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SATURDAY
NEWS UPDATE.
OPEN
THREAD: Your turn to chat while I keep busy writing.
I'm digging up the dirt on a major gubernatorial candidate with
some bizarre friends and connections he'd rather not have you
read about. Fortunately, you'll read it right here in a Politics1
exclusive on Monday. Meditate and speculate on that teaser until
Monday.
Posted
by Ron Gunzburger - 7.30.05 |
FRIDAY
NEWS UPDATE.
P2008:
It didn't take US Senator Rick Santorum (R-PA) more than a day
or two to kinda, sorta un-quit the Presidential race. On Monday
he told the Washington Post: "I can't speak for
other politicians but I can speak for me, and my intention is
not to run in 2008." Instead, he said he planned to focus
on his tough '06 re-election contest. But, as soon as Senator
Sam Brownback (R-KS) publicly staked a claim on Santorum's former
supporters in the Prez race and commentators mentioned Santorum
was out of the P2008 race, he changed his mind. Santorum told
reporters mid-week that he wanted to leave a "little window
open" on running in '08. "It would be easier for me
to say no, absolutely, positively, under no circumstances [would
I run for President] but in my mind that wouldn't be honest,"
Santorum said.
KENTUCKY:
Governor Ernie Fletcher (R) says he may take the fifth and refuse
to testify if called before the grand jury investigating hiring
corruption in his administration. "I will have to assess
that at the time and see what conditions it's under and everything
else," he said to the Louisville Courier-Journal.
The Fifth Amendment protects witnesses from being forced to give
self-incriminating testimony in criminal cases. Through his attorney,
Fletcher has offered to testify if he does not have to do so under
oath. Republicans accuse Attorney General Greg Stumbo (D) of using
the grand jury to advance a partisan agenda. Eight current or
former Fletcher Administration officials have already been charged
with illegal hiring practices and official misconduct -- and one
was also charged with felony witness tampering. According to the
newspaper, Fletcher was willing to vaguely admit -- not under
oath -- that his administration made "mistakes" and
"exercised less than good judgment" in the state job
hiring process -- in exchange for the grand jury being dissolved
and having no further charges filed. Fletcher, a physician and
former Congressman, faces re-election in 2007.
ARIZONA:
Conservative State Representative Russell Pearce (R) said this
week he will either run for Governor or make a primary challenge
to Congressman Jeff Flake (R) next year -- but he hadn't decided
yet what direction he will go. According to the Phoenix Business
Journal, Pearce -- like Congressman Tom Tancredo (R) -- is
a supporter of "tougher border and immigration controls ...
and using federal troops and state police to secure the U.S./Mexican
border." Pearce appears to be leaning towards a Congressional
run, as he disagrees with Flake's co-sponsorship of the McCain-Kennedy
guest worker bill that would make it easier to current illegal
immigrants to obtain legal status. Pearce views that bill as a
"backdoor amnesty" for illegals. However, Pearce also
notes he has issues with Governor Janet Napolitano (D) for purportedly
failing to deal with an "illegal alien invasion" of
the state.
CAFTA
ANTICS:Congressman
Charles Taylor (R-NC) claimed he was opposed to the Central America
Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA) -- and he even claimed he tried to
vote "no" Wednesday night -- although the official House
record doesn't show Taylor casting any floor vote at all. With
a lot of arm-twisting, the Bush Administration won CAFTA a narrow
217-215 passage in the House. For his part, Taylor claims he inserted
his voting card and pushed the "no" button but it oddly
didn't work for him. Here is his story: "I informed the Majority
Leader and the Appropriations Chairman I was voting no, as I had
informed my constituents I was voting no ... Due to an error,
my 'no' vote did not record on the voting machine. The Clerk's
computer logs verified that I had attempted to vote,
but it did not show my 'nay." Huh? Somehow, Taylor wants
us to believe his voting card alone failed to work -- even though
432 colleagues were able to successfully insert their cards and
push the buttons and even though his card worked correctly every
other time until now -- yet he didn't think to try another of
the many voting machines? Even more embarrassing was Congressman
Robin Hayes (R-NC), who represents a district that lost many textile
jobs due to NAFTA. "There needs to be a clear-cut case that
[CAFTA] is going to bring jobs and grow the economy. CAFTA does
not make that case," said Hayes on Monday. On Tuesday, Hayes
again told reporters he would vote against CAFTA. When the floor
vote began, Hayes initially voted no -- causing a 216-216 tie
(i.e., CAFTA failed for lack of a majority) -- but after 40 minutes
of pressure from GOP leaders and holding the vote open, Hayes
folded and switched his vote to "yes." Charles Taylor
and Robin Hayes: Two Congressional profiles in courage.
FLORIDA:
Suspended Miami City Commissioner Art Teele shockingly
committed suicide in the lobby of the Miami Herald early
Wednesday evening, shooting himself in the head. Teele began his
political career as young lawyer who in 1980 served as national
chair of Blacks for Reagan-Bush. The next year, he was appointed
chair of the Federal Transit Administration. In '84, Teele was
the Reagan-Bush op research staffer who found the dirt on Dem
VP nominee Geraldine Ferraro's husband. Afterwards, he returned
to South Florida to become a lobbyist. Since 1990, Teele served
on the Miami Commission -- briefly leaving the commission in '96
to run a failed race for Miami-Dade County Mayor. Governor Jeb
Bush suspended the once powerful Teele after he was charged last
year assaulting a police officer who had been following Teele
as part of a corruption investigation. Earlier this year, he was
convicted of the assault charges and placed on probation. Five
days ago the deeply indebted Teele was arrested and charged with
26 charges of federal fraud -- and more corruption indictments
were expected. The suicide came just hours after the alternative
weekly Miami New Times printed a lurid
cover story giving new details of Teele's purported corruption
-- including new details from police reports involving prostitutes,
mistresses, drug use, drug money, bribery, and extortion schemes.
"I really feel bad. I would never want anyone to harm themselves
over something I wrote, but at the end of the day, I was just
doing my job," said the reporter who wrote the New Times
piece. "Who did I piss off in this town," a distraught
Teele asked a Herald columnist and friend shortly before
he killed himself. Teele's last words were "Tell my wife
that I love her." The Herald printed at the top
of their front page a large, graphic photo (right) of Teele sprawled
in a pool of blood on their lobby floor -- but with a condolence
note from the Herald management to the Teele family tastelessly
running down the side column right next to it. I only met Teele
once in the early 1990s -- and found him rather haughty -- but
still it's a sad end to a once promising political career that
went very far astray.
Posted
by Ron Gunzburger - 7.29.05 |
THURSDAY
NEWS UPDATE.
NEW
YORK: Governor George Pataki (R) finally ended his long,
drawn-out Hamlet "to run, or not to run" act
on Wednesday, announcing he will not seek a fourth term next year.
"Today, with pride in our accomplishments, enduring enthusiasm
for New York's future and heartfelt gratitude to its people, I
am announcing that I will not seek another term as your Governor,"
he explained. Polls showed Pataki was likely to lose to aggressive
Attorney General Eliot Spitzer (D). While Pataki previously said
he would not run for US Senate against Hillary Clinton (D) next
year, he did not give any indication of his '08 plans. Based upon
his recent actions, however, he appears to be readying an exploratory
effort for the Presidential contest. With Pataki out of the Guv
race, billonaire perennial candidate Tom Golisano, and Secretary
of State Randy Daniels appear most likely to enter the GOP contest.
NYC Mayor Mike Bloomberg (R) said a few days ago that he will
"never" run for Governor. Former NYC Mayor Rudy Giuliani
(R) also says he won't run -- likely in an attempt to keep his
P2008 options open. Pataki said he would support Golisano if he
decides to make a fourth gubernatorial run.
P2008:
Congressman Tom Tancredo (R-CO) is still spinning -- but not retracting
nor apologizing for -- his comments a week ago that the US may
want to threaten to "take out" Islam's holiest sites
(like Mecca) if Islamic terrorists commit devastating acts of
terrorism within the US borders. A few days ago, Tancredo said
the firestorm created by his remarks proved his concept was thought-provoking
and may cause terrorists to think twice before hitting the US.
Tancredo explained further on Tuesday that he doesn't really understand
the uproar. "I didn't say nuke anything. I just said 'take
out their holy sites,'" he explained to Fox News. Apparently
this Is Tancredo's idea of damage control. In other P2008 news,
US Senator Sam Brownback (R-KS) says he believes he will probably
gain the most -- in terms of support from Religious Right activists
-- now that Senator Rick Santorum (R-PA) has announced he will
not run for President in 2008.
MASSACHUSETTS:
There could soon be two members of the Kerry family in elective
office in Massachusetts. Cam Kerry -- attorney and brother of
US Senator John Kerry -- has filed paperwork to run next year
for Massachusetts Secretary of State (note: don't email me corrections
-- I know it's actually called Secretary of the Commonwealth,
but nobody outside the state would call it that). Kerry was very
active in his brother's Presidential campaign, assisting with
fundraising and organizing the legal teams for election day. Senator
Kerry says he'll encourage and support his brother in anything
he wants to do. Cam Kerry says he'll only seek the office if incumbent
Bill Galvin (D) runs for Governor, as is expected.
CONNECTICUT:
Incumbent Govenor Jodi Rell (R) looks almost unbeatable
next year. Rell -- a longtime Lieutenant Govenor -- succeeded
to office last year when incumbent Governor John Rowland (R) resigned
amid a bribery investigation. Rowland subsequently pled guilt
to federal charges and was sentenced to prison. Rell was not tainted
by the scandal. In fact, she scored a 79% approval rating in a
Quinnipiac University poll. "She scores sky-high on a series
of personal traits -- leadership, honesty likability, you name
it," said the pollster. In her first year in office, Rell
has pushed for same-sex civil unions, the death penalty, expanded
stem cell research, and public campaign financing. Rell also easily
defeats any of her likely Democratic opponents, according to the
poll. She led Attorney General Richard Blumenthal (D) -- who has
yet to decide on making the race -- by a 49% to 37% vote. Rell
did even better against the Dems was are actively running, leading
each of them by margins of nearly 40-points. The
poll also showed Blumenthal would easily defeat the pack of Dems
currently in the primary field by a landslide margin. As for President
Bush, 59% of poll respondents disapproved of his perfomance --
which indicates how many cross-over Democrats are backing Rell.
Posted
by Ron Gunzburger - 7.28.05 |
WEDNESDAY
NEWS UPDATE.
ARIZONA:
Congressman J.D. Hayworth (R-AZ) denies that he is soon
going to announce he is retiring to take a position with Fox News.
Hayworth was a local TV anchorman before being elected to Congress.
Hayworth's press secretary said all the talk is simply rumor --
and that the rumor is "approaching the status of urban legend"
inside the Beltway. A spokesman for Fox News told the Phoenix
Business Journal he was "not aware of any pending deal."
Even if the rumors prove true, Hayworth's CD-5 is a safe Republican
district.
P2008:
Remember back to a month or so ago when I opined that outgoing
Iowa Governor Tom Vilsack must have quietly agreed to forgo any
Presidential ambitions for 2008 when he agreed to become the new
Chairman of the Democratic Leadership Conference. My thinking
was that the Clintonista group was not about to hand over control
of the DLC to anyone who planned to use it as a platform to promote
their own national candidacy (particularly against a Clinton ...
unless he's posturing to be HRC's runningmate). Well, I'm now
retracting that statement. Why? Because Vilsack is getting ready
to launch his own leadership PAC. From an early sneak peek at
the Heartland
PAC website, it appears the PAC exists primarily to raise
Vilsack's political profile. Count Vilsack back in as another
active P2008 hopeful.
FLORIDA:
A review of the 2Q '05 FEC reports quickly highlights
the Florida CD-22 race as the most hotly contested challenger
race in the nation. Fortunately for me, that district is located
right next door to where I live -- and shares the same TV market
-- so I'll have a front row seat. According to the numbers, Congressman
Clay Shaw (R) has a cash-on-hand of $1.03 million and challenger
State Senate Minority Leader Ron Klein (D) has $560,000 cash-on-hand.
Klein actually outraised the incumbent in the most recent quarter.
While the CD-22 seat surprisingly went for Kerry over Bush last
year -- and this will likely be the most competitive re-election
race of Shaw's entire career -- the contest still should be classified
as "Leans GOP" for now because Shaw been able to regularly
draw crossover votes in his past runs.
NEW
YORK: Governor George Pataki (R) continues to stymie
any attempts by Empire State Republicans to recruit a successor
to him in '06. Pataki had promised to announce by June whether
he would seek a fourth term next year. Instead, he stalled and
trekked to Iowa this month to promote his possible Presidential
candidacy. Pataki "can win anything he goes for," boasted
NY State Parks Commissioner Bernadette Castro, a longtime Pataki
loyalist. This week Pataki told WINS Radio that he'll announce
his re-election "when we're ready to do that" -- but
that it should be before the end of September. Pataki trails Attorney
General Eliot Spitzer (D) by significant margins in the gubernatorial
race in all polls this year. Postscript: Within hours after
giving this WINS interview, NY1 News reported that sources close
to Pataki say he will announce his retirement on Wednesday. Stay
tuned to see whether he goes ahead with his announcement plans
or delays it again.
ROVE-GATE:
For those of you who remain perplexed as to why any of
this "Rove-gate" stuff is even remotely a criminal matter,
then check out the DCCC's Wartime
Betrayal Timeline.
Posted
by Ron Gunzburger - 7.27.05 |
TUESDAY
NEWS UPDATE.
P2008:
You can cross the name of US Senator Rick Santorum (R-PA)
off the list of potential 2008 Presidential hopefuls. Santorum
told the Washington Post on Monday he will not be a candidate
for President in 2008. "I have six children ages 4-14, and
the idea of coming off a [2006 re-election] race of the intensity
that I am engaged in at this point and turning around and running
another two-year campaign for President is not something that
I believe is in the best interest of my family ... I can't speak
for other politicians but I can speak for me, and my intention
is not to run in 2008," he explained. Polls show Santorum
trailing State Treasurer Bob Casey Jr. (D) in his '06 re-election
contest.
LABOR
PAINS: In a split that was looming for months, several
key unions took steps Monday towards breaking away from the giant
AFL-CIO labor union umbrella organization. President Andrew Stern
of the 1.8 million member Service Employees International Union
(SEIU) -- the organizer of the breakaway movement -- made the
announcement that SEIU would "disaffiliate" from the
AFL-CIO. Stern cited his concern that labor has been steadily
losing membership, losing pension security, losing job security,
and that salaries are no longer keeping pace with living expenses.
Stern was joined in his move by President James Hoffa and his
powerful Teamsters. Other smaller unions also joined the breakaway
group. In total, the breakaway equals roughly one-third of the
AFL-CIO's membership. The move is not about political differences
-- as Stern and the SEIU were strong Howard Dean supporters during
the 2004 Presidential primaries -- so much as it is about significant
difference in strategies. The SEIU complains the AFL-CIO is focused
largely on political campaigns, while the breakaway Change
to Win Coalition wants to focus on growing union membership,
and winning more benefits and protections for workers. "We
must have more union members in order to change the political
climate that is undermining workers rights in this country ...
We have partnered with seven strong and progressive unions in
the Change to Win coalition to organize the unorganized and create
real power for the working families of America," said Hoffa.
Other members of the Coalition include the Carpenters, the UFCW,
and the Farm Workers. In total, the new splinter group represents
approximately seven million American workers. In related news,
the New Orleans Times-Picayune reported that the SEIU
will announce later this week that the group is "offering
unspecified financial assistance to the Third Way New South Project,
an effort by some moderate Democrats to turn around growing voter
disenchantment with their party." The leaders of the project
are US Senators Mary Landrieu (D-LA) and Mark Pryor (D-AR), Virginia
Governor Mark Warner (D-VA) and Georgia Attorney General Thurbert
Baker (D).
FLORIDA:
Attorney General Charlie Crist -- the current frontrunner
in the hotly contested '06 race for the GOP gubernatorial nomination
-- made a point of openly distancing himself from the actions
of Governor Jeb Bush during the recent legal battle over ending
medical life support for the late Terry Schiavo. While Bush and
State CFO Tom Gallagher -- Crist's primary opponent -- both aggressively
advocated state intervention against Schiavo's husband to keep
the comatose Schiavo alive in her vegetative state, Crist remained
silent during the highly publicized court fight. According to
the Daily Business Review, Crist was the keynote speaker
this month at the annual dinner of the Florida chapter of the
American Board of Trial Advocates. At the dinner, Florida Circuit
Judge George Greer and US District Judge James Whittemore -- the
two judges who blocked state intervention to keep Schiavo on life
support -- were both honored as the group's "Jurists of the
Year." Crist then spoke in favor of judicial independence.
“It is important we protect the judicial branch,” said Crist,
who went on to say he was "proud" of Greer and Whittemore.
“You are heroes to all of us, and your defense of the judiciary
and what is right is beyond admirable,” he added. Watch Gallagher
try to use this stuff against Crist -- even though published polling
data indicates most Florida Republicans quietly agreed with Crist.
PENNSYLVANIA:
If the new Rasmusson Reports poll is accurate, Governor Ed Rendell
(D) is in a tougher re-election fight than had been anticipated.
According to the poll, Rendell led former pro football player
Lynn Swann (R) by a 47% to 41% vote. The poll also showed that
Rendell led former Lieutenant Governor Bill Scranton III (R) by
an even closer vote of 46% to 42%. Scranton, however, may have
problems getting out of the GOP primary because of his ties to
purported cult leader Maharishi Mahesh Yogi and his 2000 endorsement
of the Presidential candidacy of Maharishi acolyte John Hagelin
(Natural Law Party) over then-Governor George W. Bush. As with yesterday's
Virginia poll, we'll need to wait and see whether other polls
confirm these numbers.
P2008
& STEM CELL RESEARCH:StemPAC
-- leading group advocating authorization of expanded stem cell
research -- is now targeting US Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist
(R-TN) for delaying consideration of HR 810, the key stem cell
research bill currently being debated in DC. Here's the interesting
twist: the group is only seeking to air the TV spots in New Hampshire,
as Frist is a likely 2008 White House candidate.
NEW
YORK CITY: NYC Mayor Mike Bloomberg (R) does not want
to face any primary opposition in September. According to the
New York Times, Bloomberg's campaign is carefully combing
the ballot petitions filed by conservative former New York City
Councilman Tom Ognibene (R) in an attempt to disqualify him from
the ballot. This represents a major reversal for Bloomberg, who
just last year told the New York Sun: "I think it's
time to end this 'gotcha' kind of technique where lawyers comb
petitions to find some technical violation." But that was
last year. Here is what a Bloomberg spokesman told the Times:
"I don't think it's a game of 'gotcha' to make sure the minimum
number of signatures is valid." Under the state's arcane
ballot laws, an entire page of petition signatures can be ruled
invalid if any signature on the page is bad. The Bloomberg camp
is apparently worried about the possibility of a repeat of the
1969 GOP primary, when a conservative challenger defeated liberal
incumbent Mayor John Lindsay -- forcing Lindsay to seek re-election
in the general election as a third party nominee. Lindsay won
the '69 general as the Liberal Party nominee, but soon after bolted
to the Democrats. The billionaire Bloomberg is favored over Ognibene
in the primary and backed by the GOP organization in the four
other counties that comprise New York City, although the Queens
County Republican organization has endorsed Ognibene. FYI:
We've added links to the various NYC mayoral campaigns on our
New York page.
ROVE-GATE:
Okay ... nothing new to report here today, but I couldn't
help but mention this again.
Posted
by Ron Gunzburger - 7.26.05 |
MONDAY
NEWS UPDATE.
VIRGINIA:
A new Mason-Dixon poll conducted for the Richmond
Times-Dispatch shows that Lieutenant Governor Tim Kaine (D)
has apparently eliminated the lead held since the start of the
open gubernatorial race by former Attorney General Jerry Kilgore
(R). The new numbers: Kaine-38%, Kilgore-37%, and State Senator
Russ Potts (Independent) - 9%. Pollster Brad Coker described the
race on Sunday as "very competitive." According to the
pollster's analysis, Kaine is helped by "the broad popularity"
of outgoing Governor Mark Warner (D) and by Kaine's focus on education,
transportation and jobs (versus Kilgore's focus on guns, gay rights,
abortion and the death penalty). Potts -- a GOP State Senator
who has positioned himself as the most socially liberal of the
three candidates -- is mainly drawing moderate GOP and Independent
voters away from Kilgore, according to Coker. However, unless
subsequent polls confirm these numbers, this poll may simply be
an anomaly.
TOUR
DE LANCE: Congrats
to American cyclist Lance Armstrong on scoring his record-setting
seventh Tour de France win on Sunday. No other man has ever one
more than five of the grueling, three-week bike race circle around
France and over steep mountains in the Pyrenees and Alps. On Saturday,
US Senator John Kerry was the honored guest riding in the Discovery
Channel team car immediately behind Armstrong. Kerry is an amateur
cyclist and -- like Armstrong -- a cancer survivor. Kerry has
been wearing one of Armstrong's ubiquitous "Livestrong"
yellow bracelets for over a year. After the race, Kerry told
the AP that Armstrong "would make a terrific politician"
if he chooses to pursue that when he returns to Texas. "I
think he'd be awesome, he'd be a force. I just hope it's for the
right party," said Kerry. During his racing career -- and
particularly during the 2004 elections -- Armstrong was very careful
to never express support for any candidate or political party,
or even define his political views beyond some rather vague comments
implying he is moderately liberal on a few social issues. Armstrong
has also known President Bush for many years, going back to Armstrong's
first Tour wins while Bush was Texas Governor.
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GREEN
PARTY: The Green
Party held its national convention this weekend in Oklahoma and
-- thanks to the blog of GP activist/journalist Ken
Sain -- we know what took place. Nader '04 runningmate Peter
Camejo apologized to '04 Green Presidential nominee David Cobb
for disparaging comments he and other Nader supporters made about
Cobb last year. Afterwards, both Camejo and Cobb said that neither
would run for President in 2008. Instead, Camejo -- who captured
nearly 400,000 votes as a candidate for California Governor in
'02 -- said he is leaning towards making a third run for Governor
next year. Delegates also expressed the general view that the
party should nominate a woman for President next time. Among the
many names floated by delegates were actress Susan Sarandon, former
VP nominee Winona LaDuke, progressive activist Medea Benjamin,
and Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney (D-GA) -- though none of these
four have expressed any desire to run for President. So far, the
only three women openly expressing interest in seeking the Green
Presidential nomination are newly elected party national co-chair
and New Paltz Deputy Mayor Rebecca Rotzler (NY), attorney and
drug decriminalization activist Nan Garrett (GA), and young Green
activist Kat Swift (TX).
PENNSYLVANIA:
Democrats succeeded earlier this month in recruiting a top tier
candidate -- former State Treasurer Barbara Hafer (D) -- to oppose
Congressman Tim Murphy (R) in CD-18. The Republicans, in turn,
are now trying to do likewise against an incumbent Dem. NRCC leaders
have approached Montgomery County District Attorney Bruce Castor
(R) about challenging Congresswoman Allyson Schwartz (D) for the
CD-13 swing seat. Explained Castor: "I don't doubt that I
could put on a good showing -- but I'm unsure if that's what I
want to do." Castor -- a '04 candidate for Attorney General
-- has also seen his name floated in recent weeks as either a
possible draft candidate for Governor or as a possible Lieutenant
Governor runningmate for former pro-football player Lynn Swann
(R).
ROVE-GATE:
Here's the latest in the federal grand jury investigation.
According
to various published news reports, White House Deputy Chief of
Staff Karl Rove and VP Chief of Staff Scooter Libby both gave
sworn testimony before the grand jury that was contradicted by
all relevant media witnesses. Apparently, even conservative columnist
Robert Novak -- a friend of the Bush Administration -- gave testimony
that contradicted Libby's testimony. Time magazine reporter Matt
Cooper and MSNBC's Chris Matthews' likewise contradicted the
testimony of Rove and Libby. While the Special Prosecutor may
not charge Libby or Rove with violating the complex law involving
leaking identities of covert CIA agents, felony indictments for
perjury or obstruction of justice are looking more likely as the
case moves forward. In related news, the Democrats on Saturday
allowed retired CIA officer Larry Johnson -- a Republican -- to
give their radio response to the President. "We must put
to bed the lie that she was not undercover. For starters, if she
had not been undercover then the CIA would not have referred the
matter to the Justice Department," said Johnson. He noted
he once attended a CIA training program with Valerie Plame --
identified even there to CIA co-workers only as "Val P"
-- and other agents. Johnson made the comments because he believes
the President should fire Rove. It is time for Republicans to
"call the ugly dog the ugly dog. Where are these men and
women with any integrity to speak out against this? I expect better
behavior out of Republicans," he said.
OPEN
THREAD: Have at it.
Posted
by Ron Gunzburger - 7.23.05 |
FRIDAY
NEWS UPDATE.
P2008:
Despite
a bunch of good press and a burgeoning draft
campaign, Montana Governor Brian Schweitzer (D) said he thinks
people "are kooky" to promote the idea of him running
for President in 2008. At age 49 and in only his first year in
elective office, Schweitzer clearly thinks the attention now isn't
appropriate. "I'm not that smart and I ain't pretty, so I
don't know what they're talking about," joked the rancher/scientist-turned-politician.
Besides, Schweitzer added, "If I stay in Washington for more
than 72 hours, I have to bathe myself in the same stuff I use
when my dog gets into a fight with a skunk." The Montana
GOP Chair doesn't believe Schweitzer's claim of disinterest in
running for President, noting that Schweitzer is increasing his
profile in the national media. "There has to be someone,
somewhere opening those [media] doors" for Schweitzer, said
GOP Chair Karl Ohs. Schweitzer can, however, offer his take on
why people seem interested in him: "Maybe it's because I'm
kind of a straight-talker and tend to say it the way it is. A
lot of politicians are scared of their own shadows so they parse
their words."
NEW
JERSEY: A new Fairleigh Dickinson University poll shows
US Senator Jon Corzine (D) continuing to hold a solid lead over
former West Windsor Mayor Doug Forrester (R) in the open race
for Governor. The new numbers: Corzine-47%, Forrester-34%. Just
for fun, the poll also asked respondents who they would vote for
in a hypothetical contest between Forrester and former Governor
Jim McGreevey (D), who resigned in disgrace amid a gay sex scandal.
The result: Forrester-60%, McGreevey-40%. Good thing for the Dems
that Corzine is their candidate instead of McGreevey.
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another special offer (but you gotta order this one directly through
us) ... Campaigns and candidates: Place your ads on the one state
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a good businessman and believer in freedom of speech ... so I'll
sell the space to just about anyone who wants to pay for it.)
UTAH:
US Senator Orrin Hatch (R-UT) has drawn a credible primary opponent.
First elected in 1976, Hatch has held his seat by relatively easy
electoral margins over the years -- although a conservative challenger
at the '00 GOP State Convention nearly drew the 40% delegate vote
required to force a primary contest. State House Majority Whip
Steve Urquhart (R) told newspapers Thursday he will oppose Hatch
because the incumbent has lost touch with Utah. Particularly,
the conservative Urquhart opposes the No Child Left Behind program
and thinks Hatch should have helped blocked radioactive waste
from being trucked to Utah for disposal. A Hatch spokesman said
the Senator would "prefer" to not have a GOP opponent
for the nomination -- but also added that Hatch would "rather
not have any Democratic opposition, either. But we kind of expected
both. We'll win in both arenas." Wealthy internet executive
Pete Ashdown (D) previously announced his candidacy for the seat.
A new Salt Lake City Desert News poll released Thursday
shows Hatch currently holding a very impressive 74% approval rating.
HAWAII:
Former CNN-Asia anchorman Dalton
Tanonaka (R-HI) pled guilty Thursday to several felony campaign
counts in federal court pursuant to a plea agreement. The charges
stem from Tanonaka admitting he accepted $84,000 in illegal contributions
during his failed '04 Congressional race and '02 Lieutenant Governor
race. "This pattern of deceptive conduct by Tanonaka resulted
in significant sums of money being illegally passed into his campaign
accounts," said an FBI spokesman. The candidate's former
campaign manager was the person who reported the illegal activity.
Tanonaka faces up to 66 years in prison when he is sentenced in
November.
ROVE-GATE:
Let's see: there was a White House memo marked as classified
that identified Ambassador Joe Wilson's wife as a CIA covert agent
-- but Karl Rove denied seeing it. Did Rove lie to the grand jury
when he said he wasn't familiar with the memo ... or did Scooter
Libby leak it ... or did they both play a role in the media leak?
Remember, it is a federal crime punishable by up to 10 years in
prison for a federal official to knowingly divulge the identity
of a covert CIA agent if the person knows the government is trying
to keep it secret. Check out the IsItTreason.com
website. (See: the Roberts nomination didn't distract us. FYI:
We also wrote about Sandy Berger )
Posted
by Ron Gunzburger - 7.22.05 |
THURSDAY
NEWS UPDATE.
US
SENATE CHALLENGERS: In Washington State, wealthy insurance
executive Mike McGavick (R) -- a former congressional aide --
launched his campaign Wednesday against US Senator Maria Cantwell
(D). In a quick sign that most Republicans wanted to unify to
avoid a bloody primary fight, State GOP Chair Chris Vance and
former Congressman Rick White both announced in response that
they would not run. Former US Senator Slade Gorton, former Congresswoman
Jennifer Dunn and Attorney General Rob McKenna also quickly threw
their support behind McGavick. Former US Attorney and current
RNC Member Diane Tebelius (R) said she would not be pushed out
of the race and was "seriously considering" entering
the contest. In Arizona, State Democratic Chairman Jim Pederson
resigned to prepare his entry into the race against US Senator
Jon Kyl (R). As Chairman, wealthy developer Pederson dumped almost
$7 million from his own pocket into the party to help grow the
Dems. Party activists appear united behind Pederson and he is
unlikely to face serious primary opposition. Both McGavick and
Pederson both start their respective races as underdogs for the
general election.
A
BLATANT PITCH FOR ADS: Politics1 records over 160,000 page views
weekly. Have your Blogad seen by all those political eyes for
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a good businessman and believer in freedom of speech ... so I'll
sell the space to just about anyone who wants to pay for it.)
THE
ROBERTS NOMINATION: Unless something shocking emerges
about Supreme Court nominee John Roberts Jr., I'd expect him to
ultimately win an easy confirmation in time to take a seat on
the Court in October. I find him far too conservative for my tastes,
and his real views would likely lead him to become a conservative
activist judge ... but he's still going to be confirmed.
A
WARNING: We have a handful of bloggers who decide
to act rather boorishly and inappropriately on a daily basis.
The thing is, I've been monitoring the IP addresses of the posters
and can finally identify the real person who is behind some of
our most offensive postings in the blog. In fact, it appears to
be someone from JHU we've confronted once before so -- unless
he wants his names posted here (again) -- it's going to stop now!
Okay?
Posted
by Ron Gunzburger - 7.21.05 |
WEDNESDAY
NEWS UPDATE.
SUPREME
COURT: For
a few weeks folks speculated on who would replace Justice Sandra
O'Connor. The debate centered around those saying the choice would
be another woman versus those who said it would the Court's first
Hispanic. To solve the woman-versus-Hispanic divide, President
Bush solved it with a unique compromise by picking a someone from
an entirely different and underrepresented group: wealthy, conservative,
white Republican guys. The President on Tuesday night announced
his nomination of US Court of Appeals Judge John Roberts Jr. to
the vacancy on the US Supreme Court. Roberts, 50, is a former
Rehnquist legal clerk, a former Reagan White House lawyer, a Federalist
Society legal conservative, a former partner in a top national
law firm, and federal appellate judge for just two years. Roberts
is also reportedly a brilliant legal mind, exceedingly polite,
and purported to be one of the best oral advocates to argue cases
before the Supreme Court in the past decade. Another plus for
Roberts: he has almost no paper trail of opinions because of his
brief tenure on the bench. According to the Legal Times
newspaper, "those who know Roberts say he, unlike Souter,
is a reliable conservative who can be counted on to undermine
if not immediately overturn liberal landmarks like abortion rights
and affirmative action ... 'He is as conservative as you can get,'
one friend puts it." What is the reaction to the Roberts
nomination from the left and right? "The President ... promised
to nominate someone along the lines of a Scalia or a Thomas, and
that is exactly what he has done," said Tony Perkins, the
President of the evangelical conservative Family Research Council.
Said DNC Chair Howard Dean: "It is disappointing that when
President Bush had the chance to bring the country together, he
instead turned to a nominee who may have impressive legal credentials,
but also has sharp partisan credentials that cannot be ignored."
ROVE-GATE:
According to Reuters, "the timing of a [Supreme
Court nominee] announcement had been moved up [by the White House]
in part to deflect attention away from a CIA leak controversy
that has engulfed Bush's top political adviser Karl Rove."
That said, just so you don't forget that Rove lied (and potentially
committed a federal felony by divulging the name of a super-secret
CIA agent), I printed this reminder right here again as a public
service for those ADD folks with short attention spans.
A
BLATANT PITCH FOR ADS: Politics1 records over 160,000 page views
weekly. Have your Blogad seen by all those political eyes for
just $85 for one week. Click
here for to learn more about our Blogads opportunities. Here's
another special offer (but you gotta order this one directly through
us) ... Campaigns and candidates: Place your ads on the one state
page you want to target for only $50 per month. Email
us for more info. (And, despite my personal politics, I'm
a good businessman and believer in freedom of speech ... so I'll
sell the space to just about anyone who wants to pay for it.)
ARKANSAS:
In a shockingly unexpected move, Lieutenant Governor
Win Rockefeller (R) announced Tuesday his withdrawal from the
open gubernatorial race for health reasons. Rockefeller, 56, said
he was just diagnosed with a blood disease likely to lead to leukemia.
"Effective immediately I am retiring from this campaign.
We're doing a bone marrow transplant and getting this under control,"
he explained. With a net worth of $1.2 billion and extensive ties
to the state's GOP establishment, Rockefeller was the frontrunner
in the race at the time of his withdrawal. With Rockefeller out,
former Congressman and former US Homeland Security Undersecretary
Asa Hutchinson now appears likely to capture the Republican nomination
without major opposition. Attorney General Mike Beebe is the presumptive
Democratic nominee. The Beebe-Hutchinson race is expected to be
a very competitive and spirited contest.
NORTH
CAROLINA: It's still early, but you should probably place
the NC CD-11 race on your radar screen for '06. In 2004, Congressman
Charles Taylor (R) got hit with lots of questions about potential
ethics problems -- and scored a 55%-45% victory over retired teacher
and County Commissioner Patsy Keever. Believing that Taylor is
vulnerable with the right challenger, the Dems succeeded in recruiting
retired pro-football quarterback and wealthy real estate executive
Heath Shuler to oppose Taylor next year. The DCCC is already running
some early anti-Taylor TV spots to drive up the incumbent's negatives.
The NRCC previously attempted to recruit Shuler as a GOP candidate
in a nearby district in Tennessee, where he was a college football
star. "This is not about Democrats versus Republicans. It's
about good ideas versus bad ideas ... It's about protecting the
traditions and values of the people," said Shuler.
AN
EDITORIAL: My liberal political views are well known
these days. Has the blog overtly shifted a bit to the left over
the past two years? Yes. When I came back from my recent hiatus,
I decided I could no longer report on politics in an entirely
neutral manner. You see, I've evolved as from a paid campaign
consultant of many years into a "true believer" these
days. Does that make me wear my politics on my sleeve? Yes. But
at least I divulge my politics right up front so you can read
my postings with that disclaimer in mind. But I still try to be
inclusive of all parties, candidates and events -- staying pretty
respectful to all -- and provide the blog comment feature so y'all
can complain on my dime about how biased I am. I will continue
to welcome all here. And if that doesn't work for 'ya, it's
a big blogosphere out there so go build yourself a political site.
Posted
by Ron Gunzburger - 7.20.05 |
TUESDAY
NEWS UPDATE.
P2008:
You can now call Senator Hillary Clinton (D-NY) "The
Six-Million Dollar Woman." In a truly amazing move, Clinton
reported raising $6 million during the 2Q '05 period -- with $4
million more in cash-on-hand just from this quarter alone. That
number is a record for a US Senate candidate in any off-year quarter
-- and sets on her on pace, if she were to later flip her money
to a Presidential campaign, for raising a record-shattering amount.
National Journal's The Hotline predicts HRC could easily
have $50 million in the bank by January 2007.
P2008:
I'm starting to suspect the Democratic Party must be
secretly paying Congressman Tom Tancredo (R-CO) to run for President
in 2008 (and if they're not, they ought to be) -- because the
GOP certainly doesn't want this kind of bad press. Appearing Friday
on a Florida radio talk show on WFLA-AM, Tancredo was asked how
our government should respond if terrorists detonated a nuclear
device in the US, Tancredo said "if ... we determine that it is
the result of extremist, fundamentalist Muslims, you know, you
could take out their holy sites." The show's host asked: "You're
talking about bombing Mecca?" Responded Tancredo: "Yeah." By Sunday,
Tancredo's office was already in spin mode. A spokesperson said
Tancredo was speaking hypothetically, was "just throwing
out some ideas" and was only thinking about "the pressure
point that would deter them from their murderous impulses."
In other P2008 news, lots of stuff going on in Iowa at the National
Governors Association annual meeting. New York Governor George
Pataki (R) looked like a Presidential candidate this weekend,
visiting local county fairs and introducing himself to voters.
Governors Mark Warner (D-VA) and Mitt Romney (R-MA) met with key
Iowa political strategists. Governor Bill Richardson (D-NM) spoke
to the Iowa Trial Lawyers Association. Also, US Senator Sam Brownback
(R-KS) made a weekend political swing through South Carolina.
MISSOURI:
Our third party sources come through for us again! A Politics1
Exclusive - Missouri Secretary of State Judith Moriarty
(D) was impeached and removed from office in 1994 for misconduct.
Related to that, she was also convicted of a misdemeanor for her
role in tampering with a state legislative race in order to improperly
slip her son onto the ballot after the filing deadline. Since
her embarrassing demise, Moriarty flirted with a comeback in '96
and then seemed to vanish from the political scene. Sources inside
the Missouri Libertarian Party inform us Moriarty recently joined
the LP and told leaders she plans to run for Governor in 2008
as a Libertarian. According to one top LP state officer, the "[Missouri
Libertarian Party] is -- rightfully -- highly skeptical of her,
but she will be a [LP] candidate nonetheless."
TEXAS:
Everything's big in Texas, especially the GOP money.
Governor Rick Perry (R) reported raising $2.3 million in the recent
quarter and has a $8.8 million cash-on-hand. Primary challenger
State Controller Carole Strayhorn (R) reported $7 million cash-on-hand.
On the Dem side, former Congressman Chris Bell collected just
over $150,000 and has a cash-on-hand of only $25,000. Interestingly,
colorful musician and author Kinky Friedman (Independent) reported
raising roughly $300,000, but has already spent all but $17,000
of it.
For any Indy candidate, that's pretty good fundraising. But for
a "serious" Dem to be trailing a gadfly Indy ... well,
it looks pretty bad.
A
CORRECTION: Two days ago we wrote that no Pennsylvania
Governor has ever been defeated for re-election. It turns out
we were wrong. Two sharp readers noticed that Governor William
Bigler lost for re-election in 1854 and Governor George Wolf lost
in 1835. I stand corrected ... as it should have merely read "no
Pennsylvania Governor has lost for re-election in 152 years."
Posted
by Ron Gunzburger - 7.19.05 |
MONDAY
NEWS UPDATE.
US
SENATE UPDATES: In Washington State, former State Senator
Dino Rossi (R-WA) -- who narrowly lost the '04 gubernatorial race
by just a few hundred votes -- definitively said Friday what he
had hinted for months: he will not be a candidate for US Senate
next year. Instead, it appears he plans to run again for Governor
in '08. The NRSC had attempted to recruit Rossi into the race,
after recent polling showed he was the only GOP candidate who
had a shot against US Senator Maria Cantwell (D). Cantwell already
polls at or above the 50% mark in match-ups against the various
other GOP names being floated. In Missouri, it appears much more
likely these days that State Auditor Claire McCaskell (D) -- the
'04 Dem nominee for Governor -- will challenge US Senator Jim
Talent (R) next year. According to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch,
McCaskill has put her '06 re-election fundraising activities on
hold because of her exploring entry into the Senate race. State
and federal finance rules are different, so money raised for her
state re-election bid could not be used for a Senate run. McCaskill
said she'll make her decision on the race known by Labor Day.
SUPREME
COURT: US Senate Judiciary Chair Arlen Specter (R-PA)
said on Fox News Sunday that he hopes President Bush
ignores pressure from social conservatives and instead nominates
as moderate to replace retiring Justice Sandra O'Connor. Specter
said he believes it is "in the national interest" for
the President to nominate a centrist with broader experience than
just having served on a federal bench. Specter said. "It's
helpful to the country to have somebody who is a swing vote, which
maintains the [current] balance," he said. Specter also suggested
the court would be enriched by selecting a nominee who has also
served in other political offices -- as did former Arizona State
Senator O'Connor and many former Justices including former Governor
Earl Warren, former City Commissioner Potter Stewart, former Governor
Charles Evans Hughes, former President William Howard Taft, former
Attorney General Tom Clark, former US Senator Hugo Black, former
Governor Frank Murphy, former US Senator Fred Vinson, former Labor
Secretary Arthur Goldberg, former US Senator Harold Burton, former
SEC Chair William O. Douglas, and others.
ROVE-GATE:
Despite White House Deputy Chief of Staff Karl Rove's
public protestations to the contrary, Time magazine reporter
Matt Cooper wrote in an article Sunday that Rove was the first
person to tell him Valerie Plame, the wife of an outspoken critic
of the Bush administration, was a CIA agent. Cooper also said
Vice President Cheney's Chief of Staff -- Lewis Libby -- was another
source for his story on Plame's identity. "So did Rove leak
Plame's name to me, or tell me she was covert? No. Was it through
my conversation with Rove that I learned for the first time that
Wilson's wife worked at the CIA and may have been responsible
for sending him [to Nigeria]? Yes. Did Rove say that she worked
at the 'agency' on 'WMD'? Yes. ... Is any of this a crime? Beats
me," wrote Cooper. The reporter also said that -- at the
time Rove initially spoke with him about Plame -- Rove said the
information he was telling Cooper "would be declassified
soon." Does that mean Rove acknowledged it was classified
at the time he told Cooper the info?
LOUISIANA:
Secretary of State W. Fox McKeithen (R), 58, passed away Saturday
of complications from a paralyzing accident earlier this year.
Prior to his demise, he appointed his former top aide Al Ater
(D) to be First Deputy Secretary of State and then resigned on
Friday -- a move that promoted Ater to the Secretary of State's
office. Under Louisiana law, Ater will serve until a special election
can be held in Fall 2006 (the next scheduled statewide elections).
McKeithen -- a 1990 US Senate candidate -- was the son of Louisiana
Governor "Big John" McKeithen (D). He had served as
Secretary of State since his initial election in 1987.
"I'M
READY FOR MY CLOSEUP, MISTER DeMILLE": Some
folks -- mainly conservative Republicans -- are taking potshots
at Senator John McCain for doing a cameo in the new movie Wedding
Crashers. The brief cameo is not without precedent. In recent
years, Senator Rick Santorum and others did cameos as themselves
in a short-lived 2003 HBO comedy series. There were also numerous
political cameos in Traffic (cameos: Senators Orrin Hatch,
Don Nickles, Barbara Boxer and Harry Reid), and the comedy Dave
(cameos: Senators Alan Simpson, Paul Simon, Chris Dodd and others),
to cite two recent movie examples. In the realm of television,
Al Gore, Steve Forbes, Rudy Giuliani and others have hosted Saturday
Night Live in past years.
Posted
by Ron Gunzburger - 7.18.05 |
WEEKEND
NEWS UPDATE.
OHIO:
We wrote a few weeks ago about a move by some Ohio Republicans
to draft former Congressman John
Kasich to run for Governor next year. As nearly all the current
GOP contenders appear linked to the central villain in the state
government's rapidly growing (and complex-to-explain) and disastrous
investment coin
scandal, the move is gaining steam. On top of that, term-limited
Governor Bob Taft (R) has the lowest approval rating of any governor
in the nation -- just 17% in a poll earlier this week. These GOP
folks figure that Kasich -- not tied to the scandal -- could give
the GOP a chance to regain their footing in the race. Kasich told
the Columbus Dispatch "no comment" when they
asked about the race. However, Kasich backers filled in more details
for the newspaper: the former 2000 Presidential candidate said
he would enter the race "only if the field is partially cleared
for him, enough campaign money is available and the party commits
to ending pay-to-play politics." Kasich is reportedly willing
to run in the primary against Secretary of State Ken Blackwell
-- but would not run if either Auditor Betty Montgomery or Attorney
General Jim Petro stayed in the race, as he considers both to
be friends. The Dispatch also reported that former Congressman
Bob McEwen (R) -- in a sign of the growing split in the Ohio Republican
Party between centrists and conservatives -- is weighing a primary
challenge to US Senator Mike DeWine. Religious Right activists
are encouraging McEwen -- a close friends of Dr. James Dobson,
leader of the Focus on the Family group -- to make the race. A
costly, bitter DeWine-McEwen primary may give Democrats a shot
in a race that until now was viewed as fairly safe for the GOP.
PENNSYLVANIA:
A new Quinnipiac University poll shows Governor Ed Rendell
(D) remains ahead of all his likely GOP opponents. Rendell led
former Lieutenant Governor Bill Scranton III (R) by a 47% to 37%
vote. He also led former pro football player Lynn Swann by a 48%
to 36% vote -- and led State Senator Jeff Piccola by an even wider
margin. In a GOP primary contest, Swann easily leads the field.
The numbers: Swann - 32%, Scranton - 21%, Piccola - 6%. History
also favors Rendell as no Pennsylvania Governor has ever lost
for re-election. Think about that: not once, ever.
NEW
JERSEY: A new Rasmussen Reports poll shows US Senator
Jon Corzine (D) continuing to lead former West Windsor Mayor Doug
Forrester (R) by a comfortable margin. In this open seat battle
between two multimillionaire former investment executives, Corzine
currently leads Forrester by a 50% to 38% vote..
NEVADA:
Tennis star Andre Agassi said he is "flattered"
by a move to draft him as the Democratic candidate for Congress
in CD-3 against incumbent Jon Porter (R). However, he added, "I
presently have no plans to enter the political arena. I will continue
to focus my efforts on tennis, my foundation and my family."
While Agassi has mainly (but not exclusively) contributed to Democratic
candidates, the AP reported he actually is a registered Independent.
Porter is currently without '06 opposition.
HALOSCAN:
Yeah, I know it's acting a bit weird lately -- and is sometimes
rather annoying -- but there's not much I can do about it. Besides,
most the time it works fine.
Posted
by Ron Gunzburger - 7.16.05 |
FRIDAY
NEWS UPDATE.
CALIFORNIA
#1: Embattled Congressman Randy
"Duke" Cunningham (R) -- the target of an FBI bribery
investigation and a federal grand jury corruption probe -- announced
Thursday he will not seek re-election in 2006 to a ninth term.
"The time has come for me to conclude the public chapter
in my life. Quite simply, right now I may not be the strongest
candidate," he said. The announcement came less than two
weeks after FBI agents raided Cunningham's home in search of incriminating
evidence. The allegations concern the purchase of the Congressman's
former California home by a defense contractor at a highly inflated
price. Cunningham purportedly later helped the contractor win
some lucrative military deals, and enjoyed other perks from the
contractor in DC (including living on the contractor's yacht while
in DC). GOP sources report that conservative former State Assemblyman
Howard Kaloogian -- a '04 US Senate candidate -- is poised to
soon enter the race. Others Republicans looking at the open race
for the safe GOP seat include State Senator Bill Morrow, San Diego
County Supervisors Bill Horn and Pam Slater-Price, and State Assemblyman
George Plescia. College professor and '04 nominee Francine Busby
is the only announced Democrat in the race.
US
SUPREME COURT: Chief Justice William Rehnquist directly
debunked reports he will step down, despite failing health and
rumors of his imminent resignation. "I’m not about
to announce my retirement. I want to put to rest the speculation
and unfounded rumors of my imminent retirement. I will continue
to perform my duties as Chief Justice as long as my health permits,"
he told the AP on Thursday.
CALIFORNIA
#2: Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger (R) was already suffering
from nearly the lowest gubernatorial approval ratings ever recorded
in California history -- but now he has to deal with scandalous
new personal allegations. According to the Los Angeles Times,
Schwarzenegger
signed a potential $8 million consulting contract after being
elected Governor (and two days before taking office) to "further
the business objectives" of a the publisher of Flex,
Muscle & Fitness, and other bodybuilding magazines.
Under the eight-year contract, Schwarzenegger is earning 1% of
the magazines' advertising revenue -- but in no instance less
than $1 million per year -- "much of which comes from makers
of nutritional supplements." While state law allows a California
Governor to earn outside income, there's more to the story. You
see, Schwarzenegger last year vetoed legislation that would have
placed substantial government regulations on the supplement industry
-- a move that would have potentially cut the revenues for those
advertisers and cut the Guv's ad commissions. Schwarzenegger was
apparently concerned the contract could make him look bad, so
he even went so far as to have the contract refer to him simply
as "Mr. S." Schwarzenegger's spokeswoman said the contract
caused "no conflict of interest" because he "did not direct
sales or marketing activities of American Media and did not have
personal contact with any advertisers to generate the advertising
revenue." The contract was quietly disclosed last week by the
publishing company in annual SEC filings. "I’m troubled
by the revelation that Governor Schwarzenegger has made millions
of dollars on the side from a company whose advertisers have business
before the state," said State Controller Steve Westly (D).
Westly is one of several Dems challenging the incumbent next year.
MICHIGAN:
Marketing
consultant and former campaign manager Jane Abraham (R) -- the
wife of former US Senator Spence Abraham -- announced Thursday
she would not be a candidate against US Senator Debbie Stabenow
(D). The incumbent ousted Abraham's husband from the seat in 2000.
"It is not the right time from a family standpoint for me
to do this," explained the mother of three young children.
With Abraham out, evangelical bishop Keith Butler -- a former
Detroit City Councilman and vocal anti-gay activist -- appears
to be the frontrunner for the GOP nomination. Butler raised an
impressive $800,000 as of the most recent reporting period, but
is still a decided underdog against Stabenow. Butler has $403,000
cash-on-hand, versus nearly $3.9 million for Stabenow. In related
Michigan news, Congresswoman Candice Miller (R) told WKAR Radio
on Thursday she believes Governor Jennifer Granholm (D) is "vulnerable"
because of the state's high unemployment rate -- and that she's
still looking at the race. Former rock star Ted Nugent (R) --
an outspoken gun-rights activist -- also says he is weighing a
run for Guv next year.
VIRGINIA:
A new Rasmussen Reports telephonic poll shows the gubernatorial
race tightening. According to the new poll, former Attorney General
Jerry Kilgore (R) now leads Lieutenant Governor Tim Kaine (D)
by a vote of 47% to 41%, with State Senator Russ Potts (Independent)
at 4%.
OREGON: No surprise, but one of the more outrageous
political gadflies is back again for yet another masochistic run
for office. Fitness instructor Pavel
"Get Energized" Goberman has been running losing
races for years -- making failed bids every two years as a Democrat,
Republican, Libertarian, Constitution and Independent candidate.
This week he announced he's going to run as a Democrat in the
'06 primary against Congressman David Wu (D). In the opening line
of his press release, the colorful Goberman said he is running
"against idiot, political prostitute David Wu." He also
complains that "many members of [Congress] ... are without
morality ... are ignoring, violating, raping and criminal contempting
the Constitution of the USA."
TUNES:
Not politics ... well, actually the lyrics are very political
... but I finally got around this week to picking up Green Day's
American
Idiot album from last year. This album is awesome, a
great mix of the band's best punk and hard rock sounds that merge
to form a great concept album. Highly recommended!
Posted
by Ron Gunzburger - 7.15.05 |
BASTILLE
DAY UPDATE.
PENNSYLVANIA:
A new Quinnipiac University poll shows State
Treasurer Bob Casey Jr. (D) holding a commanding lead in his race
against incumbent US Senator Rick Santorum (R). The numbers: Casey-50%,
Santorum-39%. Casey has held the lead in all independent polls
since he entered the contest several months ago..
NEW
JERSEY: Outgoing and popular Governor Dick Codey (D)
is openly fishing for an appointment to the US Senate if incumbent
Jon Corzine (D) is elected -- as expected -- in November to replace
him. Codey succeeded to office upon the resignation last year
of Governor Jim McGreevey (D). "I think about it. People
have raised the issue. They say to me, 'Dick, how can any politician
pass up the opportunity to cap off a career in the United States
Senate,'" he said to the Newark Star-Ledger. If Corzine wins,
he would get to name his own replacement. Conventional wisdom
is that Corzine would pick a caretaker to finish the last year
of his term without influencing the outcome of the open US Senate
seat race. In additiont to Codey, another name being floated as
a possible caretaker is retired Congressman and former US Ambassador
Bill Hughes (D). At least four Democratic Congressman are weighing
runs for the seat: Rob Andrews, Bob Menendez, Frank Pallone and
Bill Pascrell. Moderate State Senator Tom Kean Jr. (R) -- son
of the former Governor -- is expected to be the GOP nominee for
the Senate seat.
VERMONT: Alternative weekly newspaper Seven
Days is reporting that attorney and former Dean campaign
blogger Zephyr Teachout (D) is weighing a possible run next year
for the state's open Congressional seat. With her frequent posts
about the Dean campaign -- and often traveling at Dr. Dean's side
-- she acquired near cult status with the legion of Deaniacs.
Even though state Dem leaders are not encouraging her to run,
she says she'll make a decision on the race in a few months. (Oh
yeah, Zephyr's dad Peter was my faculty adviser back at Vermont
Law School).
Posted
by Ron Gunzburger - 7.14.05 |
WEDNESDAY
NEWS UPDATE.
POPULAR
GOVERNORS: SurveyUSA just released the results
of their individual polls from each of the 50 states in which
voters were asked about their respective Governors. Interestingly,
the three most popular and three least popular Governors were
all Republicans. Governor
John Hoeven (R-ND) placed at the top, with an impressive 74% approval
rating. Second was a tie between Governors Jodi Rell (R-CT) and
Mike Rounds (R-SD), both with 73% approval ratings. At the opposite
end of the spectrum was Governor Bob Taft (R-OH) -- mired in scandal
and state economic problems -- who registered a devastatingly
bad 17% approval rating. Second worst was Frank Murkowski (R-AK)
at a 31% approval score, and third was Ernie Fletcher (R-KY) at
34%. Twelve Guvs scored disapproval ratings in excess of the potentially
fatal 50% mark, including seven who are expected to seek re-election
next year: John Baldacci (D-ME), Ted Kulongoski (D-OR), Rick Perry
(R-TX), Rod Blagojevich (D-IL), Jennifer Granholm (D-MI), Arnold
Schwarzenegger (R-CA) and Murkowski. All of this could make for
a tumultuous election year for many incumbents. In related news,
Texas State Comptroller Carole Strayhorn (R) announced she raised
$1.5 million in the final ten days of June after launching her
candidacy against Governor Perry, pushing her cash-on-hand to
over $7 million.
P2008:
Roll Call reports that some Democrats are starting to
tout Montana Governor Brian Schweitzer -- a wealthy rancher and
research scientist -- as a possible White House candidate in 2008.
They reportedly like Schweitzer's populist message, consensus
building skills, and ability to criticize the GOP in a plainspoken
way that doesn't appear to alienate swing voters. There's also
a Draft
Schweitzer for President group.
MARYLAND:
Congressman Chris Van Hollen (D) announced Tuesday he will not
be a candidate for the US Senate seat next year. With Van Hollen
out, the race is essentially finalized (at least as to major players).
In the Dem primary, former State House Speaker and Congressman
Ben Cardin is a heavy favorite over former Congressman and former
NAACP national leader Kweisi Mfume. Cardin has locked up tons
of endorsements -- including in the black community -- and raised
a lots of money. By contrast, Mfume can show few endorsements
and raised only a paltry sum of contributions. On the GOP side,
Lieutenant Govenor Michael Steele is assured of the nomination
over nominal opposition. Controversial White House political guru
Karl Rove is scheduled to keynote a Steele fundraiser, which is
expected to raise a substantial amount of cash. Attorney Kevin
Zeese (Green), the '04 Nader campaign press secretary, is also
likely to enter the contest. We'd peg Cardin as a slight favorite
today over Steele, but there's a long time between now and November
2006.
US
SENATE RACES '06: DSCC
Chair Chuck Schumer (D-NY) is recording an impressive year in
fundraising for Dem Senate candidates. According Roll Call,
the new fundraising reports for the latest quarter will show Democratic
candidates with "roughly twice the available campaign cash
their GOP counterparts." Pretty impressive for the minority
party in DC. In related news, Missouri State Auditor Claire McCaskill
(D) is being recruited by the DSCC to challenge US Senator Jim
Talent (R). Unlike in the past, when she disclaimed much interest,
McCaskill now says she's giving the race serious thought. McCaskill
ran a very competitive race for Governor last year, defeating
the incumbent in the primary but losing the general election.
FLORIDA:
Politics1 received a unexpected phone call today from a GOP Congressman
from Florida who was ... well ... less than happy with some of
our recent reporting. He also didn't want to be named here. What
was interesting, however, was when the conversation turned to
the '06 US Senate race. "We've got to get [Katherine] Harris
out of the Senate race -- she's killing our chances in the race
[against incumbent Democrat Bill Nelson]," he said. "She
draws flies -- some Democrats are still very upset with her from
the 2000 Presidential race -- and she could cause problems for
other Republicans on the ballot." Don't you think that Harris
is such a Republican folk hero that she'll defeat State House
Speaker Allan Bense -- the White House's preferred candidate --
in the primary if the party leaders cannot convince her to quit
the race? "I'd agree with that. Harris will win the primary
if she stays in, and she's very stubborn, but we've got to get
her to quit the race," he answered. If she stays in, he explained,
the gubernatorial nominee would be the focal point of the statewide
GOP campaign. Interesting.
Posted
by Ron Gunzburger - 7.13.05 |
TUESDAY
NEWS UPDATE.
P2008:
US Senator Evan Bayh (D-IN) is making a swing through
New Hampshire. Meanwhile, Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee (R)
becomes the new Chair of National Governors Association this week.
And, where is the NGA holding it's annual meeting? Iowa! That
will give Huckabee and Governors Mitt Romney (R-MA), Bill Richardson
(D-NM), Mark
Warner (D-VA), Tim Pawlenty (R-MN), Ed Rendell (D-PA) and others
interested in the Presidential race a bit of exposure in the Iowa
media market. Iowa Governor Tom Vilsack (D) looked for a while
to be a possible P2008 contender, but his elevation last month
to become the new Democratic Leadership Conference Chair makes
it look much less likely Vilsack will be a '08 candidate.
ROVE-GATE:
This was White House spokesman Scott McClellan on September 29,
2003, about the possibility that a member of the White House staff
was involved in the illegal leak to reporters that the wife of
Iraq War critic Joe Wilson was a covert CIA operative: "That
is not the way this White House operates. The President expects
everyone in his administration to adhere to the highest standards
of conduct. No would be authorized to do such a thing ... Well,
I've made it very clear that it was a ridiculous suggestion [that
political advisor Karl Rove was involved] ... and I have spoken
with Karl Rove ... If anyone in this Administration was involved
in [the leak], they would no longer be in this Administration."
And here is McClellan today when peppered with questions about
Rove now that Rove's attorney admitted he was the secret source
who spoke with Time magazine about Wilson's wife: "We're
not going to get into commenting on an ongoing criminal investigation."
NBC tried to pin McClellan down, since McClellan had no problem
talking about the matter in '03 when it was also an ongoing criminal
investigation. NBC asked is Rove was guilty of a crime. "This
is a question relating to an ongoing investigation, and you have
my response related to that investigation," McClellan answered.
Well, he was asked, if he still stood by his 2003 denials. "There
will be a time to talk about this, but now is not the time."
Even when the usually pro-Bush FOX News asked if the President
still had "confidence" in Rove, McClellan responded:
"These are all questions coming up in the context of an ongoing
criminal investigation, and you've heard my response on this."
DETROIT:
Embattled Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick (D) looks to be in trouble
in the city's nonpartisan mayoral primary on August 2. According
to the new EPIC/MRA poll, Kilpatrick badly trails former Deputy
Mayor Freman Hendrix (D). The numbers: Hendrix - 34%, Kilpatrick
- 23%, City Councilwoman Sharon McPhail - 16%, and State Senator
Hansen Clarke - 7%. Kilpatrick -- the son of Congresswoman Carolyn
Cheeks Kilpatrick (D-MI) -- has suffered from extensive bad press
from both the city's financial deficit and embarrassing personal
revelations. The top two vote-getters will meet in a November
general election. In a head-to-head contest, the poll showed Hendrix
defeating Kilpatrick by a vote of 53% to 39% -- but these numbers
represent a 13-point improvement for Kilpatrick since the previous
poll two months ago.
NORTH CAROLINA '08: While the open seat race
is three years away, state GOP leaders are already trying to persuade
Congresswoman Sue Myrick to run for Governor. According to the
Raleigh News & Observer, these party activists believe
Myrick would "be the strongest candidate against Lt. Gov.
Beverly Perdue, whom they consider the most likely Democratic
nominee." In fact, 2008 could be the "Year of the Woman"
in the Tarheel State, with Myrick and Perdue as the candidates
for