Democrats and Republicans Nearly Tied on Generic Ballot
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A new Gallup poll
shows that registered voters prefer the Democrats to the Republicans 46% to 45%, a statistically insignificant difference. The gap has been
as large as 10% in favor of the Republicans in the past month. But the devil is in the details. This was a poll of registered voters, not of likely voters. If half the
voters prefer the Republicans and half prefer the Democrats but the Republicans all go vote and many of the Democrats stay home, the Republicans
will win. Although Gallup didn't use a likely voter screen, it did ask people if they were enthusiastic about voting and 47% of the Republicans
said they were vs. only 28% of the Democrats. That's a big gap.
Tea Parties Transitioning into Get Out the Vote Operations
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The tea party movement, originally a loose confederation of angry (white) voters, is becoming
better organized and starting to focus on a get-out-the-vote operation to make sure the candidates
it endorsed win in November. The Tea Party Patriots are going to
announce
a 7-figure donation to the effort today. No indication is given where these millions of dollars are coming from, but a good bet is
shadowy billionaires such as the Koch brothers.
If this operation succeeds and many of the 10 tea party candidates running for the Senate and dozens running for the House win, it
will change the face of Congress and cause immense problems for both parties come January when campaigning time is over and
governing time starts.
Polling the Alaska Senate Race Will Be Tough
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How do you poll a race when the only candidate most of the voters have ever heard of
isn't even on the ballot? That is the situation in the Alaska Senate race now that
Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-AK) has decided to run as a write-in. The usual question on
an automated poll: "Press 1 if you are going to vote for the Republican Joe Miller
and press 2 if you are going to vote for the Democrat Scott McAdams" kind of misses
the mark here. Adding a third choice: "Press 3 if you are going to write in Lisa Murkowski"
gives her far too much attention and will certainly over represent her following.
It's going to be tough. Pollster Mark Blumenthal
discusses the issue.
Another facet of this campaign that almost no one has brought up is what happens if Murkowski wins?
No doubt Mitch McConnell will give her a big hug and say: "You know, those last 2 months when we were
trashing you every day
and calling you a skunk? We didn't mean it of course." And our stripping you of your leadership position back in September? My mistake. You can have it back now.
And what is she going to do?
Give him a big kiss and say "We'll just let bygones by bygones?" Maybe. Maybe not. If the NRSC really
goes after her and she wins despite their best efforts, it might occur to her to caucus with the
Democrats, just to spite the Republicans. On the whole, she's probably not much more conservative than Sen. Ben Nelson (D-NE)
and she's really going to hate NRSC chairman John Cornyn's guts after he goes all out to defeat her.
Conservatives are already calling her a sore loser.
The situation is somewhat like Joe Lieberman's independent run in Connecticut in 2006 except that the
DSCC didn't really gun for him. They just kind of pulled out of Connecticut figuring they could live with
either Lieberman or the official Democrat, Ned Lamont. If the NRSC pulls out of Alaska, Sarah Palin and the tea partiers will go bonkers.
Cornyn can't afford that.
However, the chances of Murkowski winning are low. Only once in Senate history has a write-in candidate won, Strom Thurmond in 1954.
But the danger the Republicans see is her splitting the Republican vote and letting Sitka mayor Scott McAdams (D) squeak by with under 40%
of the vote (Obama got 38% in 2008). Alaska does not have runoffs. It's first past the post:
the person with the most votes wins.
Rundown of the Competitive Gubernatorial Races in the West
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Yesterday we looked at the most competitive contests for the governors' mansions east of the Mississippi River.
Below are brief descriptions of the ones in the West. The photos are hyperlinked to the candidates' Websites.
Their names are hyperlinked to their Wikipedia articles. The party designations are hyperlinked to the corresponding
state party Website.
Arizona
Incumbent | Challenge | Notes |
Jan Brewer (R)
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Terry Goddard (D)
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Gov. Jan Brewer (R-AZ) got her job when term-limited Gov. Janet Napolitano (D-AZ)
took a job in the cabinet. Since she wasn't elected, she may be vulnerable.
The Democratic candidate is Attorney General Terry Goddard.
Since the most recent person to be elected governor was a Democrat in an
otherwise somewhat Republican state, this race has to be considered a
tossup at this point. However, Brewer is a big supporter of the controversial
Arizona law requiring the police to check the papers of anyone they suspect of
of being an illegal immigrant, and that position, while probably unconstitutional,
is quite popular in Arizona and may pull her over the finish line.
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California
Challenger | Challenger | Notes |
Meg Whitman (R)
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Jerry Brown (D)
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Open seat (R). Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger (R-CA) is term limited so the
biggest prize of all in terms of possibilities to gerrymander
House districts is up for grabs.
The Democrats nominated former governor Jerry Brown (D) while the Republicans nominated former
eBay CEO and billionaire Meg Whitman (R), who has already spent over $120 million of her own money on the race.
Despite being a very blue state, California has had many Republican governors.
Furthermore, Brown is an extremely erratic campaigner. He might even decide to
go off to an ashram to meditate instead of campaigning this Fall. Whitman has a real shot at
it, especially if she continues to outspend Brown 10 to 1 in this vast state.
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Iowa
Incumbent | Challenger | Notes |
Chet Culver (D)
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Terry Brandstad (R)
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Gov. Chet Culver (D-IA) is a moderate Democrat in a moderately Democratic state.
However, his popularity is dropping and he is vulnerable.
The Republican is former four-term governor Terry Branstad (R) looking for an encore.
Since Branstad is a proven vote getter, albeit a decade ago, he will be a tough competitor.
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Minnesota
Challender | Challenger | Notes |
Tom Emmer (R)
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Mark Dayton (D)
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Open seat (R). When some people started talking about Gov. Tim Pawlenty (R-MN) as a possible
presidential nominee in 2012 he got bitten by the bug
and decided not to run for a third term in 2010 to concentrate on his presidential run.
Former senator Mark Dayton (D) decided to get back into politics and won the DFL (Democratic)
primary. State representative Tom Emmer (R) won the Republican primary. The race is clouded
by the presence of a third-party candidate, Tom Horner. It could be close.
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New Mexico
Challenger | Challenger | Notes |
Diane Denish (D)
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Susana Martinez (R)
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Open seat (D). Gov. Bill Richardson (D-NM) is term limited. Lt. Gov Diane Denish (D-NM) is
runing for the Democrats. What about the Republicans?
Well, Obama carried the state in a landslide, the Democrats control both Senate seats, all three House
seats, all statewide offices, and both chambers of the state legislature (by nearly 2 to 1 margins).
The Republicans control nothing, so the best they could come up with is the Dona Ana County
District Attorney, Susana Martinez. With both candidates female, New Mexico is sure to get
its first woman governor. Martinez would be the first Latina, but the current governor is
a Latino, so that is less of a breakthrough. It is likely to be a close race.
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Oregon
Challenger | Challenger | Notes |
John Kitzhaber (D)
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Chris Dudley (R)
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Open seat (D). Term-limited Gov. Ted Kulongoski (D-OR) won't be on the ballot in 2010. The
Democrats nominated John Kitzhaber, who already served two terms as governor, from 1995 to 2003.
The Republican nominee is Chris Dudley, a former professional basketball player making his first
run for public office. It should be an interest race in an anti-incumbent year: a candidate who
is the ultimate insider (although he is not responsible for the current mess) vs. the ultimate
outsider. Kitzhaber will harp on the idea that being governor is a tough job and he knows how to do it
whereas Dudley will attack Kitzhaber for being just another politician. At this point it is a tossup.
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Texas
Incumbent | Challenger | Notes |
Rick Perry (R)
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Bill White (D)
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The fight to unseat Gov. Rick Perry (R-TX), the longest serving governor in Texas history,
is going to be a humdinger. Perry first had to beat back a primary challenger, Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchinson, which he did handily.
Now he has to face off against the popular former mayor of Houston, Bill White (D). White is the first
Democrat in years with a decent shot of being elected governor because the state's growing
Latino population is highly Democratic and Perry has made a lot of enemies during his tenure.
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Today's Polls: AR CA IN LA MO PA UT WV MI-15 NY-24 PA-15 WA-09
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Arkansas |
Blanche Lincoln* |
29% |
John Boozman |
56% |
|
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Sep 16 |
Sep 16 |
Hendrix College |
California |
Barbara Boxer* |
50% |
Carly Fiorina |
42% |
|
|
Sep 14 |
Sep 16 |
PPP |
Indiana |
Brad Ellsworth |
34% |
Dan Coats |
50% |
|
|
Sep 16 |
Sep 16 |
Rasmussen |
Louisiana |
Charlie Melancon |
34% |
David Vitter* |
52% |
|
|
Sep 19 |
Sep 19 |
Magellan Strategies |
Missouri |
Robin Carnahan |
39% |
Roy Blunt |
43% |
|
|
Sep 14 |
Sep 18 |
Global Strategy |
Pennsylvania |
Joe Sestak |
36% |
Pat Toomey |
40% |
|
|
Sep 14 |
Sep 16 |
Critical Insights |
Pennsylvania |
Joe Sestak |
36% |
Pat Toomey |
45% |
|
|
Sep 15 |
Sep 16 |
Municipoll |
Utah |
Sam Granato |
24% |
Mike Lee |
52% |
|
|
Sep 07 |
Sep 13 |
Howey Gauge |
Utah |
Sam Granato |
25% |
Mike Lee |
52% |
|
|
Sep 07 |
Sep 13 |
Dan Jones |
West Virginia |
Joe Manchin |
50% |
John Raese |
43% |
|
|
Sep 19 |
Sep 19 |
Rasmussen |
MI-15 |
John Dingell* |
49% |
Rob Steele |
30% |
|
|
Sep 15 |
Sep 16 |
Detroit News |
NY-24 |
Mike Arcuri* |
48% |
Richard Hanna |
40% |
|
|
Sep 13 |
Sep 15 |
Siena Coll. |
PA-15 |
John Callahan |
38% |
Charlie Dent* |
49% |
|
|
Sep 11 |
Sep 16 |
Muhlenberg Coll. |
WA-09 |
Adam Smith* |
49% |
Dick Muri |
46% |
|
|
Sep 14 |
Sep 16 |
SurveyUSA |
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