West Virginia is full of coal mines and two-term Gov. Joe Manchin (D-WV) is the canary in them. He is immensely popular, with a 68% approval and only 22% disapproval, figures most politicians can only dream of. He is running in the special election to replace the late Sen. Robert Byrd, who served in the Senate for 50 years. His opponent is John Raese (R), a rich Maryland-born businessman who lives in Florida but who has nevertheless run for office in West Virginia three times before and been decisively defeated all three times. Raese makes no bones about his money, saying that he got it the old-fashioned way: he inherited it. He wants to eliminate the estate tax permanently so everyone can inherit more money. While Americans often admire people who earned a fortune themselves (like Bill Gates or Warren Buffet), normally they don't like people who just inherited it. In addition, Raese wants to eliminate the minimum wage in this dirt-poor state. To top it off, the NRSC recently issued a casting call for hicky-looking actors.
So in a nutshell a popular governor is facing a rich businessman who lives out of state and has contempt for the residents of West Virginia and what do the polls show? They are running about even. Manchin got 70% and 64% of the vote on his two gubernatorial runs, respectively, and should be leading by 30% now instead of being roughly tied. If Democrats this popular and Republicans who fit their states as badly as Raese are about even, what's going to happen in contests with less-popular Democrats and better-quality Republicans? In Wisconsin, we may be seeing an example of that. There Russ Feingold (D-WI), who won his three Senate elections with 53%, 51%, and 55% of the vote, respectively, is trailing another rich plastics manufacturer, Ron Johnson (R), by about 10%. Normally rich businessmen running for governor or senator win about 10% of the time--it's tough to buy a top office, but this year it may happen more often, except where the candidate has messed up badly, as is the case with Meg Whitman, who had an illegal maid while denouncing people who hire illegal maids.
Tea party senatorial candidate Sharron Angle (R) raised an unbelieveable $14 million from July to September. Only Sen. Scott Brown (R-MA), raised more ($14.2 million) in a comparable period in a Senate race. Most (96%) of the money came in donations of under $200, indicating a lot of grass roots support, presumably mostly from out of state. Her opponent, majority leader Harry Reid (D-NV), raised only $18 million during the entire cycle. Angle has not said how much she spent to raise the money or how much she has left, however. Still, television ads in Nevada are cheap and the state has only a handful of stations, so it is not clear how she could spend so much money in the remaining 3 weeks.
An Angle win could be a Pyrrhic victory for the Republicans, however. In the Nevada state Assembly there were many 41 to 1 votes, with Angle being the 1, so she could be very difficult to manage in the Senate, especially since she beat the establishment favorite, Sue Lowden, in the primary and owes Mitch McConnell and John Cornyn nothing. In addition, if the Democrats hold the Senate, however narrowly, the new majority leader will be either Sen. Dick Durbin (D-IL) or Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-NY), both of whom are far more aggressive and uncompromising than the mild Reid.
Unlike Angle, who has more money than she can ever hope to spend, the DCCC has far less money than it needs to defend perhaps 50 House seats. As a consequence, it is effectively giving up on many House races in order to salvage others where it has a better chance. Among the candidates being abandoned are Suzanne Kosmas (FL-24), Betsy Markey (CO'04*), Kathy Dahlkemper (PA-03), Steve Driehaus (OH-01), and Chet Edwards (TX-17). It is also giving up on the open seats in TN-08 and IN-08. In two districts, DE-AL and LA-02, the DCCC has cancelled ads from a position of strength as they think they can win without any more ads.
The House Blue Dog Coalition of conservative Democrats is going to need new leadership in 2011 since its founder, John Tanner (D-TN) is retiring and many of its 54 members are in tough reelection battles. To a large extent, the size and power of the Blue Dogs is a result of Rahm Emanuel's strategy in 2006 of looking for conservatives who could win in rural, Republican-leaning districts. It worked and many won their races. Now it appears that the Blue Dogs will take the brunt of the 2010 Republican tsunami as their districts return to their normal Republican bent. A much smaller and leaderless Blue Dog Coalition is likely to have far less power in 2011 than it had in 2009. So ironically, although the Democrats are virtually certain to lose many seats in the House, the party's center of gravity will move to the left as the Blue Dogs are decimated.
| State | Democrat | D-pct | Republican | R-pct | I | I-pct | Start | End | Pollster |
| Alaska | Scott McAdams | 26% | Joe Miller | 35% | Lisa Murkowski | 33% | Oct 09 | Oct 10 | PPP |
| Arizona | Rodney Glassman | 22% | John McCain* | 56% | Oct 01 | Oct 10 | Rocky Mtn Poll | ||
| Connecticut | Richard Blumenthal | 49% | Linda McMahon | 43% | Oct 09 | Oct 09 | Pulse Opinion Research | ||
| Delaware | Chris Coons | 54% | Christine O'Donnell | 38% | Oct 09 | Oct 09 | Pulse Opinion Research | ||
| Delaware | Chris Coons | 57% | Christine O'Donnell | 38% | Oct 08 | Oct 11 | Monmouth U. | ||
| Florida | Kendrick Meek | 21% | Marco Rubio | 44% | Charlie Crist | 33% | Oct 09 | Oct 10 | PPP |
| Illinois | Alexi Giannoulias | 37% | Mark Kirk | 37% | Sep 30 | Oct 10 | Southern Illinois University | ||
| Illinois | Alexi Giannoulias | 44% | Mark Kirk | 43% | Oct 11 | Oct 11 | Rasmussen | ||
| Nevada | Harry Reid* | 47% | Sharron Angle | 45% | Oct 07 | Oct 09 | PPP | ||
| Nevada | Harry Reid* | 47% | Sharron Angle | 49% | Oct 09 | Oct 09 | Pulse Opinion Research | ||
| Ohio | Lee Fisher | 34% | Rob Portman | 57% | Oct 11 | Oct 11 | Rasmussen | ||
| Ohio | Lee Fisher | 35% | Rob Portman | 52% | Oct 09 | Oct 09 | Pulse Opinion Research | ||
| Washington | Patty Murray* | 46% | Dino Rossi | 47% | Oct 09 | Oct 09 | Pulse Opinion Research | ||
| Washington | Patty Murray* | 55% | Dino Rossi | 40% | Oct 07 | Oct 11 | Elway Poll | ||
| Wisconsin | Russ Feingold* | 43% | Ron Johnson | 45% | Oct 07 | Oct 11 | Fairbank Maslin | ||
| Wisconsin | Russ Feingold* | 44% | Ron Johnson | 51% | Oct 08 | Oct 11 | IPSOS | ||
| Wisconsin | Russ Feingold* | 45% | Ron Johnson | 52% | Oct 11 | Oct 11 | Rasmussen | ||
| West Virginia | Joe Manchin | 48% | John Raese | 45% | Oct 09 | Oct 10 | PPP |
| Cong. Distr. | Democrat | D-pct | Republican | R-pct | I | I-pct | Start | End | Pollster |
| CA-11 | Jerry McNerney* | 42% | David Harmer | 48% | Oct 08 | Oct 11 | SurveyUSA | ||
| DE-AL | John Carney | 53% | Glen Urquhart | 44% | Oct 08 | Oct 11 | Monmouth U. | ||
| NY-19 | John Hall* | 42% | Nan Hayworth | 42% | Oct 06 | Oct 06 | Iona College | ||
| VA-05 | Tom Perriello* | 41% | Robert Hurt | 52% | Oct 08 | Oct 11 | SurveyUSA | ||
| WA-08 | Suzan DelBene | 46% | Dave Reichert* | 49% | Oct 09 | Oct 10 | PPP |