PA-12: Burns Leads Critz by 1 Point in Final PPP Poll

Public Policy Polling (5/15-16, likely voters, 4/17-18 in parens):

Mark Critz (D): 47 (41)

Tim Burns (R): 48 (44)

Undecided: 6 (15)

(MoE: ±3.4%)

More, from Jensen:

If Burns does pull out the victory on Tuesday night it will be more because of a continuing gap in interest between Democratic and Republican voters in the off year election than anything else. Critz is actually winning over more McCain voters (14%) than Burns is Obama voters (12%). This race is not an example of people who voted for Obama who are now unhappy with him and voting Republican. But those planning to vote on Tuesday report having voted for John McCain by 5 points in 2008, compared to his actual 1 point victory in the district. And among voters who say they’re ‘very excited’ to vote in this election, Burns has a 60-38 lead.

In contrast, two other recent polls have given Critz a slight lead. It looks like we’re heading for a photo finish here, sports fans.

Bonus finding: Sestak leads Specter by 44-35 among Democratic primary voters in the 12th District.

Rasmussen Reports, You Decide, Vol. 17

AK-Gov (5/6, likely voters):

Sean Parnell (R-inc): 58

Ethan Berkowitz (D): 30

Sean Parnell (R-inc): 62

Hollis French (D): 24

Sean Parnell (R-inc): 62

Bob Poe (D): 21

Ralph Samuels (R): 43

Ethan Berkowitz (D): 36

Ralph Samuels (R): 48

Hollis French (D): 26

Ralph Samuels (R): 47

Bob Poe (D): 23

(MoE: ±4.5%)

CA-Sen (5/12, likely voters, 4/12 in parens):

Barbara Boxer (D-inc): 42 (43)

Tom Campbell (R): 41 (41)

Barbara Boxer (D-inc): 45 (42)

Carly Fiorina (R): 38 (38)

Barbara Boxer (D-inc): 46 (42)

Chuck DeVore (R): 40 (39)

(MoE: ±4.5%)

CO-Gov (5/11, likely voters, 5/14 in parens):

John Hickenlooper (D): 41 (42)

Scott McInnis (R): 47 (48)

(MoE: ±3%)

ID-Sen (5/11, likely voters):

Tom Sullivan (D): 22

Mike Crapo (R-inc): 66

(MoE: ±4.5%)

ID-Gov (5/11, likely voters, 3/23 in parens):

Keith Allred (D): 32 (28)

Butch Otter (R-inc): 54 (60)

(MoE: ±4.5%)

KS-Gov (5/11, likely voters, 2/24 in parens):

Tom Holland (D): 27 (33)

Sam Brownback (R): 58 (55)

(MoE: ±4.5%)

KS-Sen (5/11, likely voters):

David Haley (D): 25

Jerry Moran (R): 60

Lisa Johnston (D): 25

Jerry Moran (R): 61

Charles Schollenberger (D): 25

Jerry Moran (R): 59

David Haley (D): 27

Todd Tiahrt (R): 58

Lisa Johnston (D): 29

Todd Tiahrt (R): 57

Charles Schollenberger (D): 30

Todd Tiahrt (R): 55

(MoE: ±4.5%)

MA-Gov (5/10, likely voters, 4/5 in parens):

Deval Patrick (D): 45 (35)

Charlie Baker (R): 31 (27)

Tim Cahill (I): 14 (23)

Grace Ross (D): 27

Charlie Baker (R): 32

Tim Cahill (I): 16

(MoE: ±4.5%)

NH-Sen (5/11, likely voters, 4/7 parens):

Paul Hodes (D): 38 (35)

Kelly Ayotte (R): 50 (50)

Paul Hodes (D): 37 (37)

Bill Binnie (R): 49 (49)

Paul Hodes (D): 43 (39)

Ovide Lamontagne (R): 38 (44)

(MoE: ±4.5%)

PA-Sen, PA-Gov: R2K Gives Sestak 2-Point Edge

Research 2000 for Daily Kos (5/10-12, likely voters, 3/8-10 in parens):

Joe Sestak (D): 45 (32)

Arlen Specter (D-inc): 43 (51)

Undecided: 12 (17)

(MoE: ±5%)

Joe Sestak (D): 40 (39)

Pat Toomey (R): 45 (42)

Undecided: 15 (19)

Arlen Specter (D-inc): 41 (47)

Pat Toomey (R): 49 (41)

Undecided: 10 (12)

(MoE: ±4%)

Research 2000 is the most recent pollster to find a small edge for Joe Sestak over Arlen Specter in the May 18 Democratic Senate primary, and also to find Sestak overperforming Specter versus Toomey in the general election. They also find Sestak with by far the most upside of any of the three candidates: Specter’s favorables are at 45/44 with 11% no opinion, Toomey’s are 45/40 with 15% no opinion, and Sestak’s are 39/26 with 35% no opinion.

Muhlenberg College for Allentown Morning Call (pdf) (5/10-13, likely voters, 5/9-12 in parentheses):

Arlen Specter (D-inc): 45 (44)

Joe Sestak (D): 43 (44)

Undecided: 12 (12)

Dan Onorato (D): 39 (39)

Anthony Williams (D): 14 (14)

Joe Hoeffel (D): 11 (11)

Jack Wagner (D): 11 (9)

Undecided: 25 (27)

(MoE: ±5%)

Muhlenberg finds things going the other direction, with a move from a tie in its daily tracker to a 2-point lead for Specter. They also find almost no movement in the gubernatorial primary, with Dan Onorato still in a dominant position.

SSP Daily Digest: 5/14 (Afternoon Edition)

AK-Sen: Moose man endorses Some Dude. That’s SSP shorthand for: Todd Palin just endorsed Joe Miller, the right-wing lawyer who’s taking on Lisa Murkowski in the Republican Senate primary. Recall that Mr. Palin has had some fairly fringey politics in the past (as with his membership in the Alaskan Independence Party), so I wonder if this was done with his wife’s approval (or, given her busy schedule these days, whether he was even able to block out some time with her to get her say-so). Given her rumored brief interest in taking on Murkowski in the primary herself (back when she was still Governor rather than itinerant book-selling motivational-speaking grifter), and her long-standing beef with all things Murkowksi, I’d suppose yes.

CA-Sen: Carly Fiorina, trying to make up last-minute ground in the GOP primary against Tom Campbell, has thrown $1.1 million of her own money into her campaign. On top of previous loans to her campaign, that brings her total self-contributions to $3.6 million. Meg Whitman and Steve Poizner were both heard scoffing loudly.

CT-Sen: Chalk this one up to bad, bad timing. Linda McMahon just sent out a mailer proposing to “put Connecticut back to work” by “increasing offshore drilling and production” (um, in Long Island Sound?). The mailer features a large, lovely picture of a (non-burning) offshore oil rig.

NH-Sen: Has Kelly Ayotte just given up on any pretense of trying to look moderate? She’s appearing at a Susan B. Anthony List (the anti-abortion group) fundraiser today, headlined by Sarah Palin, along with a supporting cast like Rep. Steve King. I know that she still needs to survive her GOP primary, but her main opposition these days is looking like moderate Bill Binnie, not right-wing Ovide Lamontagne.

NV-Sen: Steve Kornacki looks at the Nevada Senate race and the “what if” scenario if Sharron Angle somehow wins the primary. History indicates that Harry Reid can’t pin too many hopes on winning just because the GOP puts forth its most extreme candidate… maybe the biggest case in point, the Carter camp’s hopes that wacko Ronald Reagan would make it out of the GOP primary in 1980.

NY-Sen: Wow, there’s actually going to be a GOP primary for the right to get mulched by Chuck Schumer! Nassau County Comptroller George Maragos, who’s only been on the job half a year, is already looking to move up. He’ll still have to get past political consultant Jay Townsend in the primary.

UT-Sen: She stopped short of a formal endorsement, but fringey activist Cherilyn Eagar, who finished fourth at the GOP convention, said that Tim Bridgewater would be “an excellent senator” and complimented him on a “clean, honest race.” Eagar is back to her day job fighting the menace posed by gnomes.

AL-Gov: I’m losing track of all the weird outside groups popping up to play dirty pool in the Alabama governor’s race. Today’s entrant is the mysterious New Sons of Liberty, whose main agenda seems to be Barack Obama’s birth certificate. They’ve reserved $1.1 million in TV airtime, although it’s unclear what they’ll be advertising about or on behalf of whom. The leader of a group, Basics Project, affiliated with the New Sons is mystified at where they would have gotten that kind of money, so it seems like they’re being used as a conduit for… well, somebody.

There’s also a new poll out of the Republican primary, by Republican pollster Baselice (on behalf of local PR firm Public Strategy Associates… there’s no word on whether any of the candidates are their client). They find Bradley Byrne barely leading Tim James 24-23. Roy Moore, who many thought would be the man to beat, is lagging at 18, with Robert Bentley at 12 and Bill Johnson at 2. The juicier numbers might be down in the AG race, where GOP incumbent Troy King is in all kinds of trouble. He’s losing 50-25 to challenger Luther Strange. There are three Dems in the AG field, most prominently James Anderson, ready to try to exploit the cat-fud fight.

AR-Gov: One thing we didn’t mention in our writeup of Research 2000’s AR-Sen poll from yesterday is that they were the first pollster to throw the Arkansas Governor’s race into the mix. Incumbent Dem Mike Beebe routinely sports some of the highest favorables of any politician (64/24 here), and he seems immune from Arkansas’ reddish trend and the nation’s overall anti-incumbent fervor. He leads Republican former state Sen. Jim Keet, 62-19.

CT-Gov: Former Stamford mayor Dan Malloy picked up another potentially useful endorsement today as we make our way toward Connecticut’s endorsing conventions. He got the nod from Rep. John Larson, the #4 man on the House totem pole. UPDATE: On the GOP side, ex-Rep. Chris Shays has an endorsement of his own: Lt. Gov. Michael Fedele.

NY-Gov: It’s kind of more meta than we’d like, to report on an announcement about an announcement (about an announcement), but it sounds like we’re getting closer to pinning down a date from Andrew Cuomo. It’s being reported that he’ll announce his gubernatorial candidacy on or around May 25, the start of the state Democratic convention.

AL-05: Rep. Parker Griffith is already up with a negative ad hitting one of his Republican primary opponents, Madison Co. Commissioner Mo Brooks, calling him a “career politician” and “big spender.” Brooks observed, perhaps correctly (although the Alabama primary is fast approaching), that an incumbent attacking a challenger is a big-time sign of weakness.

GA-09: Former state Rep. Tom Graves, in the runoff for the special election in this seat against fellow Republican Lee Hawkins, got the endorsement from nearby Rep. Lynn “Uppity” Westmoreland. In a district this red, that may actually be a plus.

MN-06: An unaffiliated independent, Troy Freihammer, may appear on the ballot, in addition to Independence Party nominee Bob Anderson. He needs 1,000 signatures by month’s end, though, so he may not make that hurdle. Getting him on might be a net plus for the Dems, as his website makes pretty clear he’s a Tenther and he’s only likely to take votes away from Michele Bachmann.

OR-01: SurveyUSA is way down in the weeds here (although that’s because the poll where they get paid to do so, in this case by local TV affiliate KATU), with a look at the primaries in the 1st. In a four-way field on the GOP side, the NRCC’s preferred candidate, sports-industry consultant Rob Cornilles, leads at 31, beating mortgage broker John Kuzmanich at 19. The other guy whose name you hear in connection with this race, Stephan Brodhead (mostly because he somehow summoned up $298K CoH) is polling at all of 3, probably because his main campaign activity seems to be trolling the online comment sections of local newspapers and people have ascertained thusly that he’s a wackjob. Rep. David Wu is at 75% against token opposition on the Dem side.

PA-04: What was supposed to be a victory lap for former US Attorney and loyal Bushie Mary Beth Buchanan has turned into a real dogfight with attorney Keith Rothfus, seemingly helped along by her apparent ineptitude at electoral politics. She’s currently drawing fire for a “deceitful” mailer which uses the National Rifle Association logo without its permission. Things have actually been going badly enough on the message-control front that improbable rumors have her dropping out of the race (with days to go), although her camp is saying her “major political announcement” is just a press conference to go on the offensive against Rothfus.

Census: An interesting article from Stateline looks at what various states are doing to amp up Census participation. The real interest, here, is a neat map they’ve put together rating the states not on their overall participation percentages, but on the overall shifts in participation percentage from 2000 to 2010. Intriguingly, the biggest improvements in participation were clustered in the Deep South (especially North and South Carolina, both of which are on the cusp of adding another seat), while the Mountain West states suffered the most. California also seemed to fall off a bit, as budget limitations kept them from doing much outreach this time around, which could conceivably hurt their hopes of staying at 53 seats.

SSP Daily Digest: 5/14 (Morning Edition)

  • AR-Sen: Americans for Job Security, a shadowy group deservedly under fire for racist ads attacking Bill Halter, has now followed suit with an equally if not more disgusting mailer (click to see for yourself).
  • FL-Sen: So Charlie Crist’s gone and hired himself an interim campaign manager… who just happens to be his sister. It’s not surprising that Charlie’s having trouble finding staff. Dems are loyal to Kendrick Meek and will risk getting blackballed by the DSCC if they work against him. And the Republicans – you can bet they will fucking fry anyone who crosses them. Crist is definitely going to wind up with some slim pickins’, though if the Jeff Greene thing doesn’t work out, I’m sure Joe Trippi will be available.
  • NC-Sen: Former Rep. Eva Clayton, the first woman elected to Congress in North Carolina and a prominent backer of third-place finisher Ken Lewis, gave her endorsement to Elaine Marshall. Will Lewis himself follow suit?
  • AL-Gov: Is Artur Davis’s plan to win the war causing him to lose the battle? Ron Sparks just picked up the endorsement of two historically black political groups in Birmingham, which seem to have established a mutual shunning society with Davis thanks in large part to his vote against healthcare reform. Even if Davis does win the primary, will he kill the enthusiasm of black voters for the general?
  • CT-Gov: The Democratic state convention is the same weekend as the GOP meetup (see CT-04 item below). My understanding is that Dan Malloy has the nomination locked up, but Ned Lamont and his millions are only hoping to score the 15% they need to avoid petitioning to get on the ballot.
  • SC-Gov: Moose Lady in the Palmetto State today, endorsing Mark Sanford protégé Nikki Haley.
  • ME-Gov: Heh – it’s a poll, of sorts. Portland-based Critical Insights asked 600 likely voters if they could name any of the gubernatorial candidates, I assume by pure recall. Republican Les Otten was best-known, with 30% naming him, while Peter Mills was at 16%. Among Dems, Libby Mitchell scored 16% and Steve Rowe 11%. Everyone else was in single digits.
  • CT-04: Some Dude Will Gregory is bailing on the race, following Rob Russo, who quit a couple of weeks ago. Russo endorsed state Sen. Dan Debicella, but Gregory isn’t backing anybody. The GOP will gather next weekend (May 21st) for its convention, where a simple majority gets you the party’s endorsement, which Debicella is expected to pick up easily. However, 15% gets you on the primary ballot, and failing that, so will 2,000 signatures. The other three Republican hopefuls are all more or less saying they plan to fight on regardless of what happens at the convention.
  • DE-AL: This is either some unbelievable oppo or the product of an amazingly lucky Google search: A letter to the editor in a Jamaican newspaper written by businesswoman/heiress Michele Rollins has somehow surfaced, and it’s given developer Glen Urquhart a fat opening. In the letter, Rollins advocates that Jamaica – which she refers to as “our” country – develop itself as an international banking center (aka offshore tax evasion haven) to rival the Cayman Islands. Not only does this raise the weirdest dual-loyalties question I’ve ever seen, but given that Delaware is a big banking center, it’s causing Rollins extra grief. Also of note: The DE GOP will hold its convention this Saturday. Candidates need 60% to get the party’s endorsement (which is expected to go to Rollins), but it’s non-binding, and both Republicans plan to fight on to the September primary no matter what happens.
  • FL-08: Former state Sen. Dan Webster, like so many of his brethren, also seems ensnared in the burgeoning Republican Party of Florida Amex scandal. He spent $9K over a two-year period, pretty much entirely at restaurants, and isn’t apologizing for it. That’s a lot of pizza.
  • FL-25: Joe Garcia is hammering state Rep. David Rivera for a “political stunt” which cost taxpayers several hundred thousand dollars. Rivera supported a law which required travel agencies arranging flights to Cuba to post six-figure bonds. The agencies successfully fought the law in court and were also awarded their legal costs, which amounted to $365K. This is a clever hit, and it also shows that Garcia isn’t afraid to challenge anti-Castro fanaticism.
  • HI-01: AFSCME funneled $100K back in April to a group called Workers for a Better Hawaii, which has since spent about $75K on radios ads against Charles Djou and Ed Case. Perhaps the scariest thing is that the NRCC hasn’t spent a dime on this race (thought the RNC transferred some $94K to the Hawaii GOP back in March).
  • ID-01: Remember back in 1997, when George Lucas re-released Star Wars? Yeah, he shoulda stopped there. GOP candidate Vaughn Ward shouldn’t have even bothered with the re-release: He tried to re-trot-out an endorsement from the American Conservative Union in order to bolster his wingnut bonafides… but he put out a press release about this all the way back in November. That is sad. Even sadder is the Bill Sali-esque excuse making from Ward’s campaign manager, who – when called on it – claimed, “I just got a new Mac and I’m still trying to figure it out.” Oh god.
  • IN-08: I like it: The D-Trip is already going up on the air with an ad bashing Republican Larry Buchson on a tried-and-true theme: social security privatization. No word on the size of the buy, though apparently it will go up for a week in Evansville, which is not a costly market.
  • MA-05: So Niki Tsongas demurred on whether or not she’d want Barack Obama to campaign with her. While Scott Brown did win this district 56-43, I’m really not sure Tsongas wants to be playing cringe politics. However, the NYT – which seems to think she’s in real trouble – cutely points out that her best-funded GOP challenger has not raised “as much” as Tsongas has. The truth: Tsongas $863K, Jonathan Golnik $177K. P.S. I note that Rep. Brian Higgins (NY-27) was eager to get a photo op with Obama yesterday.
  • NY-14: Hah – Reshma Saujani almost does something I might approve of, except I don’t. She’s berating Carolyn Maloney for not supporting President Obama and the DCCC because she didn’t raise money for last night’s fundraiser (see item below). Ordinarily at SSP, we’re the loudest when it comes to demanding incumbents support their party committees – but this is ridiculous bullshit. The D-Trip always goes easy when incumbents face serious races, whether primaries or generals. But in any event, Maloney points out that she has in fact raised over a quarter mil for the DCCC this cycle. I guess Saujani has a lot of credibility when it comes to supporting the D-Trip and Obama, though: She’s donated $0 lifetime to the DCCC and was a big Clinton backer.
  • PA-12: SEIU just dropped a cool $200K on TV ads to go after Tim Burns. Let’s just hope those recent polls are right…. Meanwhile, Scott Brown is coming to campaign for Burns, while Sen. Bob Casey will be doing the same for Mark Critz.
  • DCCC: Barack Obama was in NYC last night, doing a fundraiser for the D-Trip at the St. Regis hotel. He raked in $1.3 million (tickets started at $15K a pop).
  • KY-Sen: Mongiardo Losing Ground to Conway

    Research 2000 for The Great Pumpkin (5/10-12, likely voters, 5/2-4 in parens, 3/15-17 in brackets):

    Daniel Mongiardo (D): 39 (39) [47]

    Jack Conway (D): 36 (32) [31]

    Other: 10 (12) [7]

    Undecided: 15 (17) [15]

    Rand Paul (R): 45 (44) [40]

    Trey Grayson (R): 35 (32) [28]

    Other: 7 (7) [14]

    Undecided: 13 (17) [18]

    (MoE: ±5%)

    In his post, Markos has trend lines dating back to his last poll of this race, commissioned in March. However, R2K also polled this race just a week ago for a group of local news outlets. I’ve inserted those numbers in parens, and the March numbers in brackets. Between this poll and SurveyUSA‘s latest poll showing Mongiardo only ahead by a single point, I think we can say that Conway is making his move. But will it be enough on Tuesday?

    General election nums (March in brackets):

    Dan Mongiardo (D): 38 [37]

    Rand Paul (R): 43 [46]

    Undecided: 19 [17]

    Dan Mongiardo (D): 36 [38]

    Trey Grayson (R): 42 [43]

    Undecided: 22 [19]

    Jack Conway (D): 39 [39]

    Rand Paul (R): 42 [45]

    Undecided: 19 [16]

    Jack Conway (D): 35 [36]

    Trey Grayson (R): 43 [44]

    Undecided: 22 [20]

    (MoE: ±4%)

    The situation looks mildly better for Democrats against Rand Paul, but a looming weakness remains: both Mongiardo and Conway are fairly beat up, with favorables at 47-42 and 46-44, respectively. Grayson’s at 52-27 and Rand Paul sits at 56-27. Hopefully the Democratic nominee can do a better job exploiting Paul’s weirdo politics than Trey Grayson has been able to do in the Republican primary.

    AR-Sen: Lincoln Still Leads Halter, But Runoff Possible

    Research 2000 for Daily Kos (5/10-12, likely voters, 4/26-28 in parens):

    Blanche Lincoln (D-inc): 46 (43)

    Bill Halter (D): 37 (35)

    D.C. Morrison: 6 (7)

    Undecided: 11 (15)

    (MoE: ±5%)

    At this point, it doesn’t look likely that Halter will be able to come out on top next Tuesday, but will Paulist weirdo D.C. Morrison eat up enough of the vote to force this one to a runoff? It could happen.

    And for the first time, R2K has taken a look at the Republican primary:

    John Boozman (R): 46

    Jim Holt! (R): 19

    Gilbert Baker (R): 12

    Kim Hendren (R): 6

    Curtis Coleman (R): 2

    Other: 2

    Undecided: 13

    (MoE: ±5%)

    Again, the big thing to watch next Tuesday is whether or not one or both of these races go to a runoff. For our sake, let’s hope they both do.

    General election match-ups:

    Blanche Lincoln (D-inc): 40 (42)

    John Boozman (R): 54 (52)

    Undecided: 6 (6)

    Blanche Lincoln (D-inc): 39 (40)

    Gilbert Baker (R): 45 (47)

    Undecided: 16 (13)

    Blanche Lincoln (D-inc): 40 (40)

    Kim Hendren (R): 46 (50)

    Undecided: 14 (10)

    Blanche Lincoln (D-inc): 41

    Jim Holt! (R): 44

    Undecided: 15

    Bill Halter (D): 41 (42)

    John Boozman (R): 50 (47)

    Undecided: 9 (11)

    Bill Halter (D): 42 (43)

    Gilbert Baker (R): 42 (44)

    Undecided: 16 (13)

    Bill Halter (D): 42 (43)

    Kim Hendren (R): 42 (45)

    Undecided: 16 (12)

    Bill Halter (D): 42

    Jim Holt! (R): 43

    Undecided: 15

    (MoE: ±4%)

    While Halter will have an incredible challenge ahead of him if he can pull out a win in this primary, Lincoln and her 39-55 favorable rating look like burnt toast.

    PA-Sen, PA-Gov: More Strong Numbers for Sestak, Onorato

    Quinnipiac (5/4-10, registered voters, 3/30-4/5 in parens):

    Arlen Specter (D-inc): 40 (41)

    Pat Toomey (R): 47 (46)

    Undecided: 12 (12)

    Joe Sestak (D): 40 (34)

    Pat Toomey (R): 42 (42)

    Undecided: 16 (22)

    Dan Onorato (D): 37 (33)

    Tom Corbett (R): 43 (45)

    Undecided: 19 (21)

    Jack Wagner (D): 28 (29)

    Tom Corbett (R): 47 (48)

    Undecided: 23 (21)

    Joe Hoeffel (D): 26 (28)

    Tom Corbett (R): 49 (50)

    Undecided: 22 (21)

    (MoE: 2.9%)

    Quinnipiac released the general election half of its sample today (note that they still aren’t polling likely voters on November, despite their switch to LVs for the primary). Two big things leap out here: first, Joe Sestak has really turned the pro-Specter electability argument on its head. What seemed to hold him back earlier was his unknownness, which has changed now that he’s actually advertising and increasing his profile. Sestak has pulled within 2 of Toomey, up from an 8 point gap, while Specter has lost ground vs. Toomey, currently a 7-point gap instead of April’s 5. In addition, there are more persuadables left open in Sestak/Toomey. And second, while I’d just about written the gubernatorial race off for dead, it also seems like Dan Onorato is trying to make a race of this against Tom Corbett, as he too is getting better-known throughout the state. Onorato within 6 is the best result any pollster has seen so far.

    Suffolk (5/4-10, likely voters, no trendlines):

    Joe Sestak (D): 49

    Arlen Specter (D-inc): 40

    Undecided: 12

    Dan Onorato (D): 46

    Anthony Williams (D): 13

    Jack Wagner (D): 9

    Joe Hoeffel (D): 8

    Undecided: 25

    (MoE: 4.9%)

    Suffolk weighs in with their first poll of the Pennsylvania race, and these are some attention-getting numbers: they find Joe Sestak up by 9 over Arlen Specter, by far the largest margin anyone has seen for him. They also have Dan Onorato at 46, which is the first time he’s broken into the 40s against his multiple opponents. (Suffolk, as you may remember, was bang-on in predicting their home state in MA-Sen, but whiffed pretty badly on NJ-Gov, so you can decide how much weight to give this one.) They also looked at the GOP primaries, and like everyone else, found nothing to see here: Tom Corbett beats Sam Rohrer 58-20 and Pat Toomey beats Peg Luksik 60-9.

    Muhlenberg College for Allentown Morning Call (pdf) (5/9-12, likely voters, 5/8-11 in parentheses):

    Arlen Specter (D-inc): 44 (45)

    Joe Sestak (D): 44 (45)

    Undecided: 12 (9)

    Dan Onorato (D): 39 (37)

    Anthony Williams (D): 14 (15)

    Joe Hoeffel (D): 11 (8)

    Jack Wagner (D): 9 (9)

    Undecided: 27 (30)

    (MoE: ±5%)

    There’s little to report in today’s Muhlenberg daily tracker. Specter and Sestak are still tied, although undecideds have ticked up a bit. Finally, at least one more poll is forthcoming: Research 2000 will have a poll out tomorrow, if not later tonight.

    SSP Daily Digest: 5/13 (Afternoon Edition)

    AZ-Sen: A little tension here between John McCain and retiring Rep. John Shadegg? Shadegg has endorsed McCain (along with the rest of Arizona’s GOP House delegation) but was publicly laughing along with the Morning Joe crew to John McCain’s new TV ad on border security (which marks a big ‘ol flip-flop for the one-time pro-immigration reform McCain).

    NV-Sen: Everyone’s abuzz today about the new Mason-Dixon/LVRJ poll that has right-winger Sharron Angle moving into contention in the GOP primary, mostly as Sue Lowden’s expense. The numbers suggest that may have more to do with Angle’s higher profile after getting the Tea Party Express endorsement, rather than blowback from Lowden having laid an egg. We’ll have more on that poll once we have the general election numbers. Danny Tarkanian still seems to be in the thick of things, though; he’s touting an internal poll that has him tied with Lowden at 30-30, with Angle hanging back at 15. Tarkanian may also be able to blunt Angle’s surge a bit with a far-right endorsement of his own, from Minutemen co-founder Jim Gilchrist.

    NY-Sen-B: Rep. Peter King took a pass on challenging Kirsten Gillibrand after much public pondering, but today he’s announcing that he’s backing Bruce Blakeman in the GOP primary among the various lower-tier candidates who did get in.

    CA-Gov: Yesterday, Steve Poizner rooted around in his change jar and found an extra $2.5 million to go toward a final push in the GOP gubernatorial primary. Meg Whitman was unimpressed, raising the stakes with another $5 million (bringing her own campaign-long total to $64 million of her own money). “That’s not a ludicrous waste of money. Now this is a ludicrous waste of money,” she was overheard saying in an Australian accent.

    CT-Gov: Stop the presses! Rudy Marconi is out of the Democratic field for the gubernatorial race. Since this is probably the first you’ve heard of him and you may be thinking he’s the guy who invented the radio, no, he’s the First Selectman of Ridgefield. He was the last minor Dem to fall, making it a two-man fight between Ned Lamont and Dan Malloy. (Marconi endorsed Lamont on the way out.) Both Lamont and Malloy picked up some labor endorsements too, although it seems like Malloy got the bigger score, in the form of the SEIU’s two largest locals in the state. Lamont got the Laborers.

    MA-Gov: It looks like the RGA’s hard hit on indie Tim Cahill (echoes of their attacks on Chris Daggett in New Jersey) may have had the desired effects. A Rasmussen poll this week showed Cahill lagging into the teens, in the third place, with GOPer Charlie Baker moving up (unfortunately for them, it also seemed to suggest some Cahill votes moving to Patrick too, as he moved up even more than Baker and pushed into the 40s, but I suppose that’s part of the GOP’s plan to try and minimize Cahill and turn it into a traditional two-man race). It also blunted a social conservative uprising: a number of RNC national committee members had moved to stop the RGA from spending money on Charlie Baker because of his tolerant social views, but many of them withdrew that request shortly after seeing the polls indicating that the GOP attacks were actually working. UPDATE: National Journal has some additional background, and it seems like the back-down may have had more to do with some hard arm-twisting from Haley Barbour than a sudden epiphany on the part of the recalcitrant Iowans.

    MN-Gov: Looks like Margaret Anderson Kelliher, despite her DFL endorsement, is far from having things locked down in the Democratic primary. The United Steelworkers endorsed one of her opponents who didn’t bother with the party process, ex-sen. Mark Dayton.

    NV-Gov: One small tidbit from yesterday’s poll by Dem pollster Fairbank Maslin, that raised a lot of eyebrows over its NV-Sen numbers, escaped our attention. They also found Rory Reid within striking distance of likely GOP nominee Brian Sandoval, 46-41. (No word on a Reid/Gibbons result.)

    NC-07: Now here’s one of the last places I’d expected to see an intramural cat-fud fight. After attracting some good notices from the NRCC (including addition to the “On the Radar” tier) based on respectable fundraising and Iraq vet credentials, Ilario Pantano got over the 50% mark in the GOP primary. But now his two vanquished rivals, 2008 nominee Will Breazeale and Randy Crow, are uniting to fight against Pantano in the general. This doesn’t sound like a typical lame case of sour grapes: Breazeale, a vet himself, says he has a “moral obligation” to fight Pantano over his actions in Iraq. It turns out Pantano was charged with murder after shooting two Iraqis in his custody, although charges were eventually dropped. Pantano faces Dem Rep. Mike McIntyre, who’s had little trouble holding this R+5 seat so far.

    NY-01: With three rich guys duking it out in the GOP primary, Newt Gingrich, for some reason, waded into the fray to endorse the seemingly richest of the bunch: Randy Altschuler.

    WI-07: One more prominent local Dem decided against competing in the primary to replace retiring Rep. David Obey, leaving state Sen. Julie Lassa pretty much the consensus pick. Former state Sen. Kevin Shibilski said he liked the idea of getting in, but recognized the importance of avoiding a contested primary.

    West Virginia: Highly motivated voters in both parties this year? Guess again, if West Virginia’s primary is any indication. Turnout in the Mountain State was actually a record low, with only 166,000 votes cast, or 14% of registered voters.

    Florida: Mason-Dixon’s Senate and Governor poll included a whole bunch of downballot races too, offering a mixed bag for Dems. Maybe the most noteworthy finding: Dem ex-Tallahassee mayor Scott Maddox is leading the Ag Commissioner race, 31-30. That’s surprising, since the GOP fielded a top-tier opponent (in fact, several tiers above what this kind of race usually attracts) in the former of retiring Rep. Adam Putnam. In the CFO race, GOP state Senate president Jeff Atwater leads Dem ex-state Rep. Loranne Ausley, 33-26. For the AG race, they don’t poll the general but look at both primaries (where undecideds rule the day). On the Dem side, state Sen. Dan Gelber (who had run for Senate for a while) leads state Sen. Dave Aronberg (who really should be running in FL-16 instead) 15-12, while on the GOP side, Lt. Gov. Jeff Kottkamp leads Pam Bondi 13-10.

    Demographics: While we’re talking about Florida, Josh Goodman has some interesting number-crunching about where the growth in Florida is, and what that may mean for redistricting. The fastest-growing counties in the state seem to be the dark-red exurbs around Jacksonville (like Clay County), but that’s counterbalanced somewhat by the fast growth in the Orlando area, where the growth isn’t quite as fast but where there’s also a Democratic trend in the electorate.

    PA-Sen, PA-Gov: Specter and Sestak Neck and Neck

    Quinnipiac (5/5-10, likely voters, 4/28-5/2 in parens):

    Arlen Specter (D-inc): 44 (47)

    Joe Sestak (D): 42 (39)

    Undecided: 14 (14)

    Dan Onorato (D): 38 (36)

    Jack Wagner (D): 11 (8)

    Anthony Williams (D): 10 (8)

    Joe Hoeffel (D): 9 (9)

    Undecided: 32 (37)

    (MoE: 3.2%)

    Quinnipiac is the first pollster out of many polls to find that Arlen Specter has a lead in the Democratic Senate primary (hard to believe, even a month ago, that I’d be saying those words). They’ve switched to a likely voter model, with May 18 fast approaching, but the main difference over the last few weeks is that Joe Sestak hit the airwaves hard, which seemed to upend this race. They also take a look at the sleepy GOP primaries, finding Tom Corbett beating Sam Rohrer 57-14 on the gubernatorial side and Pat Toomey beating Peg Luksik 60-9. (Remember when I thought that the squishy-on-abortion Toomey might face some trouble against single-issue pro-lifer Luksik, who was more of a force back in the 1990s, in the primary? Well, looks like I was wrong on that one.)

    Franklin & Marshall (5/3-9, registered voters except likely voters for Dem Senate primary, 3/15-21 in parens):

    Joe Sestak (D): 38 (12)

    Arlen Specter (D-inc): 36 (32)

    Undecided: 25 (52)

    (MoE: 7.9%)

    Joe Sestak (D): 28 (19)

    Pat Toomey (R): 29 (27)

    Undecided: 43 (49)

    Arlen Specter (D-inc): 33 (29)

    Pat Toomey (R): 35 (33)

    Undecided: 26 (32)

    (MoE: 3.3%)

    Dan Onorato (D): 27 (11)

    Jack Wagner (D): 5 (7)

    Anthony Williams (D): 5 (4)

    Joe Hoeffel (D): 4 (5)

    Undecided: 57 (71)

    (MoE: 4.9%)

    Franklin & Marshall switches back to their choose-your-own-adventure approach, offering a choice of LV or RV numbers in the Democratic primary for the Senate. What’s happening in the Dem primary mirrors what they’ve previously found in the general: that Specter wins among all registered voters, but loses among those actually likely to vote. Among RVs, Specter leads Sestak 38-29. (Note the huge margin of error on their Dem LV sample. The RV sample, which was the only way Governor primary numbers were reported, is down in the normal range, though.) F&M’s numbers on the GOP primaries are Corbett 29, Rohrer 10, and Toomey 28, Luksik 1. (Yep, definitely not happening for Luksik this year.) They also include general election numbers, which show tightening vs. Toomey as the Dems are moving to front-of-mind thanks to their ad deluges.

    Muhlenberg College for Allentown Morning Call (pdf) (5/8-11, likely voters, 5/7-10 in parentheses):

    Arlen Specter (D-inc): 45 (43)

    Joe Sestak (D): 45 (47)

    Undecided: 9 (10)

    Dan Onorato (D): 37 (33)

    Anthony Williams (D): 15 (15)

    Jack Wagner (D): 9 (9)

    Joe Hoeffel (D): 8 (10)

    Undecided: 30 (34)

    (MoE: ±5%)

    Finally, is there some Arlen-mentum in the daily Muhlenberg tracker? After Sestak peaking with a 5-point lead, now the duo are back to a tie today. Taking all the data together, I don’t think you can call this anything but the deadest of dead heats.