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October 27, 2008

New House Poll Round-Up

There are some many polls coming in for House races, that there’s no way I can blog on each of them.  So…below the fold are polls in the last week or so in races where Council for a Livable World has made an endorsement.  

The quick and dirty summary?  Our guys are doing great!

California – 04 – Open Seat
Charlie Brown (D – CLW Endorsed) – 48%
Tom McClintock – 42%

California – 50
Rep. Brian Bilbray (R) – 44%
Nick Leibham (D – CLW Endorsed) – 42%

Colorado – 04
Betsy Markey (D – CLW Endorsed) – 47%
Rep. Marilyn Musgrave (R) – 38%

Connecticut – 04
Jim Himes (D – CLW Endorsed) – 44%
Rep. Chris Shays (R) – 44%

Florida – 08
Alan Grayson(D – CLW Endorsed)  – 52%
Ric Keller (R) – 41%

Kentucky – 03
Ann Northrup (R) – 45
Rep. John Yarmuth (D – CLW Endorsed) – 53%

Maine – 01 – Open Seat
Chellie Pingree (D – CLW Endorsed) – 56%
Charlie Summers (R) – 35%

Michigan – 09
Rep. Joe Knollenberg (R) – 36%
Gary Peters (D – CLW Endorsed) – 46%

Minnesota – 03 – Open Seat
Ashwn Madia (D – CLW Endorsed) – 44%
Eric Paulsen (R) – 39%

New Hampshire – 01
Jeb Bradley (R) – 39%
Rep. Carol Shea-Porter (D – CLW Endorsed) – 44%

New Jersey – 03 – Open Seat
John Adler (D – CLW Endorsed) – 43%
Chris Myers (R) – 35%

New Jersey – 07 – Open Seat
Leonard Lance (R) – 31%
Linda Stender (D – CLW Endorsed) – 40%

New York 25 – Open Seat
Dan Maffei (D – CLW Endorsed) – 49%
Dale Sweetland (R) – 31%

New York – 29
Poll for Rep. Kuhl
Rep. Randy Kuhl (R) – 40%
Eric Massa (D – CLW Endorsed) – 30%

Poll for DailyKos
Rep. Randy Kuhl (R) – 42%
Eric Massa (D – CLW Endorsed) – 49%

Ohio – 02
Jean Schmidt (R) – 46%
Victoria Wulsin (D – CLW Endorsed) – 39%

Ohio – 15 – Open Seat
Mary Jo Kilroy (D – CLW Endorsed) – 46%
Steve Stivers (R) – 37%

Pennsylvania – 03
Kathy Dahlkemper (D – CLW Endorsed) – 48%
Rep. Phil English (R) – 41%

Pennsylvania – 04
Rep. Jason Altmire (D – CLW Endorsed) – 53%
Melissa Hart (R) – 35%

Virginia – 02
Glenn Nye (D – CLW Endorsed) – 42%
Rep. Thelma Drake (R) – 47%

Virginia – 05
Rep. Virgil Goode (R) – 48%
Tom Perriello (D – CLW Endorsed) – 40%

Washington – 08
Darcy Burner (D – CLW Endorsed) – 46%
Rep. Dave Reichert (R) – 46%

Wisconsin – 08
John Gard (R) – 44%
Rep. Steve Kagen (D – CLW Endorsed) – 46%

Posted in: Blog

October 27, 2008

Can Democrats Get to 60 in the Senate? — updated

It is possible for Democrats to gain the seats needed to reach a filibuster-proof 60 votes in the Senate in 2008, but it will take running the table in a number of undecided elections.

Running the table means that almost every close election must be won by the Democratic candidate.  This is a difficult, but not impossible, task.  Indeed, Democrats grabbed control of the Senate in 2006 by doing just that:

  • Democrat Jim Webb won the Virginia seat held by Sen. George Allen (R) by fewer than 10,000 votes.
  • Jon Tester (D) knocked off Sen. Conrad Burns (R) in Montana by about 3,000 votes.
  • In Missouri, Claire McCaskill (D) upset Sen. Jim Talent (R) 50% – 47%.
  • Rhode Island’s popular Sen. Lincoln Chafee (R) was ousted by the anti-GOP tide and Sheldon Whitehouse (D).

Presently, Democrats cling to a 51 – 49 majority in the Senate, with one of those 51 the independent-tilting-Republican Sen. Joseph Lieberman of Connecticut.  The Lieberman seat is an important one to factor in any calculation about the balance of power in the Senate.

Unlike in the House of Representatives, it generally takes 60 votes in the Senate – more than a simple majority – to win approval of controversial legislation.

Can Democrats grab 60 votes in 2008?  Most certainly, but don’t bet the mortgage on it no matter how much housing prices have sunk in the current market.

As they say in sports broadcasts, let’s go to the scoreboard.

51 The number of seats presently held by Democrats, including two independents, Lieberman and Vermont’s Bernie Sanders.  There is no Democratic seat seriously in jeopardy, although Sen. Mary Landrieu (D) – currently polling ahead — always has a tough contest.

+1 Virginia: This race was over when former Governor Mark Warner (D) entered the contest and Rep. Tom Davis (R) decided he could not win the Republican nomination.  Virginians will trade one Warner for another when Mark Warner takes the retiring John Warner’s (R) seat.

+1 New Mexico: Democrats picked the perfect candidate for retiring Sen. Pete Domenici’s (R) seat in Rep. Tom Udall while Republicans chose conservative Rep. Steve Pearce (R) in a primary over a more moderate candidate who would have put up a better fight.  

+1 Colorado:  Tom Udall’s cousin Rep. Mark Udall (D) has enjoyed a modest but constant lead over ex-Rep. Bob Schaffer (R) and should capture the seat of the retiring Sen. Wayne Allard (R).

+1 Oregon:  One Udall cousin (yes, Smith is related to both Udalls running for Senate) is probably not returning to the Senate as Jeff Merkley (D) has opened up a small but consistent lead over incumbent Sen. Gordon Smith (R).  The Democratic tide is probably too strong for Smith, who has tried to grab the coattails of Barack Obama, Ron Wyden, Ted Kennedy and other Democrats.

+1 New Hampshire:  In a rematch of the 2002 contest, former Gov. Jeanne Shaheen (D) has held a steady if not huge lead over Sen. John Sununu (R) and should continue the Democratic takeover in a once rock-ribbed GOP state.

+1 North Carolina: Sen. Elizabeth Dole (R) has been trailing her Democratic opponent state Sen. Kay Hagan for a while and is likely to go down to defeat.

+1 Alaska:  The jury verdict is in — and Sen. Ted Stevens (R) is likely out. On Oct. 27, a Washington, DC jury found Stevens guilty on all counts. While Boston has had Mayors who spent part of their terms in jail, Alaska is likely to choose Anchorage Mayor Mark Begich (D).

58 The new total if Democratic candidates pick up all seven of these seats.

4 toss-ups or leaning R

?+1 Minnesota:  Al Franken (D) has overcome a number of hurdles to claim a narrow front-runner status over Sen. Norm Coleman (R), but the contest is too close to call and is complicated by independent Dean Barkley who is capturing 15% – 20% in the polls.

?+1 Mississippi:  Appointed Sen. Roger Wicker (R) has held a huge fundraising lead over former Gov. Ronnie Musgrove (D), but the Democrat has kept it close.

?+1 Georgia: Sen. Saxby Chambliss (R) appeared to be cruising to an easy victory until ex-state Representative Jim Martin (D) suddenly caught up in the polls.  Chambliss, who dumped former Sen. Max Cleland (D) in a dirty campaign in 2002 might just end up dumped himself in 2008.

?+1 Kentucky: Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R) finds himself in a close contest against Bruce Lunsford (D).  While McConnell leads, an incumbent under 50% at this point is in serious trouble.

60 votes:  Democrats must win 2 of the 4 contests – depending on what happens to Sen. Lieberman

?-1 Connecticut:  Does Joe Lieberman jump or get pushed from the Democratic caucus?

For current polling, check out Council for a Livable World’s constantly updated list of polls:

Full polling data is here.

Posted in: Blog

October 24, 2008

Obama Releases New Ad for Jeff Merkley, Despite Smith’s Attempts to Link Himself to Obama

We blogged last week about Oregon Sen. Gordon Smith’s attempt to link himself to Obama in a last-ditch effort to hold his seat. Latest polls show challenger and CLW endorsed candidate Jeff Merkley is pulling ahead and poised to win. Obama has a near 20…

Posted in: Blog

October 24, 2008

More News on Veterans with PTSD out of, and Alarmingly in, War

Cross-posted on Daily Kos diary

ABC World News reported last night that more and more soldiers are being returned to Iraq for subsequent tours with clear symptoms and often diagnosis of PTSD and on anti-depressant or anti-anxiety medication – another depressing example of the toll that this war has taken on our Armed Forces. We’ve known this for a while, but this report caught my attention.

Unfortunately, if the branches who have taken the biggest brunt of the war, the Army and Marines, don’t recruit more soldiers (unlikely to happen, both branches admit severe recruiting challenges), I predict more and more stories like this to continually surface.

“We know the Army is stretched too thin. We know how busy we are. We know we need more forces,” said the Army’s chief psychiatrist, Dr. Elspeth Ritchie to ABC World News.

Ritchie also said she agrees with the recent Rand Report which concluded that roughly 300,000 soldiers have PTSD. However, the Army isn’t tracking how many of those soldiers are being re-deployed.  

But, have we deployed soldiers with obvious PTSD in other wars? Not entirely, said former Navy psychiatrist Paul Ragan.  Ragen was in in Kuwait during the first Gulf War, said that practices have changed. “Clearly, in 1990, if someone was on antidepressant medication, we sent them back to the United States.”

The ABC segment follows several families who have seen the consequences of deploying soldiers who have active PTSD diagnoses and who are on medication, including one widow whose husband went to Iraq with PTSD from a previous deployment, and committed suicide while in Iraq for a second time.

Watch the video and read the full report here.

Posted in: Blog

October 23, 2008

We’ve Surpassed the Million Dollar Mark

In the early stages of this historical election cycle, we set a goal of raising $1.5 million dollars to help progressive candidates boot out (or keep out) Bush and GOP cronies and allies in Congress like Sens. Norm Coleman, Gordon Smith, John Sununu, S…

Posted in: Blog

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