IA-Gov, IA-05: King Considers Gube Bid

Callin’ out around the world, are you ready for a brand new beat?

Rep. Steve King (R) is looking at a bid for governor in 2010, according to multiple local news sources. On a weekly public TV show taping this week, King said he was not sure whether he would challenge Gov. Chet Culver (D) but was looking at his options.

“There’s a duty for me, I think. I’ve made no decisions,” King said on the program, according to the Associated Press. “It would be constructive for me at this point to say that the most important job right now is to bring together and reunify the Republican Party in this state.”

Summer’s here and the time is right for dancin’ in the streets!

Fun fact: John McCain carried King’s 5th CD by a 54-44 margin last November.

FL-02: Lawson Will Run

State Senate Minority Leader Al Lawson is now making it known that he will indeed challenge Rep. Allen Boyd in the 2010 Democratic primary:

Lawson, an insurance agent who has represented Tallahassee in the Legislature since 1982, said today he intends next year to take on Congressman Allen Boyd, a Democrat from Monticello.

The primary will be bruising, with the nation’s economic crisis front and center. […]

Lawson has come out of the gate swinging, accusing Boyd of forgetting his struggling constituents.

Boyd voted in favor of a $700 billion taxpayer rescue of the nation’s troubled financial industry that was first proposed by former President George W. Bush. Boyd joined most Republicans in Congress in voting against a more than $800 billion economic stimulus package being pushed hard by the new administration of President Barack Obama.

Congress is still negotiating a final package.

“He’s putting Wall Street ahead of Main Street, and there’s something wrong with that,” Lawson said. “Most of that district is rural and the people need help.”

Before you get too excited, though, let’s not forget that Lawson “almost” endorsed Charlie Crist in 2006 — not exactly the behavior of a progressive firebrand.

(Hat-tip: The Briefing Room)

NH-Sen: Hodes Narrowly Leads Sununu and Bass, CSP Competitive

Public Policy Polling (2/6-8, registered voters):

Paul Hodes (D): 40

Charlie Bass (R): 37

Paul Hodes (D): 46

John Sununu (R): 44

Carol Shea-Porter (D): 42

Charlie Bass (R): 43

Carol Shea-Porter (D): 45

John Sununu (R): 46

(MoE: ±2.7%)

While all the matchups tested here by our friends at PPP are well within the margin of error, Hodes starts off the 2010 Senate race in the best shape — indeed, he even has more room to grow than Shea-Porter does. A full 24% of voters have no opinion of Hodes, while only 17% of voters don’t know enough about CSP to give an opinion.

Sununu has near-universal name recognition, which is hardly a surprise given his recent humiliating defeat at the polls, but that suggests that his numbers here may be something of a high water mark. Bass, on the other hand, has the least name recognition of the bunch, and those who do know him don’t seem to care for him all that much — his favorability score clocks in at 33-37. I’d be pretty surprised if the Bassmaster threw his hat into the ring.

Upside Down?!

Hi! I’m Charlie Wheelan and I am running to fill Rahm Emanuel’s vacant congressional seat in the Illinois’ 5th Congressional District. I am an expert in economics and a public policy lecturer at the University of Chicago. I’m also the author of Naked Economics, a lay-persons guide to economics!

Last month, my “Underwater” TV ad caught the nation’s eye.  Today, I’m launching my second TV ad, “Upside Down.”

Check out the new ad at

This time, instead of being underwater, I’m dangling from my feet, literally UPSIDE DOWN!  Why?  Because I wanted to show that I understand how many people’s efforts to pay their mortgage, afford health care and college tuition costs have gone “bottom-up”.

This is an equal opportunity recession.  I’ve met people with buildings named after them who’ve lost half their net worth.  I’ve met middle-class parents who thought they’d saved four years of college tuition and now only have two.  I’ve met people who’ve lost jobs, or are really worried about that possibility.

If it takes something a bit crazy like hanging upside down to make folks sit up and take notice, I’m willing to do it.

You can see me in the ad holding a copy of my book Naked Economics while strapped in inversion boots and suspended from a bar.  Halfway through the television spot, gravity wins out; I finally plummet, like the economy.

The ad, which was shot in front of a blue screen, took more than three hours to tape and I was hanging upside down almost the whole time.  I felt like my eyes were going to pop out. It was much worse than having to submerge myself underwater. Still, it was worth every minute to show people that I am the best person to help get out of the economic struggles we are facing today.

Don’t forget – the special primary election for the Illinois Fifth District Congressional seat is March 3.

Populist Caucus Membership Announced

One of the more interesting developments in the behind-the-scenes organization of the House this year is the introduction of a whole new caucus, the Populist Caucus. It’s the brainchild of IA-01’s Bruce Braley, who despite his sophomore status is well on his way to establishing himself as a major player in the House (he’s also the DCCC’s candidate services vice-chair).

The House Democrats certainly aren’t hurting for ideological caucuses (the Progressive Caucus, New Democrats, and Blue Dogs pretty clearly mark out the left, center, and right of the Democratic caucus). But the Populist Caucus — which has a current top priority of getting “Buy American” provisions included in the stimulus package, but plans to focus on health care and tax as well as trade issues — is interesting because it draws on members from across the ideological spectrum. In addition to Braley, the announced members are:

Reps. Michael Arcuri (D-NY); Pete DeFazio (D-OR); Betty Sutton (D-OH); Leonard Boswell (D-IA); Steve Cohen (D-TN); Joe Courtney (D-CT); Keith Ellison (D-MN); Bob Filner (D-CA); Phil Hare (D-IL); Mazie Hirono (D-HI); Hank Johnson (D-GA); Steve Kagan (D-WI); David Loebsack (D-IA); Eric Massa (D-NY); Linda Sanchez (D-CA); Jan Schakowsky (D-IL); Carol Shea-Porter (D-NH); Peter Welch (D-VT); and John Yarmuth (D-KY).

While there’s a fair amount of overlap with the Progressive Caucus (of the 20, 11 are also big-P Progressives), there are also some New Dems (Courtney, Braley himself), and some of the less objectionable Blue Dogs (Arcuri, Boswell). There isn’t even much of a correlation with the first bailout vote — of the 19 who voted, 7 were ‘ayes’ (Arcuri, Boswell, Cohen, Ellison, Hare, Loebsack, and Schakowsky) — although that may have to do with the panic surrounding the initial bailout and dismay over how it’s been administered. There are some names that you’d certainly expect to see in any Populist Caucus (DeFazio), but also some likely suspects missing (starting with Marcy Kaptur).

If there’s a common thread here, it may be what I observed among Democratic ‘no’ votes when looking for a pattern in the strange vote alignment in the first bailout vote in September: it’s representatives from rural or small-city districts that seem to be geographically and/or economically removed from Wall Street and other centers of power (although there are a few exceptions, like Jan Schakowsky’s affluent IL-09). Or, it may simply boil down to the districts with some of the angriest constituents:

“As someone who has been out holding town hall meetings and getting a faceful of that populist rage, I know that it is real, it is a force that needs to be dealt with, and it needs to be given a voice,” said Braley.

NY-20: Election Slated for March 31

New York Governor David Patterson has set the special election in NY-20 for March 31. Those two months are a pretty generous timeframe, but from the Dems’ standpoint, it’s necessary, to give candidate Scott Murphy some time to introduce himself to the district. (The self-funding Murphy hasn’t held elective office before.)

That timeframe also gives Jim Tedisco the chance to get better familiarized with the kinds of technology the kids are using these days. (After all, the new post-2008 GOP strategy appears to be “We’re going to do the exact same thing as before. Except now we’re going to use Facebook and Twitter.”)

Brownsox at Daily Kos has an amusing piece on how the tech-savvy, linked-in Tedisco has a feature on his website that front-pages everything from the #NY20 Twitter feed… including all the press releases coming from the DCCC’s blog, such as “Will Tedisco Finally Reimburse Taxpayers Over $21,000 for His 20-Minute Car Ride?” (Throw in Pete Hoekstra‘s little problems with constantly Twittering away his locations on his recent trip to Iraq and Afghanistan, and you’ve gotta wonder if the GOP would be better off just sticking with the tools they’ve already mastered: direct mail and AM radio.)

Oregon at 150: Celebrating Oregon’s Progressive Heritage

Oregon will celebrate its 150th anniversary of achieving statehood on Valentine’s Day this Saturday.  In honor of my beloved state’s 150th birthday, I present this short piece highlighting some of the achievements of the state’s progressive movement.  As our state motto says, “She Flies With Her Own Wings.”

Cross-Posted from Loaded Orygun: http://www.loadedorygun.net/sh…

The National Journal wrote in 2006 that, “Oregon is an experimental commonwealth and laboratory of reform on the Pacific Rim, a maker of national trends.”  Oregon 2006 State Profile.  Whether is the initiative system, public beaches, the bottle bill, assisted suicide or the Oregon Health Plan, Oregon has always taken pride in leading its own way.  This diary briefly discusses some key moments in Oregon’s political history.

1859: Oregon becomes the 33rd state.  Oregon became a state by agreeing not to allow African Americans to own property in its original constitution.  This provision was repealed in 1926.

1897: In what would prove to be perhaps the most important session in the state’s legislative history, the state legislature refuses to meet over a dispute on whom would be one of the state’s US Senators.  In order to broker a compromise, William Simon U’Ren, a leader of one of the factions in the state legislature at the time, agrees to accept the opposition’s Senator in exchange for the legislature’s support of the Initiative and Referendum system.

1902: The Initiative and Referendum System goes into effect in Oregon.  In its early years it did the following: Banning free railroad passes, popular elections of U.S. Senators, establishing the first presidential primary in the United States, giving women the right to vote, eliminating poll taxes and establishing a 40 hour work week.

1913: Governor Oswald West declares that the state’s beaches are public property.  Today, this means that access points must be provided at regular points along the beach and that, in fact, the state’s beach is a public highway.

1924: Following the overturning of the “Compuolsory School Act” (a reform pushed by the KKK which required all students to go to public schools and not religious ones), the KKK largely leaves the state and moves to Idaho.

1949: Oregon establishes the fair labor practices commission, helping protect worker’s rights.

1971: Oregon establishes the nation’s first bottle bill, providing for a $.05 deposit on soft drinks (now extended to water bottles and all carbonated drinks).

1972: Oregon passes Senate Bill 100, establishing Oregon’s land use system.  The system is predicated on the basic principle of limiting sprawl and thus preserving farmland.  In brief, each city (or in the case of Portland and Eugene the full urban area) draws an “Urban Growth Boundary” outside their cities beyond which only limited development may occur.  This has been wildly successful by most estimations.

1973: Oregon passes Public Records and Public Meetings laws, establishing some of the most open government systems in the country.

1986: Portland’s light-rail system (MAX) begins service.

1987: The Oregon Health Plan begins to be implemented, providing a trial of free comprehensive health care under Medicaid.

1993: Oregon holds the first statewide vote by mail election in the country.  Mandatory vote by mail was approved by initiative in 1998.

1994: Oregon establishes Doctor Assisted Suicide by initiative, becoming the first state to do so (followed recently by Washington).

2007: Oregon passes domestic partnership and equal protection laws granting GLBT couples the rights to equal benefits to marriage and full protection under the state’s anti-discrimination laws.

That’s a good brief summary.  Discuss below.

MO-Sen – Talent is out

http://rturner229.blogspot.com…

The Turner Report reports that Talent issued a statement saying:

I have decided to withdraw my name from consideration for the Senate in 2010, for several reasons. First, there are other qualified Republicans who are seriously investigating the race, and it is vital to prevent the kind of dissension that hurt my Party’s ticket so greatly in 2008. In addition, I have family and public obligations which this unexpected race would disrupt. Chief among the latter is my work as Vice Chairman of the Commission on WMD Proliferation and Terrorism, which is working to prevent a nuclear or biological attack on the United States.”

“I am still very interested in serving the people of Missouri in elective office, but the considerations I have recited in this statement are more important than my personal goals.”

“My political priority in 2010 will be electing a strong and qualified Republican to replace my friend Kit Bond in the United States Senate”

Conservative PAC vows to primary Collins, Snowe and Specter

All for the unforgivable sin of supporting an economic recovery plan.  The right eating it’s own once again.  And they wonder why they are down to 41 Senators and counting.

http://politicalticker.blogs.c…

An influential conservative political action committee is pledging to support primary challengers to any Republican senator who supports President Obama’s stimulus package – the latest public show of dissatisfaction from the right over the massive measure before Congress.

“The American people don’t want this trillion dollar political payoff that will just line the pockets of non-governmental organizations who supported [President] Obama in the election,” said Scott Wheeler, the executive director of The National Republican Trust PAC, an organization that calls for less government spending and lower taxes.

“Republican senators are on notice,” Wheeler said. “If they support the stimulus package, we will make sure every voter in their state knows how they tried to further bankrupt voters in an already bad economy.”

In a Senate vote Tuesday, only three Republicans backed the $838 billion measure – Sens. Olympia Snowe and Susan Collins of Maine, and Pennsylvania Sen. Arlen Specter.

All three senators were involved in cutting spending proposals from the plan, and have said they may not vote for the final version bill if more spending projects are added to it.

TX-Gov: Bush Ambassador Tom Schieffer Considering Run… as a Dem

A potentially interesting development:

Having wrapped up his career as an ambassador under President Bush, Fort Worth’s Tom Schieffer is back home and pondering a run for governor – as a Democrat.

“I’ve thought about it for a while,” Schieffer told the Star-Telegram. “I have not made a decision.”

Although Schieffer served in a Republican administration under Bush – with whom he worked as general manager of the Texas Rangers – he says there should be no confusion about his political affiliation. “I am a Democrat,” said Schieffer, who voted for Barack Obama in the primary and general elections.

The right Democrat just might find an opening left by the inevitable all-out slugfest grudge match between Gov. Rick Perry and Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison that will soon be in full bloom. Is Schieffer (brother of CBS broadcaster Bob) that guy? Perhaps.

(h/t)