The Demographics of Swing State Project

Now that the open thread about what Congressional districts the Swing State Project readership hails from has died down, I thought I’d pull together some data to try and make some generalizations about what type of places we inhabit and who represents us.

This is a question that has always nagged me in the past when reading blogosphere calls to action. In other words, when all of us in the blogosphere get off our butts and call our representatives and complain, are we preaching to the choir? It’s been documented that the liberal blogosphere is more metropolitan, more affluent, more educated, whiter, and maler than the population at large. Does that mean that we are concentrated in urban, heavily Democratic districts, to the extent that most of us are represented by progressive reps who are already voting the way we want to, regardless of our demands? Or, based on the fact that many of the most educated and affluent districts are suburban swing districts, where our input might actually have some impact on a representative facing competing demands and potentially competitive elections?

One more Daily Kos demographic post by DrSteveB from May 2007 (so reflecting Congress’ current composition) sheds a little light on this: “Is Your Congressperson a Dem or Rep?” 63% of the respondents (sample of 2,610) said that they are represented by a Democrat, and 47% indicated that they would not support a primary challenge to their representative (most likely indicating satisfaction with the progressiveness of their representative, although it may also indicate resignation to their representative’s conservativeness as being acceptable given the district’s lean). 37% of the respondents were represented by a Republican. Compare this with the overall composition of the House, which is 54% Democrat and 46% Republican. Daily Kos is disproportionately represented by Democratic representatives.

To my surprise, this almost exactly matched the results from the much smaller sample here at Swing State Project. I found a sample of 81, using comments but not the Frappr map (not many Frappr participants actually cited their district, and those that did were often the same people who participated in the comments). Where commenters (usually college students) mentioned living in multiple districts without saying where they were registered, I assigned them to their ‘home’ (i.e. parents’) districts.

Here’s how we at SSP break down:

Democrat-held districts 50 62%
Republican-held districts 31 38%

But by knowing specifically which districts each respondent lives in, we can go a lot further than the Daily Kos survey did. For instance, we can check out what ideological caucuses our representatives are members of. Look at the first line: 16 of the 81 SSPers are represented by members of the Progressive Caucus, or 20% of us. In reality, Progressives are 68 of the 435 in the House, or 16% of the House members.

Caucus SSPers % Actual percentage of House
Progressive Caucus 16 20% 16%
New Democrats 15 19% 14%
Blue Dogs 7 9% 11%
Cong. Black Caucus 7 9% 9%
Cong. Hispanic Caucus 3 4% 5%
Unaffiliated Dems 12 15% 14%
Main Street Partnership 9 11% 9%
Republican Study Comm. 15 19% 25%
Unaffiliated GOP 8 10% 12%

We’re disproportionately represented not just by Progressives but even more so by New Dems. Interestingly, we’re also disproportionately represented by Main Street Partnership members (maybe not surprising, since they tend to be concentrated in affluent and educated suburban districts). We’re under-represented among Blue Dog and RSC constituencies (again not surprising, since these tend to be the rural and less-educated districts). (Don’t look for these numbers to add up to 100, as many members belong to more than one caucus.)

We can also take a look at the ranked liberalness or conservativeness of our representatives. For this, I’ll use National Journal composite scores from 2007 (since they’re already an attempt to scale reps on their liberalness from 0 to 100). On average, our reps are more liberal than average, but, oddly, we’re under-represented by representatives who are in the top decile for liberalness. That may have something to do with the fact that we’re particularly over-represented by New Dems, while not being over-represented by CBC members, many of whom are among the House’s most liberal members.

Liberalness

Our median NJ score: 63.65 (Overall median is 50.75)

Our range: 95 (Al “Ooops, I’d better veer left because of my primary” Wynn in MD-04) to 7.7 (Virginia Foxx in NC-05)

6 of 81 (7.4%) are in top decile for liberalness (score of 87.3 or more)

29 of 81 (35.8%) are in top quartile for liberalness (76.8 or more)

14 of 81 (17.3%) are in bottom quartile for liberalness (21.3 or less)

5 of 81 (6.1%) are in bottom decile for liberalness (14.5 or less)

SSPers also tend to inhabit districts with a lean that is predisposed toward the Democrats at the presidential level. Only 29 out of the 81 of us live in districts with a Cook PVI rating that is Republican-leaning, and only 15 out of 81 live in districts with a rating of R+6 or more (which is where I’d start to say “that’s pretty red”).

PVI

Our median PVI: D+5 (Overall median is R+1)

Our range: D+43 (NY-15) to R+16 (TX-07)

12 of 81 (14.8%) are in top decile for PVI (D+22 or more)

29 of 81 (35.8%) are in top quartile for PVI (D+10 or more)

10 of 81 (12.3%) are in bottom quartile for PVI (R+10 or more)

5 of 81 (6.2%) are in bottom decile for PVI (R+15 or more)

Let’s look at a few other demographic indicators. Overall, SSPers are an extremely metropolitan bunch (it’s hard to break down ‘urban’ vs. ‘suburban’ because a lot of districts contain elements of both, and the census bureau uses a binary system where someone is either ‘urban’ or ‘rural,’ although I’ve observed that many districts that are 5-10% ‘rural’ tend to be what you’d think of as stereotypical suburban districts). The number, for each district, represents the census bureau’s count of people living in a ‘rural’ environment.

Ruralness

Our median ruralness: 5% (Overall median is 15.7%)

Our range: 64% (VA-05) to 0% (12-way tie)

5 of 81 (6.2%) are in top decile for ruralness (50.6% or more)

10 of 81 (12.3%) are in top quartile for ruralness (35.8% or more)

33 of 81 (40.7%) are in bottom quartile for ruralness (1.5% or less)

12 of 81 (14.8%) are in bottom decile for ruralness (0%)

SSPers tend to come from affluent districts. That, of course, doesn’t mean that they themselves are affluent, just that they live among people with high per capita incomes. (Especially considering that we seem to have a large number of college students and post-collegiate activists here.) These are using 2000 census numbers for each district’s per capita income, so bear in mind that these numbers have gone up even more (at least in some parts of the country).

Per capita income

Our median PCI: $23,208 (Overall median is $20,529)

Our range: $47,498 (CA-30) to $14,021 (CA-38)

21 of 81 (25.9%) are in top decile for PCI ($28,560 or more)

36 of 81 (44.4%) are in top quartile for PCI ($24,527 or more)

7 of 81 (8.6%) are in bottom quartile for PCI ($17,820 or less)

2 of 81 (2.5%) are in bottom decile for PCI ($15,277 or less)

And the area where SSPers seem most out of whack with the nation, even more so than per capita income, is education. Look at the numbers, which are each districts’ percentage of persons 25 or older with at least 4-year college degrees.

Education

Our median education: 30.5% (Overall median is 22.6%)

Our range: 53.8% (VA-08) to 12.5% (CA-38)

22 of 81 (27.2%) are in top decile for education (36.5% or more)

45 of 81 (55.6%) are in top quartile for education (28.9% or more)

6 of 81 (7.4%) are in bottom quartile for education (17.5% or less)

1 of 81 (1.2%) are in bottom decile for education (14.1% or less)

Taken as a whole, we can see that Swing State Project members (or at least the ones who responded to the question) are disproportionately represented by Democrats, and by Progressives or New Dems in particular. We’re coming from districts that are disproportionately urban, affluent, and educated. And when we get in touch with our representatives, many of us are getting in touch with someone who already shares our values.

(I’m probably as good a case in point as anyone. I’m in WA-07, which is Seattle. We’re represented by Jim McDermott, who’s in the Progressive Caucus and in the top quartile for liberalness. The district is in the top decile for PVI, educational attainment, and per capita income, and the bottom quartile for ruralness.)

For those who are interested in the full data set (and I know you’re out there), go to Google Docs for the database.

KS-Sen: Another Solid Showing For Slattery

Research 2000 for Daily Kos (6/2-4, likely voters):

Jim Slattery (D): 38

Pat Roberts (R-inc): 50

(MoE: ±4%)

Very decent numbers for Slatts, and they line up nicely with Rasmussen’s recent poll showing Roberts ahead by 52-40.

We’ve really been blessed with a large number of Senate races that “could get interesting” this year (in addition to those that already are clearly very competitive): Oklahoma, Texas, Kentucky, Nebraska and Kansas. It’s a solid bench of second-tier races where the DSCC could put its ample resources to good use if the circumstances warrant it.

Cook’s New Ratings: Massive Shift to Blue

Now that everyone acknowledges that Barack Obama is the Democratic nominee, Charlie Cook has shifted ten distric rating, and boy are they huge.

Primary Aftermath: Race Ratings Change in Ten Districts: House Editor David Wasserman releases the latest updates for districts in which primaries were held on Tuesday, and explains what the conclusion of the Democratic presidential nomination fight may mean in several other districts across the country. We are changing our race ratings in ten districts where we believe Democratic chances of taking Republican-held seats have increased. With these changes, the GOP occupies 21 of the 27 seats now listed in the Toss Up column.

CA-04- OPEN (Doolittle)- Solid Republican to Likely Republican

CO-04- Marilyn Musgrave- Lean Republican to Toss Up

CT-04- Chris Shays- Lean Republican to Toss Up

IL-10- Mark Kirk- Lean Republican to Toss Up

NM-02- OPEN (Pearce)- Likely Republican to Lean Republican

NY-29- Randy Kuhl- Lean Republican to Toss Up

NC-08- Robin Hayes- Lean Republican to Toss Up

OH-01- Steve Chabot- Lean Republican to Toss Up

VA-02- Thelma Drake- Likely Republican to Lean Republican

WA-08- Dave Reichert- Lean Republican to Toss Up

Some like CO-04 and CT-04 were long overdue, but the one that stands out is OH-01. If we can take out someone like Chabot, we’ll have a VERY big night.

By what margin will Bob Shamansky win?

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OH-02: Wulsin Leads Schmidt in New Poll

American Political Polling (5/31-6/2, registered voters):

Vic Wulsin (D): 30

Jean Schmidt (R-inc): 24

David Krikorian (I): 13

Undecided: 33

(MoE: ±3.5%)

The poll also shows that Schmidt has a job approval rating of 23%, and Bush at 40%. But this is one weird poll, and frankly, the numbers seem a little suspect. Was there any attempt made to push leaners?

Here’s a “bonus finding” from the poll: Obama leads McCain by 34-33 in Ohio’s 2nd CD. Let the record show that this is an R+13 district.

These numbers just seem too hard to believe. Full memo below the fold.

SSP currently rates this race as Leans Republican.

OH-07: Neuhardt Trails Austria By Six in New Poll

Cooper & Secrest Associates for Sharen Neuhardt (5/27-6/2, likely voters):

Sharen Neuhardt (D): 35

Steve Austria (R): 41

Undecided: 24

(MoE: ±4%)

So despite only having 33% name recognition, Neuhardt only trails Austria, a state senator, by six points.

This is an R+6 open seat that the Democrats’ most-hyped recruit, Clark County Sheriff Gene Kelly passed up, saying that Austria was probably too formidable for any Democrat to beat this year.

The numbers suggest otherwise. On the generic ballot, Democrats have a whopping 46-33 advantage over the Republicans. And despite Bush beating John Kerry by a 57-43 margin here in 2004, McCain only leads Obama by 43-40 in the district.

With enough resources, Neuhardt can put this district in play. So far, she’s done a pretty good job, raising $172K in her first fundraising quarter and ending March with a cash-on-hand parity with Austria.

SSP currently has this race on our list of Races to Watch, but it might merit an upgrade in its rating soon.

NY-13: Even Francis Powers Won’t Vote for Francis Powers

I am so utterly flabbergasted by this turn of events that I’m completely speechless. From the Staten Island Advance:

An already topsy-turvy political year grew even more so yesterday when Francis M. Powers, the son of GOP designee Francis H. Powers, said he would seek the Libertarian Party line to run for Congress.

“This is not about my dad,” said the younger Powers, 47, a master carpenter from Clifton who plays and sings with the Staten Island band Box of Crayons and runs an indie record label called Penny for the Guy Records. “I’m running against the Republican candidate.” […]

Fran Powers insisted his candidacy is not a “vendetta” against his father.

“I’m not going to say that my dad treated me bad when I was a kid,” Fran Powers said. “I know his policies. I’m running against someone I know.”

Francis H. was quick to release a statement calling into question his son’s “lifestyle”:

“I’ve tried very hard for many years to help my son,” the elder Powers said in a statement released by his campaign.

“Unfortunately, he’s rejected everyone’s help to live a healthy lifestyle. Regardless of whether he wants to run for Congress, I still stand ready to help him move his life in a positive direction.”

The elder Powers did not comment beyond the statement, but a Republican source said that Powers was referring to his son’s “carefree” lifestyle in the music business.

The younger Powers, who apparently has been taking hairstyle pointers from Gary Glitter, will petition to be placed on the ballot as “Francis M. Powers”, and the Manhattan Libertarian Party will assist him in gathering the 3000 signatures necessary to get on the ballot. Failing that, Powers says he’ll try to get the Anarchist Party’s endorsement form his own Anarchist Party line.

I am not making this up.

Redistricting Minnesota

This started out more as a response in the front page blog about the Sarvi-Kline poll and it quickly turned into a diary on Minnesota redistricting.  Minnesota is either going to lose a seat, or maintain our 8, it’s pretty up in the air as of now.  I’ll talk about what we should do in both case.

The current delegation make up is 5 Democrats, 3 Republicans with all 3 Republican seats being at least somewhat competitive, one being open, and all 5 Democrats being safe incumbents for as long as they so please (Walz appears to be on that track after this election when he wins 60%)

more after the jump

This post started from a response about how we can turn MN-2 (Kline) into a district more winnable for Sarvi, with the mention of Carver county, the most Republican county in the Twin Cities metro area and one of the most Republican in the state.  If we can somehow put Carver county (which is on the edge of MN-2) into a neighboring CD, MN-2 would almost automatically become a DFL leaning CD.  

First, the geography of MN-2.  The counties in MN-2 are Carver, most of Dakota, Scott, the southern portion of Washington, Le Sueur, Rice, and Goodhue.  The southern portion of Washington are suburbs that are trending Democrat and are a swing area that should be voting Obama.  Dakota, Scott, and Carver contain the majority of the population of MN-2.  There are a few tier two suburbs in these counties, and all of these suburbs have been trending quickly DFL.  However, there aren’t many of these tier two suburbs.  Carver is mainly all tier three suburbs and exurbs, the areas that have not shown any trending.  Scott county is like Carver in demographics except with a slightly less Republican voting pattern.  Then Dakota is now a swing area with strong trends towards the DFL.  Le Sueur, Rice and Goodhue are rural districts that are swing but have been seeing a swing towards the DFL.

First, I’ll go into how to create a 7-1 DFL advantage.

I would shore up Bachmann’s Republican base all in her district, which would inevitably screw over any chance of ever competing here, but it would guarantee a DFL leaning MN-2.  I’ve mentioned the Bible Belt of MN-6 in a few posts and Carver county perfectly fits into that, as does Scott.  Here are the 2004 Presidential Vote Totals for Carver and then also the bible belt of CD6, Wright, Sherburne, Stearns, and Benton.

Carver- 36.2% Kerry, 62.8% Bush

Scott- 39.5% Kerry, 59.5% Bush

Benton- 43.8% Kerry, 54.6% Bush

Sherburne- 38.2% Kerry, 60.7% Bush

Stearns- 43.2% Kerry, 55.2% Bush

Wright- 38.% Bush, 60.8%

There are 3 counties that gave Bush a higher margin of victory in the entire state, which is pretty damn decent considering there are 87 counties with many many being very rural and conservative at the federal level.

As for more Republican than Wright and Sherburne, there are only another 3 that vote more Republican.

Stearns and Benton is home of St. Cloud, the only liberal area of the exurban parts of the CD and it was the only area that voted for Wetterling over Bachmann except for a few random precincts here and there.  St. Cloud is one of the largest cities in the state with a population of 50,000-60,000.  It greatly improves the vote totals for both of these counties.

Here is the best way to consolidate all the Republicans into MN-6 and create a DFL MN-2.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C…

Here is a map of Minnesota with Carver County highlighted.  Scott county it the county southeast of Carver.  The Bible Belt lies directly to the north with the county directly north of Carver is Wright county.  North of Wright is Sherburne, northwest of Sherburne is Benton and then west of Benton is Stearns.  Also add in Scott which is southwest of Carver.  I would take out St. Cloud and put it into neighboring MN-7 just to help shore up the Democrats there for when Peterson retires and because they don’t deserve to be with Bachmann.  St. Cloud was already in this CD prior to 2000.  To add more to the population, start adding in parts of neighboring Anoka county to the east.  Anoka county is made up of two differing areas, the blue trending second tier suburbs, and the red neck stably Republican third tier suburbs.  Throw in the third tier suburbs to the new MN-6.  Bachmann would probably have a CD of about R+10 or maybe more but it’s the price to pay.

This leaves MN-2 without the incredibly Republican areas.  Maintain Dakota, Le Sueur, Rice, and Goohue counties, add in all of Washington county, some of the counties maybe even further north and then the blue trending suburbs of Anoka county (Blaine in particular) and create a CD with boundaries that arch around the Twin Cities, much like MN-3 and MN-6 do.  This should create a CD that is almost D+0 or, after this election with Obama winning every area of the state, a D+3 or something.

Now, if we were to lose a congressional seat, we should still be able to create a 7-0 delegation.  First look at the current MN-6.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I… ,

As you can see, it borders every single CD in Minnesota, even a tiny part of MN-5.  It’d be as simple as smartly dividing out the CD into every other neighboring one.  However, I this would turn MN-2, MN-3, MN-7and MN-8 into more Republican CD’s, especially MN-2 and MN-7 since I’d assume they’d leave MN-3 as all suburban as much as possible.  If we can get our incumbents in place here and shore them up, then they should survive 2012 but any retirements would really put this in the air.  Also, we’d almost certainly put all of Washington county (in MN-6, county bordering Wisconsin) into MN-2 and if we have Sarvi there already and Bachmann is still there, this is where she resides and it would be one epic battle between her and Sarvi with Sarvi the slight favorite since Bachmann is a wingnut.

I think the conclusion I would draw is that a sustainable 7-0 DFL delegation is not possible.  If we lose a CD after the census, we may be able to have the 7-0 advantage but pending any retirements or tier one Republican candidates could ruin this.  Also, creating that 7-0 advantage opens us up to the possibility of losing five seats since only McCollum and Ellison’s seats are safe DFL.  Oberstar leans our way but he’s been there since the 70’s, it’s anyone’s guess how it would go.  Walz would be safe as an incumbent but if he retires, or runs for Governor, who knows.  Plus, lets not be total bitches, the Republicans deserve a few seats here and there, the country will need a constant reminder as to why we made them irrelevant.

I think Minnesota should create a 6-1 delegation, by eliminating MN-2 and MN-6, distributing the blue areas to the CD’s that need them (MN-1, MN-3, MN-7 especially) and then create the one hella Republican CD I mentioned above for Bachmann or whatever crazy would run in it.  I’d be sad to see Sarvi go but well, then if Sarvi doesn’t win and we still have Kline, we can screw over two incumbents a bit.  I wonder if they’d both move to the ultra Republican CD and battle it out in the primary.  Would be interesting.  Oh well, Sarvi can always come back in 2014 in case Coleman somehow wins.

Poll of 45 competitive House districts gives Dems a seven-point lead

I am not sure if this has already been posted, but it is a story that should interest everyone.  Greenberg Quinlan Rosner (a prominent Democratic outfit) just released a poll they conducted of the 45 most competitive GOP-controlled districts (as defined by them), and the poll shows that Democratic challengers lead 50-to-43.  

The survey was conducted of 1,600 likely voters from May 19-26.  Very interestingly, the firm did a similar poll four months ago which found Democrats trailing by one point.  This change certainly shows substantial move towards Democrats as we get closer to November.  

Before doing their poll, CQR decided on what they believed were the top 45 most competitive districts currently in GOP hands (I will go over those below), and then chopped them into a first tier and a second tier.  In the first tier districts, Democrats held a healthy 51-to-42 lead.  Perhaps even more interesting, in the second tier races, Democrats lead 48-to-45 percent.  

According to the poll, Bush is weighing down many GOP candidates, as his approval rating in these 45 districts — many of them red districts — stands at 33 percent.  

When named in individually-polled districts, the GOP incumbents received an average approval rating of 38 percent.  Democrats polled 17 points ahead of the GOP on the issue of the economy, and 11 points higher on the war in Iraq.  Republicans polled three points higher than Dems on the issue of handling illegal immigration.  

The poll found that Dems hold a five-point advantage on current party ID, and edge the GOP with independents by a slim 43-to-41.  

Perhaps most troubling is that in these districts, Obama and McCain are tied 47-to-47.  

Here are the districts included in the poll, broken up by tier:

TIER 1.  AZ-01 (Renzi), CA-04 (Doolittle), CT-04 (Shays), IL-11 (Weller), MI-09 (Knollenberg), MN-03 (Ramstad), MO-06 (Graves), NV-03 (Porter), NJ-03 (Saxton), NJ-07 (Ferguson), NM-01 (Wilson), NY-13 (Fossella), NY-25 (Walsh), NC-08 (Hayes), OH-02 (Schmidt), OH-15 (Pryce), OH-16 (Regala), PA-06 (Gerlach), VA-11 (Davis), WV-02 (Capito Moore), and WY-AL (Cubin).  

TIER 2.  AL-02 (Everett), AK-AL(Young), CO-04 (Musgrave), FL-08 (Keller), FL-13 (Buchanan), FL-21 (L. Diaz-Balart), FL-24 (Feeney), ID-01 (Sali), IL-10 (Kirk), IL-18 (LaHood), KY-02 (Lewis), LA-04 (McCrery), MD-01 (Gilchrest), MI-07 (Walberg), MO-09 (Hulshof), NJ-02 (LoBiando), NM-02 (Pearce), NY-26 (Reynolds), NY-29 (Kuhl), OH-01 (Chabot), OH-14 (LaTourette), VA-02 (Drake), VA-10 (Wolf), WA-08 (Reichert).  

Keep in mind, these districts were chosen not just based on our chances of winning them, but also on their breakdown (i.e. PVI index).  So, while we may have a mediocre opponent in a district, in a vacuum it can still be considered Tier One.  

While they hit all the close ones, at the outset you can probably pick a bit at some of these selections.  CA-04, MO-06, OH-02, WV-02, WY-AL and probably NC-08 should all be in the second tier as they are fairly strong GOP strongholds and not that close to going blue in the long haul.  While we will not win PA-06, it should be on in the poll as the district is winnable, we just did not recruit a top person.  

In Tier Two, we could argue this, but in my opinion, as it stands now, ID-01, IL-18, VA-10 and probably MD-01 should be Tier Three districts.  You could argue OH-01 being in Tier One.  While NY-26, NY-29, WA-08 and probably CO-04 should be Tier One in terms of flipping, the districts themselves are Tier Two districts.  While we will not win these two this cycle, NJ-02 and OH-14 are certainly competitive for us, we just have crummy opponents for them.  (Incidentally, we need to target these two hard in 2010).    

On balance, this poll is fascinating and I think they did a good job in bracketing the districts by current race and general character.  Clearly, the GOP brand, even in pretty red districts is badly damaged (like we didn’t know that already), and the Democrats have a spectacular opportunity this November.  Heck, even if a handful of these districts are a little poorly-organized by tier, the fact that we are ahead nine points in Tier One — which includes several really red districts like MO-06, OH-02, WV-02, and WY-AL bodes very well for us.  Ditto Tier Two.  

Obviously that Obama-McCain head-to-head is very troubling, but Obama has a lot of time to get and there and make his case to the independent voters in these swing districts.  I like his chances, as it stands.  

You can take this poll with a bit of salt because it is from a Democratic pollster.  Also, with an overall sample size of 1,600, divided by 45 districts, that comes out to an average of just under 36 voters per district — hardly a large sample.  

Yet, while I will not look at this poll as gospel, I think the overall numbers we get are promising and show that at the very least, we have much better strength then the GOP going into November, even in red-leaning districts.  If this poll is accurate, a 25+ seat gain is possible.  

http://www.gqrr.com/index.php?…

MN-02: Poll Shows Potential for Sarvi

How big will 2008 be? Big enough to see a few presumed safe Republican districts painted blue in November? Anything’s possible.

A Goodwin Simon Victoria Research poll (5/19-22, likely voters) of Minnesota’s 2nd CD suggests that this R+2.7 district is turning a bluer shade of pale. From the polling memo:

It has become very clear in this election cycle that many Congressional seats formerly considered “Republican” seats are now in play; very little is safe for the GOP at present. Our recent poll results indicate that Minnesota’s 2nd Congressional District has officially reached the tipping point, as the generic ballot between any “Democrat” and a “Republican” for Congress starts out as tied, 40% to 40%, for the first time in this district’s history. Add to this Sarvi’s compelling personal narrative and moderate inclinations, and Democrats have a real chance to take this district in November.

A few other numbers: 76% of voters rate Bush’s job performance negatively, while Kline’s approval rating is at a fairly poor 39%/44%. With no head-to-heads released, we can safely assume that Kline leads at this early stage. However, after hearing a positive statement about the Democratic candidate, Steve Sarvi, Sarvi pulls ahead by 49%-37%.

Now, it takes a lot of money to educate voters, but Sarvi has a compelling profile as a small town mayor and Iraq veteran. If he can get his message out there, perhaps he can do what Coleen Rowley failed to manage in 2006.

One never knows this year.

VA-Sen: Warner Mum on Gilmore Endorsement

From The Hill:

Sen. John Warner (R-Va.) is avoiding an endorsement in the closely watched Senate contest to succeed him, so far declining to support fellow Republican Jim Gilmore several days after the former Virginia governor clinched the GOP nomination.

Warner, 81, who announced last September he will retire when his fifth term ends in January, twice shunned inquiries about his stance in the race, directing reporters to a statement that his press office said is not forthcoming.

“I’m not going to keep answering this question about Gilmore,” Warner said. “I’ll get my press office to send you a statement.”

Warner’s communications staff said no statement has been released and that there is no specific timetable for one.

Rep. Tom Davis, unsurprisingly, is also less than enthusiastic:

When asked Wednesday at a Christian Science Monitor breakfast whether he would endorse Gilmore, Davis deflected the question.

“I’m a Republican; I’m going to vote for Gilmore,” he said.

When pressed whether he would endorse the nominee, he said: “What do you mean? Am I going to go up and put my arm around him and say, ‘Jim, you’ve always been my best friend’?”

After briefly walking away, he offered: “Jim needs to do outreach. Jim doesn’t talk to anybody.

“I’ll support the Republican.”

In terms of recruitment and candidate quality, it sure feels like 2008 is going to be like sending the New England Patriots (the Democrats) to take on the Saskatchewan Roughriders (the GOP).

(H/T: Raising Kaine)