OR-Sen: Smith Leads By 9

Rasmussen (6/11, likely voters, 5/7 in parens):

Jeff Merkley (D): 38 (42)

Gordon Smith (R-inc): 47 (45)

(MoE: ±4%)

With recent polls suggesting a big advantage for Barack Obama in the presidential race here, it’s no surprise that Smith is working overtime to present himself as a bipartisan consensus builder. Smith currently grabs the support of 22% of Obama voters.

Whether Jeff Merkley and the DSCC can successfully puncture Smith’s newfound moderate public profile remains to be seen, but Smith is in the under-50 danger zone and will have to fight hard for every inch given Obama’s commanding performance at the top of the ballot (46-38 in this poll).

MN-Sen, MI-Sen: Franken Down 3, Numbers Stable

Rasmussen is out with new numbers in the Minnesota Senate race, the first numbers since Franken won the DFL nominating convention.

Rasmussen: (6/11, likely voters, 5/22 in parens)

Norm Coleman (R-inc.): 48 (47)

Al Franken (D): 45 (45)

(MoE: ±4.5%)

Almost no movement since the last one, despite Franken getting the DFL nod and the kerfuffle over his Playboy article. Things get a little dicier for Franken if Jesse Ventura enters the mix (although his entry into the race is pure speculation at this point, and, IMHO, not going to happen):

Jesse Ventura (I): 24

Norm Coleman (R-inc.): 39

Al Franken (D): 32

On the other hand, 60% of likely voters do not want Ventura to run; only 27% want him to. Ventura has till the filing deadline of July 15 to jump in.

Swing State Project rates MN-Sen as Lean R.

As a bonus, Rasmussen polled the Michigan Senate race. Carl Levin, the 30-year incumbent Dem, is up against State Representative Jack Hoogendyk of Kalamazoo. Frankly, there’s nothing to see here.

Rasmussen (6/11, likely voters, 5/7 in parens)

Carl Levin (D-inc.): 55 (54)

Jack Hoogendyk (R): 35 (37)

(MoE: ±4%)

NY-13: CQ Changes Rating from “Leans Republican” to “No Clear Favorite”

With the Democratic Party coalescing behind City Councilman Michael McMahon, and the GOP similarly backing former Wall Street executive Frank Powers, the race for what was once a safe Republican seat has now been rated a toss-up, according to Congressional Quarterly. 

The semi-suburban nature of the district gives it a stronger Republican lean than any other part of New York City, but that advantage is countered by the fact that McMahon is an elected official, representing the northern third of the district on the City Council, while Powers has never held elective office. 

Further complicating matters is the fact that Powers still has time to make himself known to voters before November, and McMahon faces a primary challenge from lawyer Stephen Harrison, who ran against the now-scandal-plagued retiring Republican Rep. Vito Fossella in 2006.  The district has consistently voted for Fossella over the past few elections, but has split its presidential votes; in 2000, Al Gore won the district with 53% of the vote, but George W. Bush defeated John Kerry there in 2004, with 55%.

Adler campaign welcomes McCain to NJ

Tomorrow morning, John McCain will be in New Jersey’s 3rd District, campaigning with Mayor Chris Myers, who believes like McCain does, that despite the 325,000 person job loss just halfway through 2008, our economy is strong. We need real common sense solutions and change in Washington with a Democrat like John Adler.

Check out this video put out by the Adler for Congress campaign today in preparation for the John McShame visit tomorrow…

KS-Sen: New Poll Shows Slattery Trailing Roberts By 12

Daily Kos diarist osagecokansasdem brings word of a new internal poll for Democrat Jim Slattery in Kansas:

Cooper & Secrest for Jim Slattery (6/5-8, likely voters):

Jim Slattery (D): 36

Pat Roberts (R-inc): 48

Undecided: 16

(MoE: ±3.5%)

That twelve point margin is a constant in every poll of this race that we’ve seen so far (Rasmussen in May and Research 2000 last week), so I think we can believe these numbers.

With only 56% name recognition, Slattery does have some room to grow, and Roberts’ numbers are decidedly mediocre: a 47/43 job performance rating and a 48/29 favorability score. Even more startling is the generic Senate ballot, where the GOP is basically tied with the Democrats at 41-40. The numbers certainly suggest that while this is an uphill fight, Slattery has something to work with.

In the presidential race, the poll finds Obama trailing McCain by an eye-popping 45-41 margin in the state. In 2004, Bush smacked Kerry by 62-37 here.

IN-GOV — A Potential Conservative Challenge to Mitch Daniels

Mitch Daniels has never been loved by the hard right here in Indiana, especially social conservatives.  In fact, he trounced their hero, anti-gay nutball Eric Miller, in the 2004 primary.

The one thing that Hoosiers of all stripes are pissed off about more than anything right now is property taxes.  If either Daniels or JLT are clearly seen as on the “wrong side” of this issue, they will lose.

So, put these two things together, and you get …

Republican State Senator John Waterman, who is trying to mount an independent bid for governor.  Now, before I go any further, it is highly unlikely he’ll be able to get on ballot.  Here in Indiana, we have some of the most restricted ballet access requirements in the country (Nader wasn’t even on the ballot for his 19 runs for the White House).  Basically, Waterman needs just over 30,000 signatures by the end of June.  Unlikely, but not totally out of the realm of possibility.  Maybe Hoosier Democrats should engage in our own brand of Operation Chaos!!

If this guy defies all the odds and actually makes the ballot, it is potentially huge trouble for Daniels.  He says he plans on running on the property tax issue, and he also would give social conservatives a place to go.  In a close race, even a few % could make a difference.  

NC-Gov: Perdue (D) Closes Gap

Rasmussen Reports (6/10, likely voters, 5/8 in parens):

Perdue (D): 47 (39)

McCrory (R): 46 (45)

Other: 1 (10)*

Undecided: 6 (2)

(MoE: ±4%)
*(May poll included Libertarian Michael Munger, who took 4%.)

Charlotte Mayor Pat McCrory has materially better favorables (59-24) than Lt. Gov. Beverly Perdue (52-38), yet the latter was still able to close the gap. Most prognosticators say that this race leans Dem, but all the polling so far (apart from one slight outlier from SUSA) makes this look more like a tossup, at least for now.

NC-Sen: Dole Resumes Her Lead

Rasmussen Reports (6/10, likely voters, 5/8 in parens):

Hagan (D): 39 (48)

Dole (R-inc.): 53 (47)

Other: 3 (2)

Undecided: 5 (3)

(MoE: ±4%)

A fourteen-point swing in one month is the kind of thing which always calls one poll or the other into question. In this case, though, we have a third poll to go by. Rasmussen tested the waters here in April and found Dole leading 52-39. That sure makes the middle poll from May look like noise, which Ras suggests may have been due to a post-primary bounce for Hagan. Since then, Dole’s gone up with TV ads, which might have helped bring Hagan down to earth.

Dole is doing very well among Republicans, winning them 90-6. Hagan, meawhile, is at just 68-25 among Dems. Frustratingly, Rasmussen refuses to detail the makeup of its samples (even though they provide crosstabs) so we have no idea what the D-R-I split was here.

The news on the presidential front is a lot better: McCain  edges Obama by just two points, 45-43. Note, though, that Rasmussen has shown NC-Pres virtually tied for three months, with no bounces or dips as with NC-Sen. Still, though, I like the prospect of Obama coattails here.

SSP currently races this race as Lean Republican.

LA-02: Primary Challenge for Jefferson

“Dollar Bill” Jefferson is getting a credible primary challenge this year. (Considering that he’s awaiting trial on corruption charges and was found to have large amounts of cash in his freezer, the question wasn’t really whether he’d get a challenge, but who.) State Rep. Cedric Richmond, who represents part of eastern New Orleans, announced his bid.

In his only veiled reference to Jefferson’s legal problems, he told the crowd, “I promise — and I want to be clear about this — I promise to serve you with the utmost integrity.”

Interestingly, the Times-Picayune described Richmond as a “longtime political ally” of Jefferson, and said that prior to 2006, Richmond stated he would run only if Jefferson didn’t run. Being unacquainted with the backwaters of Louisiana politics, I’m unclear whether that means:

1) he’s broken with Jefferson,

2) he’s running to succeed Jefferson who will soon stand down (and considering that Jefferson’s brother, sister, and niece were indicted last week, he might be feeling boxed in), or

3) he’s running as a trojan horse to siphon support from other “change” candidates to allow Jefferson to squeak through to a run-off. (Like Rep. Karen Carter, who lost the 2006 primary to Jefferson and may come back for another try… I don’t know if she plans to do so; her campaign website hasn’t been updated in over a year.)

For what it’s worth, corruption issues notwithstanding, Jefferson is one of the most out-of-whack Dems in the House, in terms of the relationship between his National Journal score of 73 and the D+28 lean of LA-02.