Senators' Approval Ratings Polled
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Public Policy Polling has
asked
people in a number of states what they think of their senator.
Here are the numbers.
Amy Klobuchar |
Dem |
MN |
62 |
25 |
37 |
|
Tom Carper |
Dem |
DE |
57 |
26 |
31 |
|
Tom Coburn |
GOP |
OK |
59 |
29 |
30 |
Up in 2010 |
Kit Bond |
GOP |
MO |
57 |
27 |
30 |
Retiring in 2010 |
Kay Bailey Hutchison |
GOP |
TX |
58 |
31 |
27 |
Likely to resign in the fall |
Mark Pryor |
Dem |
AR |
54 |
30 |
24 |
|
John McCain |
GOP |
AZ |
53 |
31 |
22 |
Up in 2010 |
James Inhofe |
GOP |
OK |
52 |
35 |
17 |
|
Dick Durbin |
Dem |
IL |
47 |
34 |
13 |
|
Bill Nelson |
Dem |
FL |
42 |
29 |
13 |
|
Jim Webb |
Dem |
VA |
44 |
33 |
11 |
|
Ted Kaufman |
Dem |
DE |
35 |
24 |
11 |
Retiring in 2010 |
Blanche Lincoln |
Dem |
AR |
45 |
40 |
5 |
Up in 2010 |
Johnny Isakson |
GOP |
GA |
30 |
25 |
5 |
Up in 2010 |
Richard Burr |
GOP |
NC |
36 |
32 |
4 |
Up in 2010; endangered |
Kay Hagan |
Dem |
NC |
33 |
33 |
0 |
|
Mitch McConnell |
GOP |
KY |
44 |
47 |
-3 |
|
Mark Udall |
Dem |
CO |
41 |
46 |
-5 |
|
Michael Bennet |
Dem |
CO |
34 |
41 |
-7 |
Up in 2010 |
George Voinovich |
GOP |
OH |
30 |
38 |
-8 |
Retiring in 2010 |
Mel Martinez |
GOP |
FL |
23 |
37 |
-14 |
Retiring in 2010 |
Jim Bunning |
GOP |
KY |
28 |
54 |
-26 |
Up in 2010; might retire |
Roland Burris |
Dem |
IL |
17 |
62 |
-45 |
Dead meat |
RFK's Son to Run for Obama's Senate Seat
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Roland Burris' net -45% approval/disapproval rating may or may not stop him from running for
a full term in 2010, but if does, he will discover that he has quite a bit of company in the
Democratic primary. State Treasurer Alexi Giannoulias is already in and Bobby Kennedy's son,
Chris Kennedy, is now
poised
to enter as well.
Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-IL) is mulling a run and Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan might jump in, too,
although it is more likely she will run for governor.
Kennedy has never run for public office before, but the Kennedy name is still revered by many Democrats.
Caroline Kennedy wasn't appointed to Hillary Clinton's vacant Senate seat in New York, but that has everything
to do with the somewhat mercurial nature of Gov. David Paterson (D-NY) and a behind-the-scenes
campaign by the state's formiddable senior senator, Chuck Schumer (D-NY),
who strongly championed now-senator Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY). A Kennedy-Giannoulias battle would be a
fight of epic proportions, but Burris would be left in the dust were he foolish enough to try.
The $845 he raised in the first quarter of 2009 won't go very far in expensive Illinois.
How Emanuel Got Israel to Drop Out of Senate Primary
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City Hall News
describes at length
why Rep. Steve Israel decided not to challenge Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY)
in a primary. Basically, President Obama's Chief-of-Staff, Rahm Emanuel told him that the President would
put everything he's got into seeing him defeated, including personally campaigning in New York City with
Gillibrand in tow.
Israel got the message. So far no other challengers have announced. The two Carolyns (McCarthy and Maloney)
may be pondering the message. (Thanks to Political wire
for pointing out the story,) An aide to Israel has
semi-denied
the story, but the incident fits very well into Emanuel's known past behavior (like the time he repeatedly slammed a meat cleaver
into a table when discussing an opponent).
So what's going here? Clearly Emanuel (and Obama and DSCC chairman Bob Menendez) want to save their pennies for Senate races in
New Hampshire, Kentucky, Missouri, and Ohio, where they will be trying to flip Republican seats. Having Democrats fighting Democrats
seems counterproductive to them. Their reasoning: Gillibrand is now a senator, so, flawed as she may be, let her keep her seat.
This whole event exposes two coountervailing views of politics and politicians: the ideological model and the partisan model.
Some people are so passionately attached to one or more causes that they want their politicians to be equally fervent and any
sign of deviation from being a true believer is fatal. People who subscribe to the partisan model don't care what their
politicians truly believe as long as they vote the way their party tells them to. In Gillibrand's case, ideological liberals
see her as fatally flawed because she is clearly not a lifelong liberal who has marched and protested for the proper causes.
People in the second category say that when she represented the rural voters of NY-20 she voted in Congress the way they
wanted her to vote (e.g., against gun control) and now in the Senate she will vote the way
the majority of people in the state want her to vote. That's
the job of a senator. Ideological liberals won't let her (future) voting record get her off the hook because she is not a true
believer. Although Israel no doubt has some personal ambition, he is clearly ideologically way to the left of Gillibrand
and that certainly played a role in his now-aborted decision to try to take her down.
Another person who brings out the ideological vs. partisan divide is Sen. Arlen Specter (D-Specter). What he truly and deeply
cares about is Arlen Specter. Ideologically oriented Democrats want a primary challenge from a "real" Democrat, possibly
Rep. Joe Sestak. Partisan Democrats say that if now votes the way majority leader Harry Reid wants him to vote, that's good
enough. They don't care about his inner feelings, just his votes. This perpetual war between ideology and partisanship is
part of what makes politics fascinating.
Coleman Preparing Case for the Supreme Court
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The Minnesota Supreme Court now has briefs from both Norm Coleman (R) and Al Franken (D).
The lawyers will present their cases before the court on June 1. Then the court will render a verdict,
probably within a week or two. In fact, it is hard to imagine that the justices will learn anything on June 1
that they don't already know. In case he loses, Norm Coleman is
ready
to take his case to the U.S. Supreme Court. It is very unlikely Franken will lose outright. Courts really, really, really,
don't like to overturn elections. His worst-case scenario is that the Minnesota high court sends the case back to the
lower court for a do-over using different rules. Coleman's argument is fundamentally that different rules applied to different
counties and that's not fair. Of course, different counties have different voting equipment, which may not be fair either, but
that's how it is.
Coburn to Announce Plans June 1
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Sen. Tom Coburn has
said
that he will announce whether he plans to run for reelection in 2010 on June 1.
Republicans are praying that he will. If he runs, he is a shoo-in. If he retires, Gov. Brad Henry (D-OK), is
likely to enter the race and would be the early favorite. Despite its Republican leanings, Oklahomans like Henry and
have elected him governor twice. He remains popular and has universal name recognition in the state. Furthermore, he would
argue that his youth (he's 45) is a plus since it takes 20 years to achieve real power in the Senate, and he would
still be young enough then to serve two or three more terms. If Coburn runs, Henry probably won't challenge him so Coburn
will be safe.
Republicans Dominance in the South Masks Problems Elsewhere
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Ron Brownstein has an interesting piece
about the Republican's "Southern Strategy." By conforming to the conservative ideology popular among white Southern men,
the Republicans are rapidly becoming a small minority everywhere else. Since 1992, the South has
provided Republicans with nearly 60% of its electoral votes or more--despite the region holding only 30% of the total
electoral votes. In the past five elections, Republicans have won an average of only 21% of the electoral votes outside
the South. In reality, the Republicans are rapidly becoming a regional party--much like the Democrats were from 1896
to 1931, when Southerners voted Democratic because they still hated Lincoln for freeing the slaves.
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