Lehman Brothers and Merrill Lynch no longer exist, A.I.G. is being radcially restructured, and the Dow dropped 500 points yesterday. Guess what? The economy is back. The Washington Post's Dan Balz has a good piece on the political fallout. People are going to be asking the candidates: "How are you going to fix this mess and prevent a repetition?" The election will probably hang on the answers. The moderator of the first debate (Jim Lehrer), on Sept. 26 at the University of Mississippi, is probably going to bring up the subject as well.
Current voting machines can still be hacked easily. Computer scientists at the University of California at Santa Barbara commissioned by the California secretary of state, Debra Bowen, have shown how easy it is. Read the story or better yet, watch the video. Bowen is an opponent of electronic voting machines and campaigned for office on a platform of election reform and making sure every vote is counted correctly. She defeated a sitting secretary of state who maintained that everything was fine with the voting systems.
The 527s are starting to rev up. A group called Brave New PAC made an ad featuring Philip Butler, who was at Annapolis with John McCain and also a POW with him in Vietnam and who knows him well. In the ad Butler says McCain can blow up and go off like a Roman candle. He added that McCain is "not somebody I would like to see with his finger near the red button." This ad was clearly inspired by the Swift Boaters of 2004 who attacked Kerry on his war record. An ad from the American Issues Project, a Republican group, made an ad linking Obama to Bill Ayers, a 1960s radical turned professor of education.
While many House races are highly competitive (see our list of Hot House races) there are also races that so are uncompetitive that one party or the other didn't even bother to run a candidate. Here is the list.
| District | PVI | Democrat | Republican |
| AR-01 | D+1 | Marion Berry* | |
| AR-02 | R+0 | Vic Snyder* | |
| AR-03 | R+11 | John Boozman* | |
| AR-04 | D+0 | Mike Ross* | |
| CA-19 | R+10 | George Radonovich* | |
| FL-03 | D+16 | Corrine Brown* | |
| FL-17 | D+35 | Kendrick Meek* | |
| FL-20 | D+18 | Debbie Wasserman-Schultz* | |
| GA-04 | D+22 | Hank Johnson* | |
| GA-05 | D+23 | John Lewis* | |
| IL-02 | D+35 | Jesse Jackson, Jr.* | |
| IL-04 | D+13 | Luis Gutierrez* | |
| IL-07 | D+35 | Danny Davis* | |
| IL-17 | D+5 | Philip Hare* | |
| MI-14 | D+33 | John Conyers* | |
| MN-08 | D+4 | James Oberstar* | |
| MO-01 | D+26 | William Clay, Jr.* | |
| NY-06 | D+38 | Gregory Meeks* | |
| NY-09 | D+14 | Anthony Weiner* | |
| OR-04 | D+0 | Peter DeFazio* | |
| PA-14 | D+22 | Michael Doyle* | |
| TN-06 | R+4 | Bart Gordon* | |
| TN-08 | D+0 | John Tanner* | |
| TN-09 | D+18 | Steve Cohen* | (no Republican) |
| TX-01 | R+17 | Louie Gohmert* | |
| TX-02 | R+12 | Ted Poe* | |
| TX-05 | R+16 | Jeb Hensarling* | |
| TX-11 | R+25 | Mike Conaway* | |
| TX-21 | R+13 | Lamar Smith* | |
| VA-03 | D+18 | Robert Scott* | |
| VA-09 | R+7 | Rick Boucher* | |
| VT-AL | D+8 | Peter Welch* | |
| WI-04 | D+20 | Gwen Moore* | |
| WI-05 | R+12 | Jim Sensenbrenner* | |
| WV-01 | R+6 | Alan Mollohan* |
The reasons why a congressman is unopposed can vary. Sometimes there district so heavily tilted one way or the other that one of the parties can't find anybody willing to put in the effort. Inner cities with large black majorities tend not to be prime hunting grounds for Republicans and rural areas where everybody hunts are not always Democrat friendly. In some cases the district has been gerrymandered to achieve its balance, but not always. here are some examples of the districts listed above that exhbit major gerrymandering. Some others were shown in on this site Sep. 18, 2006.
In still other cases, the incumbent is just so popular despite belonging to the wrong party that a run is futile. And in a few cases there are other reasons, such as the chosen candidate failing to file on time.
We have 10 presidential polls today. On the whole, the McCain post-convention bounce is still visible, but that could change fairly quickly as the financial crisis moves front and center.
| State | Obama | McCain | Start | End | Pollster |
| Colorado | 46% | 48% | Sep 14 | Sep 14 | Rasmussen |
| Florida | 44% | 49% | Sep 14 | Sep 14 | Rasmussen |
| New York | 46% | 41% | Sep 08 | Sep 10 | Siena Coll. |
| Ohio | 42% | 46% | Sep 10 | Sep 13 | Suffolk U. |
| Ohio | 45% | 48% | Sep 14 | Sep 14 | Rasmussen |
| Ohio | 45% | 49% | Sep 12 | Sep 14 | SurveyUSA |
| Pennsylvania | 47% | 47% | Sep 14 | Sep 14 | Rasmussen |
| Utah | 32% | 64% | Sep 10 | Sep 10 | Rasmussen |
| Virginia | 48% | 48% | Sep 14 | Sep 14 | Rasmussen |
| Virginia | 50% | 46% | Sep 12 | Sep 14 | SurveyUSA |
We also have 3 Senate polls. Nothing surprising here.
| State | Democrat | D-pct | Republican | R-pct | Start | End | Pollster |
| Iowa | Tom Harkin* | 53% | Christopher Reed | 34% | Sep 08 | Sep 10 | Selzer |
| Minnesota | Al Franken | 37% | Norm Coleman* | 41% | Sep 10 | Sep 12 | Princeton Survey |
| Virginia | Mark Warner | 57% | Jim Gilmore | 34% | Sep 12 | Sep 14 | SurveyUSA |