Breakdown of AK-AL GOP primary: Why Young looks good w/absentees

The Alaska division of elections was good enough to post the primary results in each of the 40 state house districts, so I have gone through the numbers for the GOP primary to see if we can figure any thing out.  The numbers are very encouraging, at least with regards to absentee ballots.  

Below, I’ve listed the total votes and breakdown between Young and Parnell in each district, plus the breakdown by absentee ballots so far counted.  I am not listing LeDoux’s numbers, but her votes are obviously part of the totals.  

HD1 — 1761 total votes: Young 66%-Parnell 25%; (98 absentee votes: Young 64%-Parnell 29%)

HD2 — 1742 total votes: Young 54-Parnell 34; (156 absentee votes: Young 47-Parnell 42)

HD3 — 1678 total votes: Young 43-Parnell 46; (103 absentee votes: Young 44-Parnell 49)

HD 4 — 2449 total votes: Young 41-Parnell 46; (70 absentee votes: Young 40-Parnell 47)

HD 5 — 1468 total votes: Young 52-Parnell 37; (93 absentee votes: Young 43-Parnell 38)

HD 6 — 1807 total votes: Young 44-Parnell 49; (146 absentee votes: Young 43-Parnell 51)

HD 7 — 3659 total votes: Young 32-Parnell 60; (109 absentee votes: Young 34-Parnell 62)

HD 8 — 2840 total votes: Young 35-Parnell 57; (86 absentee votes: Young 27-Parnell 67)

HD 9 — 1927 total votes: Young 36-Parnell 58; (68 absentee votes: Young 31-Parnell 56)

HD 10 — 1363 total votes: Young 38%-Parnell 55%; (81 absentee votes: Young 46%-Parnell 44%)

HD 11 — 3410 total votes: Young 33-Parnell 61; (111 absentee votes: Young 48-Parnell 45)

HD 12 — 2083 total votes: Young 43-Parnell 47; (223 absentee votes: Young 55-Parnell 37)

HD 13 — 3941 total votes: Young 45-Parnell 47; (240 absentee votes: Young 53-Parnell 40)

HD 14 — 3504 total votes: Young 44-Parnell 49; (140 absentee votes: Young 51-Parnell 51)

HD 15 — 3677 total votes: Young 46-Parnell 45; (186 absentee votes: Young 44-Parnell 49)

HD 16 — 4075 total votes: Young 47-Parnell 44; (205 absentee votes: Young 48-Parnell 45)

HD 17 — 3236 total votes: Young 47-Parnell 45; (203 absentee votes: Young 48-Parnell 47)

HD 18 — 1109 total votes: Young 39-Parnell 50; (133 absentee votes: Young 43-Parnell 49)

HD 19 — 1922 total votes: Young 50-Parnell 42; (109 absentee votes: Young 43-Parnell 45)

HD 20 — 945 total votes: Young 51%-Parnell 39%; (46 absentee votes: Young 44%-Parnell 50%)

HD 21 — 2671 total votes: Young 50-Parnell 43; (155 absentee votes: Young 52-Parnell 41)

HD 22 — 1414 total votes: Young 48-Parnell 41; (67 absentee votes: Young 40-Parnell 45)

HD 23 — 1523 total votes: Young 51-Parnell 41; (104 absentee votes: Young 44-Parnell 49)

HD 24 — 1982 total votes: Young 51-Parnell 41; (85 absentee votes: Young 46-Parnell 46)

HD 25 — 1472 total votes: Young 54-Parnell 37; (75 absentee votes: Young 44-Parnell 48)

HD 26 — 2513 total votes: Young 53-Parnell 39; (147 absentee votes: Young 44-Parnell 50)

HD 27 — 2910 total votes: Young 50-Parnell 42; (126 absentee votes: Young 57-Parnell 37)

HD 28 — 3572 total votes: Young 51-Parnell 42; (156 absentee votes: Young 46-Parnell 44)

HD 29 — 1916 total votes: Young 50-Parnell 41; (108 absentee votes: Young 44-Parnell 47)

HD 30 — 3009 total votes: Young 48%-Parnell 44%; (129 absentee votes: Young 46%-Parnell 47%)

HD 31 — 4063 total votes: Young 48-Parnell 45; (165 absentee votes: Young 42-Parnell 50)

HD 32 — 4359 total votes: Young 46-Parnell 45; (245 absentee votes: Young 47-Parnell 44)

HD 33 — 2863 total votes: Young 41-Parnell 50; (139 absentee votes: Young 42-Parnell 43)

HD 34 — 3396 total votes: Young 40-Parnell 50; (195 absentee votes: Young 44-Parnell 46)

HD 35 — 2537 total votes: Young 44-Parnell 44; (213 absentee votes: Young: 45-Parnell 42)

HD 36 — 1579 total votes: Young 30-Parnell 30; (114 absentee votes: Young 47-Parnell 22)

HD 37 — 966 total votes: Young 57-Parnell 34; (41 absentee votes: Young 44-Parnell 37)

HD 38 — 523 total votes: Young 57-Parnell 35; (12 absentee votes: Young 92-Parnell 8)

HD 39 — 867 total votes: Young 58-Young 33; (11 absentee votes: Young 64-Parnell 18)

HD 40 — 813 total votes: Young 55-Parnell 33; (8 absentee votes: Young 38-Parnell 50)

For what it’s worth, Young ended up winning 24 house districts, to 16 for Parnell.  

It’s important to note that at least two communities — Petersburg and Wrangell — ran out of GOP ballots, so several primary voters used sample ballots which have not been counted: 204 in Petersburg and 53 in Wrangell.  

Young bested Parnell in both towns: by 44%-37% in Petersburg, and 58%-27% in Wrangell.  It is therefore reasonable to believe Young will probably gain around 30 votes from these sample ballots once they are counted.

Onto the totals:

Total Vote (93544)

Don Young:    45.47% (42539)

Sean Parnell:  45.31 % (42387)

Absentees (so far) (4901):

Don Young:   45.79% (2244)

Sean Parnell: 44.79% (2195)

So, while Young is running 0.16 percent ahead of Parnell overall (including those 4901 absentee votes already counted), he leads Parnell by exactly 1.0 percent overall among absentee votes.  

Right now, both Young and Parnell’s campaign have estimated there are around 4,000 absentee ballots left.  Assuming the breakdown we saw with the nearly 5000 counted absentee votes carries over, Young should exceed Parnell by approximately 40 votes among the remaining 4000 absentee votes, and his lead should thus hold.  

Assuming this comes to fruition, a lot will depend the 5,000-10,000 questioned (provisional) ballots which the division of elections says may end up coming in.  We have no info on this load of potentially game-changing ballots.

But clearly, Young is running better than Parnell among absentee ballots than among the overall vote — 0.16 percent to 1.0 percent.  This is a good sign for Democrats.  Still, it is unclear that Young would be able to gain a margin of greater than 0.5 percent.  Then again, three weeks of counting, followed by a recount might not be all bad for Democrats!

Plus, Young is quoted in the Fairbanks Daily News Miner as saying he might run as an independent if he were to lose.  

Asked if he would consider running as an Independent if he lost the primary, Young said he hadn’t considered it.

“It’s a good idea; I might,” he said. “But I don’t expect him to win the primary.”

Good times!  

NY-13: Straniere Gets Ugly – Real Ugly

Life gets worse and worse every week for Staten Island Republicans, whose once-firm grip on New York’s 13th congressional district is now all but limp. Things are going less than swimmingly in the GOP primary to replace disgraced retiring Rep. Vito Fossella, as the two leading pretenders can’t stay away from each other’s throats.

Jamshad Wyne, the Staten GOP finance chair, claims that Straniere asked him to engage in illegal campaign financing for his failed 2001 campaign for borough president:

Wyne — who uses the name Dr. Jamshad Wyne professionally — said Straniere asked him to take $5,000 of his personal cash and disburse it to relatives who would, in turn, write checks in the amounts of $250 or $200 to Straniere for Borough President, thereby maximizing the amount of matching funds Straniere could receive from the city Campaign Finance Board.

Straniere adamantly denied the claim, calling it “outrageous.”

Wyne said he never followed through on what he maintains was Straniere’s request.

Such a practice is illegal; in recent years two politicians, one running for Queens borough president and the other for public advocate, were jailed for promoting such a scheme.

For his part, Straniere has decided to go all out racist:

Meanwhile, during an interview yesterday, Straniere said Wyne has been using the name “Jim” on the campaign trail because “he is trying to remake himself into something other than who is. He obviously doesn’t want people to know he is Pakistani and a Muslim.”

Stay classy, Republicans.

NRCC Reveals Defensive Crouch in Paid Media Plans

The NRCC has reserved over $8.8 million in ad time for 14 House races across the country, 11 of which are defensive moves. The Politico has the scoop while TPM EC picks up the details:



























































































District Incumbent NRCC DCCC
AL-02 Open $338K $598K
CO-04 Musgrave $1.2M $667K
FL-16 Mahoney $955K $1.5M
ID-01 Sali $509K $349K
KS-02 Boyda $580K $0
LA-04 Open $323K $714K
LA-06 Cazayoux $474K $723K
MN-03 Open $675K $1.4M
MO-06 Graves $430K $798K
NC-08 Hayes $720K $1.6M
NM-01 Open $730K $1.3M
NV-03 Porter $590K $916K
OH-01 Chabot $575K $928K
PA-03 English $828K $0

Really interesting that Idaho’s 1st is among the committee’s first wave here, and the sums that the cash-strapped committee is prepared to spend on defense in CO-04 and PA-03 is eye-popping. The Politico notes that the NRCC has reserved about two weeks worth of time (and more in some instances) for most of these races. The bad news for Team Red is that the DCCC has already blocked off $53 million for 55 districts.

In fact, the DCCC plans to outspend the NRCC in most of these 14 races, including: AL-02 ($598), FL-16 ($1.5M), LA-04 ($714K), LA-06 ($723K), MN-03 ($1.4M), MO-06 ($798K), NC-08 ($1.6M), NM-01 ($1.3M), NV-03 ($916K), and OH-01 ($928K). (UPDATE: I’ve updated the chart above to give you a district-by-district comp.)

Of course, these plans are completely adjustable, but with not much more cash in the bank than the size of this early reservation, the NRCC doesn’t have much room to pivot.

NH-Sen: Shaheen Still Has Comfortable Edge

ARG (8/18-20, likely voters, 7/21 in parentheses):

Jeanne Shaheen (D): 52 (58)

John Sununu (R-inc): 41 (36)

(MoE: ±4.0%)

Ahoy there, me hearties! Cap’n Jeanne Shaheen be sendin’ th’ scurvy dog John Sununu on a voyage to Davy Jones’ locker, or so say the landlubbers at ARRRRRRRRRRRRG! Ye olde poll may have been a foul outlier, but that scalawag Sununu’s numbers still put him in more trouble than a bilge rat tryin’ to swim the Channel.

Joe Kenney also looks t’ take a long walk off a short plank, 58-32, as Lord Governor John Lynch will be dancin’ a spirited hornpipe come November.

MS-Sen-B: Wicker Campaign Says Job Losses Good for Mississippi

Talk about being tone deaf: Roger Wicker’s campaign says that all of Mississippi’s job losses due to his votes in favor of NAFTA and CAFTA are actually a good thing!

“Roger Wicker is for free trade, because it allows us to take our low-skilled, low-paying jobs like textile manufacturing, and replace it with high-skilled, high-paying jobs like Toyota.”

Stuck in hard times, Mississippi? Why, just go grab yourself one of them newfangled high-skilled, high-paying factory jobs! Don’t all y’all know that they’re growing on trees thanks to Roger Wicker’s courage?

Our friends at Cotton Mouth expose the hypocrisy:

Roger Wicker is attacking Ronnie Musgrove for losing manufacturing jobs even though total employment stayed about even.

But here his spokesman says that it is good that Mississippi is shedding “low skilled” manufacturing jobs.

Crumb-bums will be crumb-bums.

NC-Gov: Perdue Maintains Edge

PPP (8/20-23, likely voters, 7/23-27 in parentheses):

Bev Perdue (D): 43 (46)

Pat McCrory (R): 38 (37)

Michael Munger (L): 4 (6)

(MoE: ±3.3%)

PPP’s new poll of the open North Carolina gubernatorial race gives Democratic Lt. Gov. Bev Perdue a five-point lead over Republican Pat McCrory, the mayor of Charlotte. It’s a bit of downward drift from last month, but much more comfortable than their June numbers, which had her up by only 42-41.

This is quite consistent with Rasmussen’s polling of the race. The August 13 Rasmussen (which SSP unfortunately let slip through the cracks until now) pegs it as a six-point race for Perdue, 51-45, improved from 47-46 in the previous poll in June. No pollster (including SurveyUSA or Civitas) has seen McCrory with a lead since May.

PPP also polled all the races for the Justice League Council of State; Democrats lead all but two of the races (Ag Commissioner and Labor Commissioner). Most of the leads are pretty narrow, but incumbent Democratic Attorney General Roy Cooper (seen as probably the likeliest challenger against the underwhelming Richard Burr in NC-Sen 2010) is thumping his R opposition, Bob Crumley, 48-30.

8/26 Primary Results Round-up

A quick round-up of the results from last night’s congressional primaries:

  • AK-Sen (D): Anchorage Mayor Mark Begich won the Democratic Senate nomination with an impressive 91% of the vote, with 98% of precincts reporting.
  • AK-Sen (R): Ted Stevens survived his primary against banker Dave Cuddy and Floridian beardo Vic Vickers (and several other also-rans), but only with 63.5% of the vote.
  • AK-AL (D): Ethan Berkowitz won the Democratic nomination for the state’s at-large House seat by a 59-41 margin over ’06 candidate Diane Benson. Alaskan Independence Party candidate Don Wright received 5600 votes and will appear on the November ballot.
  • AK-AL (R): With 98% of precincts reporting and many absentee ballots still outstanding, Don Young has taken a 145-vote lead over Sean Parnell. This race is heading into “contentious recount territory” real fast.
  • FL-08 (D & R): Democrat Alan Grayson upset ’06 nominee Charlie Stuart by a 48-28 margin for the right to take on Ric Keller in November. Keller, meanwhile, barely survived his primary challenge from right-wing radio personality Todd Long, with only 53% of the vote to Long’s 47%.
  • FL-09 (D): In a bit of an upset for the DCCC, attorney Bill Mitchell beat out wealthy former Plant City Mayor John Dicks by a 38-33 margin for the nomination against frosh GOP Rep. Gus Bilirakis.
  • FL-10 (D): Dunedin Mayor Bob Hackworth dispatched ’06 nominee and Ron Paul acolyte Samm Simpson by a 47-29 margin for the chance to take on longtime GOP Rep. Bill Young. Max Linn, a self-funding candidate who ran for Governor in 2006 on the Reform ticket, only earned 24% of the vote.
  • FL-15 (D & R): Physician Stephen Blythe crushed pilot Paul Rancatore by a 65-35 margin for the Democratic nomination for this open seat. Republicans nominated state Sen. Bill Posey with 77% of the vote, and he seems poised to run away with this race come November.
  • FL-16 (R): Pittsburgh Steelers heir Ed Tom Rooney won a tight three-way race by a 37-35-28 margin for the GOP nod to face off with Democratic Rep. Tim Mahoney.
  • FL-24 (D): Former state Rep. Suzanne Kosmas crushed ’06 nominee Clint Curtis by a 72-28 margin. Kosmas will face ethically-challenged GOP Rep. Tom Feeney in November.

AK-AL Results Thread #3























437 of 438 Precincts Reporting
Candidate Votes Percent
Don Young 42,539 45.47%
Sean Parnell 42,387 45.31%
Gabrielle LeDoux 8,618 9.21%

RESULTS: AP (House) | AP (Senate) | AK Division of Elections | ADN.com

11:50PM: Here are the exact numbers of outstanding sample ballots: 204 in Petersburg and 53 in Wrangell. Fenumiai also expects “between 5,000 and 10,000 questioned ballots to be counted Sept. 5” and as many as “8000-plus” absentee ballots (though it’s likely that this number is smaller rather than larger).

9:41PM: In the comments, ChuckinSeattle makes a great observation on the outstanding votes in Wrangell and Petersburg, where officials ran out of regular ballots and instead allowed voters to use sample ballots — Young won the reported votes in Petersburg by 158-135, and Wrangell by 158-75. So there’s a very good chance that these special ballots will help pad the Donald’s margin. But how will the outstanding absentee ballots break? That could be anyone’s guess.

5:53PM: At this precious time, it’s worth noting who is in charge of oversight at the Alaska Division of Elections. Why, you guessed it: Sean Parnell himself! Let’s hope he doesn’t pull another Katherine Harris here.

5:46PM: Wow, this could go on for another couple of weeks:

But absentee and questioned ballots won’t be counted until Sept. 5. Also, the division of elections ran out of Republican primary ballots in Petersburg and Wrangell late Tuesday afternoon. Republican voters in those Southeast Alaska towns were then allowed to vote using sample ballots, which are valid, but they won’t be counted until the state election review board starts its work on Sept. 8, Fenumiai said.

She said she didn’t know how many people in Wrangell and Petersburg voted using those sample ballots. It’s also unclear how many absentee ballots will be counted in the race. The state mailed out over 16,200 and has received about 7,600 back.

“So there’s still a potential for 8,000-plus of those to come back,” Fenumiai said.

She said some of the absentees were counted Tuesday, but she didn’t know how many. The state won’t be counting any more absentees until Sept. 5, Fenumiai said.

Awesome. This is set to be a long, drawn-out, bitter process.

5:39PM: With just a single precinct (and presumably a bunch of absentee ballots) remaining, Young is now up by 152 votes. Wow. Young may be a crumb-bum, but he’s OUR crumb-bum today.

12:06PM: From the Anchorage Daily News:

Most of the precincts that hadn’t reported election results as of midnight were from rural Alaska villages. Those are “typical Young strongholds,” Anderson said. But Parnell wasn’t convinced Young was going to clean up in the Bush, especially given many rural residents might choose to vote in Tuesday’s Democratic primary instead of Republican contest.

There are also the 16,000 absentee ballots the division of elections mailed out. It has received back 7,600 of them and Gail Fenumiai, director of the state division of elections, said she didn’t know how many of those have been counted. As long as the absentee ballots were postmarked Tuesday, the division will continue to count them for the next 10 days. Questioned ballots will be counted on Sept. 5.

12:00PM ET: Time for a fresh new thread. I know you all want to keep discussing these stunning results!

The Final Oregon Ballot: Game On!

Yesterday was the deadline for submitting minor party candidates and replacing withdrawn major party candidates for the Oregon ballot this fall.  Below you will find my review of the races from the statewide elections to ballot measures and all the way down to state legislative races.  Take a break from convention coverage and read on!

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

Data Sources:

The Most Recent Voter Registration Data is at: http://www.sos.state.or.us/elections/votreg/jul08.pdf

Candidate information comes from ORESTAR: https://secure.sos.state.or.us/eim/jsp/CEMainPage.jsp?CONTENT_PAGE=cf/CFSearchPage.jsp

The Statewide Layout:

Total Registered Voters: About 2.05 Million.

Democrats: 42% (+210k vs. Republicans)

Republicans: 33%.

Nonpartisan/Others: 25%.

Key:

Size of Districts:

State House: Aprox. 55k.

State Senate: Aprox. 110k.

The incumbent is always listed first, or failing that, the incumbent party.  All minor parties are listed after the two major parties.

Party Key:

D=Democratic

R=Republican

G=Pacific Green

C=Constitution

L=Libertarian

I=Independent Party (This IS a political party, NOT those running as independents).

Other Notes:

There is currently a lawsuit pending to require the SOS to list if candidates have been nominated by multiple parties.  For example, Jeff Merkley would appear as (D,I) since he has been nominated by both the Dems and the Independent Party.  I list any cross-nominations as they are posted in ORESTAR.

Ratings:

Tossup-Margin less than 3%.

Lean-3-10% margin.

Likely-11-20% margin.

Safe-More than 20% margin.

Inc=Incumbent, Int=Interim Incumbent (Someone appointed to fill a seat until the next election due typically to resignation of the previous holder.  State law allows the party which held the seat to essentially appoint the replacement.  For example, when my State Senator resigned to take a job as the leader of a moderate Business Lobbying group, as a Precinct Committee Person I was entitled to vote for his replacement, which was then ratified by the County Commission).

Statewide Races:

US President

Candidates: Sen. John McCain (R) vs. Sen. Barack Obama (D), Ralph Nader (P), Cynthia McKinney (G), Bob Barr (L) and Chuck Baldwin (C).

Summary: The fact that McCain isn’t even trying to contest Oregon says a lot.  It would be a reach for him at best.  Obama, on the other hand, sent a bunch of the Obama fellows here a few weeks ago and is ramping up for the fall.  I really don’t think Nader, who snuck on the Oregon ballot through the back door, will have much impact.

Rating: Leans to Likely Obama.

US Senate

Candidates: Sen. Gordon Smith (R-inc) vs. Speaker of the OR House Jeff Merkley (D/I) and David Brownlow (C).

Summary: Smith is at best slightly ahead but is clearly struggling.  Forced already to blow A LOT of cash on what I refer to as “Furnituregate”, I don’t know if he made that much of an impact.  Merkley is running about the best campaign I’ve ever seen anyone run in this state.

Rating: Tossup.

Secretary of State

Candidates: State Senate Majority Leader Kate Brown (D) vs. Eugene TV Reporter Rick Dancer (R) and Seth Allan Wooley (G).

Summary: Kate Brown is going to absolutely kick the crap out of Dancer.  Dancer isn’t even that good of a candidate.  On an early appearance on Lars Larson’s talk radio program (he’s a well known conservative for those who don’t know), he seemed unaware of much of what the SOS actually does.

Rating: Likely to Safe Brown.

Attorney General

John Kroger (D) faces only minor party candidates and should cruise.

State Treasurer

Candidates: State Senator Ben Westlund (D/I) vs. former Kulongoski staffer Allan Alley (R) and Michael Marsh (C)

Summary: It is always so fan to see the Republicans go after Westlund, who used to be one of them until he saw the light.  Ben has the support of those on both sides of the aisle and should cruise to an easy victory here.  Not to mention Alley’s own problems as well…

Rating: Likely to Safe Westlund.

Labor Commissioner (Technically a nonpartisan race, 2 year vacancy filling election)

Candidates: Former State Senator Brad Avakian (D-inc.) vs. Founder, Instructor/Provider of a physical and mental fitness program Pavel Goberman (D) and Losing CD1 Candidate Mark Welzycko (D).

Summary: Avakian should have little trouble, given his status as a well known figure in state politics.

Rating: Safe Avakian.

Ballot Measures:

Measure Type:

C-Constitutional.

S-Statutory.

Legislative Referrals:

Measure 54 (C):

Summary: This corrects a bizarre flaw in the state constitution that prohibits citizens under 21 from voting in school board elections (a provision which is, of course, not in effect but should be removed anyways).

Known Opposition: None.

Outlook: Safe Yes.

Measure 55 (C):

Summary: Minor fixes to the state’s redistricting process.

Known Opposition: None.

Outlook: Safe Yes.

Measure 56 (S):

Summary: Partially repeals the Double Majority law requiring that 50% of registered voters cast ballots in an election for a bond measure to pass for May and November votes.

Known Opposition: Taxpayer Association of Oregon (Far Right), Bill Sizemore (Sponsor of all things extremely libertarian).

Outlook: Likely Yes, the legislature’s approval should allow this one to win pretty easily.  The game is clearly on over this measure but I doubt it’ll have trouble.

Measure 57 (S):

Summary: Proposes an alternative to Kevin Mannix’s (R-Of Course) property crime sentence minimum initiative.  Focuses state policy on treatment rather than prison for low level drug and property crimes.

Known Opposition: Kevin Mannix and his crew.

Outlook: Leans Yes, my guess is that with both on the ballot, Mannix’s extreme measure will fail when compared to this one.

Citizen Constitutional and Statutory Measures:

Measure 58 (S):

Chief Sponsor: Bill Sizemore.

Summary: This measure would require English immersion rather than ESL for children for whom English is not their primary language.

Known Opposition: I would think a lot of progressive groups will mobilize against this one.

Outlook: Leans to Likely No, I think the racist anti-immigrant folks will discover that they have limited political power after this one fails.  However, it is impossible to know exactly how this will turn out because this is the first immigration measure to make the ballot here.

Measure 59 (S):

Chief Sponsor: Bill Sizemore

Summary: This is at least the third time that Sizemore and his gang have proposed this measure, which makes federal income taxes fully deductible on state returns.  This measure largely benefits high wage earners and would blow a huge hole in the state’s budget.

Known Opposition: A leading coalition of progressive groups will once again mobilize against this one.

Outlook: Likely No, the good news is that although Sizemore can qualify measures, he can’t pass them.  This proposal has failed by increasingly wider margins every time it’s been proposed.

Measure 60 (S):

Chief Sponsor: Bill Sizemore

Summary: This would require “merit-pay” for teachers in public schools.

Known Opposition: The Oregon Education Association will doubtless go all out against this measure.

Outlook: Leans to Likely No, in 2000 a similar measure was rejected with 65% of the vote.  Given the more favorable political climate for education since then, this one will likely fail.

Measure 61 (S):

Chief Sponsor: Kevin Mannix

Summary: This is Kevin Mannix’s draconian sentencing measure for property and low-level drug crimes.

Known Opposition: Most of the Legislature for one (See Measure 57) as well as most of the moderate and progressive groups in the state.

Outlook: Leans No, with the competing measure by the legislature, this one may go down, which is good because without the legislative measure it would likely pass.

Measure 62 (C):

Chief Sponsor: Kevin Mannix.

Summary: Dedicates 15% of Oregon Lottery proceeds to crime fighting/prevention efforts.

Known Opposition: The current groups that receive lottery funds, schools and parks, have opposed this.

Outlook: Tossup, IMHO a bad idea but measures like this have fared pretty well in the past.

Measure 63 (S):

Chief Sponsor; Bill Sizemore

Summary: This measure would allow minor building changes without a permit.

Known Opposition: None but anything Sizemore proposes won’t stay without opposition for long.

Outlook: Leans to Likely No, I don’t get this one but Sizemore’s name on the measure should be good enough to kill it.

Measure 64 (S):

Chief Sponsor: Bill Sizemore

Summary: Sizemore brings back an old and twice-failed idea to ban public-employee unions from using dues for political purposes.

Known Opposition: The progressive movement in this state will mobilize to kill this one.

Outlook: Likely No, Sizemore=without power, Public Employee Unions=Powerful, enough said.  

Measure 65 (S):

Chief Sponsor: Former SOS Phil Keisling (D)

Summary: Creates a Top-Two Open Primary in which all parties run their candidates on the same ballot and the top two, regardless of party affiliation, advance to the general election.

Known Opposition: Both the Oregon D’s and R’s oppose this strongly.

Outlook: Leans No, the state parties will spend a lot of $ to kill it, so I’ll list it as leans no for now.  Also the Oregonian is endorsing it, which typically means it’ll lose (the Oregonian has a history of endorsing losing candidates/propositions).

Congressional Races:

District 1: Wu (D-inc) will cruise.

District 2: Walden (R-inc) will have little trouble.  If the margin is under 10% that’s a victory for the Ds.

District 3: Blumenauer (D-inc) is well-loved in this district and for good reason.

District 4: DeFazio (D-inc) is unopposed.

District 5

Candidates: State Senator Kurt Schrader (D) vs. Businessman and 2006 R Nominee Mike Erickson (R).

Registration Info: 165k Ds, 144k Rs, 88k NP/Others.

Summary: Time was this was considered one of the most contentious house races in the country.  Then three things happened.  First, the Obama registration boost changed this district from one with a very slight D edge to a somewhat substantial one.  Second, Kevin Mannix, who lost the R primary to Erickson, accused Erickson, who had claimed he was pro-life, of paying for a former girlfriend’s abortion.  This assertion was proven to be at least somewhat true and the resulting turmoil, along with some other recent discoveries has knocked Erickson well behind the pace. Then, to add to Erickson’s pain came the discovery that he had made a trip to Cuba that appears to be nothing more than a glorified vacation.  If this were Florida he’d be done but it’s not and he can self-finance enough to make this competitive, meaning I’ll leave it in the “Lean” category for now.

Rating: Leans Schrader.  

Oregon Legislature:

Oregon Senate

Current Composition: 18D, 11R, 1 I.

Projected Composition: 18D, 12R (1 I to D and one D to R).

Ratings changes since last update:

Dist 9 and 12 from Likely/Lean R to Lean R.

Dist. 14 to noncompetitive because this is my district and I have yet to see any campaign by the Repub.

Safe Races:

1 (Roseburg)-Kruse (R).

2 (Central Point)-Atkinston (R).

5 (Lincoln City)-Verger (D).

14 (West Slope/Beaverton)-Hass (D).

18 (Tigard/SW Portland)-Burdick (D).

21 (SE Portland)-Rosenbaum (D).

22 (Portland)-Carter (D).

23 (NE Portland)-Dingfelder (D), this is technically a net pickup of 1, as Avel Gordly is an I.

25 (Gresham)-Monnes Anderson (D).

28 (Klamath Falls)-Whitsett (R).

29 (Pendleton)-Nelson (R).

30 (Ontario)-Ferriolli (R).

The following districts are competitive, or at least potentially competitive.

9 (Stayton)

Candidates: Fred Girod (R-int) vs. Bob McDonald (D).

Registration: R+4k.

Summary: The fact that this race is even competitive ought to really scare the Rs.  Girod still has the edge though.

Outlook: Leans Girod.

12 (McMinnville)

Candidates: Brian Boquist (R) vs. Kevin Nortness (D).

Registration: R+2.5k

Summary: The Rs had to scramble to get Boquist to run for this fairly safe seat.  This district is certainly changing but I don’t know if it is changing fast enough or if Nortness is a good enough candidate to replace the well-known Boquist.

Outlook: Leans Boquist.

27 (Bend)

Candidates: Marien Lundgren (D) vs. Chris Telfer (R).

Registration: R+3k

Summary: This is Ben Westlund’s seat and it would be a huge accomplishment to hold it (he won it twice running as a Republican).  That being said, I think its far more possible that a hold could occur now given the blue trend of Deschutes County, the center of this district.

Outlook: Leans Telfer.

Oregon House:

Current Composition: 31 D, 29 R.

Projected Composition: 32 D, 20 R, 8 Tossups (all Rs) and it could be a lot worse for the Rs.

Ratings Changes since last update:

District 29 (Riley) moved to noncompetitive due to disqualification of his Republican opponent on the grounds he did not actually live in the district.

District 35 (Galizio) moved to noncompetitive because his Republican opponent has turned out to be a complete loser.

District 38 (Garrett) moved to noncompetitive because although Steve Griffith is a personal friend of mine and in a normal year might have a shot in this blue district running as a moderate to liberal R, the registration disadvantage he faces is simply too big for him to overcome.

District 51 (Flores) moved from Lean R to tossup because of her Democratic opponent’s fundraising advantage…

The following seats are rated either safe or likely:

1 (Gold Beach)-Krieger (R).

2 (Myrtle Creek)-Freeman (R).

3 (Grants Pass)-Maurer (R).

4 (Central Point)-Richardson (R).

5 (Ashland)-Buckley (D).

8 (Eugene)-Holvey (D).

10 (Newport)-Cowan (D)-She won this seat by all of 750 votes two years ago and the Rs couldn’t find an opponent for her.

11 (Eugene)-Barnhart (D).

12 (Springfield)-Beyer (D).

13 (Eugene)-Nathanson (D).

14 (Eugene)-Edwards (D).

16 (Corvallis)-Gelser (D).

21 (Salem)-Clem (D).

25 (Keizer)-Thatcher (R).

27 (West Slope, my district!)-Read (D).

28 (Beaverton)-Barker (D).

29 (Hillsboro)-Riley (D).

31 (Clatskanie)-Witt (D).

32 (Cannon Beach)-Boone (D).

33 (Portland)-Greenlick (D).

34 (Beaverton)-Harker (D).

35 (Tigard)-Galizio (D).

36 (Portland)-Nolan (D).

38 (Lake Oswego)-Garrett (D).

40 (Oregon City)-Hunt (D).

41 (Milwaukie)-Tomei (D).

42 (Portland)-Koppel-Bailey (D).

43 (Portland)-Shields (D).

44 (Portland)-Kotek (D).

45 (Portland)-Dembrow (D).

46 (Portland)-Cannon (D).

47 (Portland)-J. Smith (D).

48 (Happy Valley)-Schaufler (D).

53 (Sunriver)-Whisnant (R).

55 (Medford)-Gilliam (R).

56 (Klamath Falls)-Garrard (R).

57 (Heppner)-G. Smith (R).

58 (Pendleton)-Jenson (R).

60 (Ontario)-Benz (R).

The following seats are competitive:

6 (Medford)

Candidates: Sal Esquivel (R-inc.) vs. Lynn Howe (D).

Registration: R+3k

Summary: No one believed me two years ago when I said this seat would be competitive, and then Esquivel barely eked out a win.  My guess is that he won’t be caught napping this time, though.

Outlook: Leans Esquivel.

7 (Roseburg)

Candidates: Bruce Hanna (R-inc) vs. Donald Nordin (D).

Registration: R+1.4k

Summary: This would be my shocker of the year if an upset happened.  This district, which has been solidly red for decades, or so it seems, has seen a huge drop in the Republican registration edge.  Hanna is also not the greatest politician in the world to begin with but still has an edge here.  He also has a huge cash edge as the minority leader from the OR House.

Outlook: Leans Hanna.

9 (Coos Bay)

Candidates: Arnie Roblan (D-inc.) vs. Al Pearn (R).

Registration: D+3k

Summary: This 2006 rematch should not be any different than the last one.  Roblan has a good read on this district and should win his easiest battle yet.  

Outlook: Leans Roblan.

15 (Albany)

Candidates: Andy Olson (R-inc.) vs. Dick Olsen (D).

Registration: D and R even

Summary: This district was not on anyone’s list but mine two years ago as potentially competitive.  Now with an even registration mix, a chance for an upset is there.  Olson, a former State Policeman, has the edge at this point though.

Outlook: Leans Olson.

17 (Scio)

Candidates: Sherrie Sprenger (R-int.) vs. Dale Thackaberry (D).

Registration: R+2k

Summary: Following a bloody and divisive R primary, Thackaberry has a real chance to pull an upset.  Add to that the fact that Sprenger has never won a general election here.  Still, this is definitely a district with an R tilt, so it’ll be an uphill battle.

Outlook: Leans Sprenger.

18 (Silverton)

Candidates: Vic Gilliam (R-int.) vs. Jim Gilbert (D/I).

Registration: R+2.2k

Summary: Jim Gilbert is back for another attempt at an upset here.  This is clearly his best chance yet but it won’t be easy.  If the Repubs lose this district, it will have been a big night.

Outlook: Leans Gilliam.

19 (Salem)

Candidates: Kevin Cameron (R-inc.) vs. Hanten (HD) Day (D).

Registration: R+ less than 1k

Summary: This is a district that should be more competitive than it has in the past.  With a lack of need to defend their own seats, this may become a democratic target, making an upset possible.

Outlook: Leans Cameron.

20 (Independence/Monmouth)

Candidates: Vicki Berger (R-inc./I) vs. Richard Riggs (D).

Registration: D+1k

Summary: Berger is one of the last remaining liberal Republicans that Oregon used to develop like crazy.  She’s in for fight for her life this time due much more to both the state of the Republican party and the slight D registration edge though.

Outlook: Tossup.

22 (Woodburn)

Candidates: Betty Komp (D-inc.) vs. Tom Chereck (R).

Registration: D+2k.

Summary: I have to put this as competitive because its Woodburn.  However, Komp has really done a great job in this district and should win pretty easily.  Interestingly, this district has the lowest number of registered voters in the state, likely due to the large number of undocumented workers living here.

Outlook: Leans Komp.

23 (Dallas)

Candidates: Jim Thompson (R) vs. Jason Brown (D).

Registration: R+2k

Summary: This open seat battle could be one for the books.  That being said, I have to give the edge to Thompson for now because it is an R-leaning district.

Outlook: Leans Thompson.

24 (McMinnville)

Candidates: Jim Wiedner (R) vs. Bernt Hansen (D).

Registration: D and R even.

Summary: This was the seat that Kossack Sal Peralta almost won in 2006.  If Hansen can run a good campaign, a win is definitely possible here.  Call it a tossup.

Outlook: Tossup.

26 (Wilsonville)

Candidates: Matt Wingard (R-int.) vs. Jessica Adamson (D).

Registration: R+2k

Summary: Sometimes the opportunities just fall into your lap.  In this case, it turns out that Wingard has been arrested for hitting his children before.  The Repubs were panicked enough that incumbent Jerry Krummel resigned so that Wingard could go in as the “incumbent”.  This is still Wilsonville though, so it’s an R lean for now.

Outlook: Leans Wingard.

30 (Hillsboro)

Candidates: David Edwards (D-inc.) vs. Andy Duyck (R).

Registration: D+2k

Summary: The Republicans are all excited that Duyck is going to be their candidate here.  The well-known Washington County Commissioner is a solid candidate but this is not the Hillsboro that existed ten or even five years ago.  It has taken a solid blue turn and add to that the fact that Edwards survived some of the most vicious smears of any candidate in 2006 and still won to give him a slight edge.

Outlook: Leans Edwards.

37 (West Linn)

Candidates: Scott Bruun (R-inc.) vs. Michele Eberle (D).

Registration: D+ less than 1k.

Summary: Bruun is a well-known figure in this district; his family has run a construction business for over 100 years in the area.  Still, this year he will have to fight hard to keep this swing district, which now has a very slight D edge.

Outlook: Tossup.

39 (Canby)

Candidates: Bill Kennemer (R) vs. Tony Forsberg (D).

Registration: D+ 1k

Summary: Kossack Mike Caudle almost pulled off a major upset here in 2006 against the then R-leader Wayne Scott. As an open seat race, this one is too close to call.  Both candidates are well known and respected in the community.

Outlook: Tossup.

49 (Gresham)

Candidates: John Nelsen (R) vs. Nick Kahl (D).

Registration: D+4.5k

Summary: Two years ago about the only major disappointment I had was Minnis winning this district.  Republicans think Kahl is a lightweight because he’s young and relatively inexperienced.  They’re wrong, he’s a great candidate, especially with the youth voter empowerment machine known as the Oregon Bus Project (http://busproject.org/) on his side.  With Mannix out of the picture, this should be a D pickup, especially with the substantial D edge in this district.

Outlook: Leans Kahl.

50 (Fairview)

Candidates: John Lim (R-inc.) vs. Greg Matthews (D).

Registration: D+3k

Summary: How Lim keeps winning here is a mystery.  He should be in for the fight of his life this year with this district clearly trending blue.

Outlook: Tossup.

51 (Clackamas)

Candidates: Linda Flores (R-inc.) vs. Brent Barton (D).

Registration: D+1k

Summary: How I would love to get rid of the racist Flores.  Barton has as good a chance as anyone and has huge financial backing.  I’m moving this race to tossup for that reason alone.

Outlook: Tossup.

52 (Corbett)

Candidates: Matt Lindland (R) vs. Suzanne VanOrman (D).

Registration: D+2k

Summary: In case you’re wondering, yes Matt Lindland is indeed otherwise known as UFC fighter Matt “The Law” Lindland.  This is a dead tossup district this year and should be fun to watch.

Outlook: Tossup.

54 (Bend)

Candidates: Chuck Burley (R-inc.) vs. Judy Stiegler (D).

Registration: D+1.5k

Summary: This district has been trending blue over the past several years.  This could well be the year Stiegler, who barely lost to Burley in an open seat race here four years ago, breaks through and wins it.

Outlook: Tossup.

59 (The Dalles)

Candidates: John Huffman (R-int.) vs. Mike Ahern (D).

Registration: R+1k

Summary: This was the district that shocked everyone in 2006 as it was almost a D pickup.  However, I think Huffman will not be caught unaware as a result, though an upset is possible.

Outlook: Leans Huffman.

Well that’s it, let me know what you think.

PA-10: Carney Leads by 4 in New Poll

SurveyUSA for Roll Call (8/23-25, likely voters):

Chris Carney (D-inc): 49

Chris Hackett (R): 45

(MoE: ±4.0%)

Carney is right under the magic 50% bubble of vulnerability, and Hackett is nipping at his heels. Carney’s favorables (40% favorable, 23% unfavorable, 30% neutral and 6% unknown) are okay, but clearly indicate that the freshman incumbent could stand to boost his profile at home. This race is shaping up to be pretty close.

In better news, and continuing a trend that we’ve seen in other red districts (CO-04 and KS-02), voters prefer a candidate who touts alternative sources of energy over one who advocates increased offshore drilling by a 54-36 margin. Bear in mind that this a conservative R+8 district, so you might expect the GOP’s pro-drilling talking points to sell well here. Not really, it turns out. Additionally, a full 40% of voters in the 10th blame the oil companies first and foremost for the high cost of gasoline. It won’t be a surprise to see the familiar attacks on “big oil” be a common thread in Democratic messaging here.

The poll also finds that John McCain leads Barack Obama by 50-41 in the 10th District; considering that John Kerry was blown out by a 60-40 margin here in 2004, Obama is in good shape to make it at least a slightly closer race in this district. And if McCain can’t rack up the score convincingly in a district like this, what chance does he have of winning Pennsylvania?

SSP currently rates this race as Lean Democratic.