Tom McClintock (R) has been elected to the House in CA-04. His Democratic opponent, Charlie Brown, conceded yesterday. McClintock won by just under 1800 votes. House seats in OH-15, VA-05, LA-02, and LA-04 are still unresolved. The latter two will have runoffs Saturday.
Somehow 133 ballots vanished in one Minnesota precinct that went strongly for Al Franken. The number of votes in the recount is lower than in the original count by 133 votes. Franken estimates that these missing votes cost him 46 votes. These missing votes will surely figure in subsequent court cases. It boggles the mind that precincts are so sloppy with ballots. The NY Times proposes abandoning the recount and flipping a coin.
Sometime in the next month or so, Gov. Rod Blagojevich (D-IL), the nation's least popular governor, with an approval rating of 13%, will get to appoint a United States senator. Politico has a list of potential candidates:
- Tammy Duckworth, an Iraq veteran and director of the state's Dept. of veterans affairsOf course, Blagojevich could surpise people and pick someone else. Among other things, he has to be concerned about the appointed senator's ability to win election in 2010.
President-elect Barack Obama is earning high marks for his initial cabinet picks. A Gallup poll shows that 78% of Americans approve what he has done so far. This number compares favorably to the approval ratings of President-elect Bush in 2000 (65%) and President-elect Clinton in 1992 (67%). Almost 70% approve of his pick of Hillary Clinton as secretary of state and 80% approve of his pick of Robert Gates to run the Defense Department. This increased popularity strengthens his already large mandate for change in the months ahead.
According to Amy Walter of the National Journal, nothing. Georgia is a reliably Republican state to start with, the Democrat, Jim Martin, had no statewise base, black turnout was way down compared to Nov. 4, and Barack Obama didn't want to use up much political capital helping Martin (all he did was make one radio ad for Martin). Walter doesn't believe this is a first step in rebuilding the GOP. Winning Georgia isn't very hard for Republicans.
Walter's colleague Charlie Cook has a good column on whither the Republican Party. He talked to a number of top GOP strategists and got some insight. One strategist had excuses for everything: it was Bush, it was the economy, it was everything except the what the party stands for. Another said the party was pretty good at being against things but not so good at being for things. Yet another point is that Republicans are losing the suburbs because they don't have solutions to the problems real people have such as education, health care, and retirement.