michele Bachmann! TAKE COVER!!!
PA-12: Republican bigwigs have chosen businessman Tim Burns as their candidate over 2008 nominee and BMW Direct frontman Bill Russell. The final vote was 85 Burns, 46 Russell, leading Russell to proclaim that “the fix was in.” While Burns is likely the strong candidate, the good news for Dems is that Russell vows to fight on, insisting that “This is the Republican Party of PA, not the Communist Party of North Korea.” I love the smell of cat fud in the morning.
Polling: Nate Silver takes a look at the house effects of the five most prolific polling firms this cycle. (This includes blechy Internet pollster YouGov, though.) And here’s a bit of info that confirms something we probably all believed: Rasmussen, R2K and PPP account for two thirds of all public Senate polls conducted this cycle. I wish more pollsters (SUSA, for instance) would step up.