Daily Kos

Tag: NC-Gov

NC-Gov: Mr. 24% is coming to raise money for McCrory

Fri Jun 20, 2008 at 06:42:01 AM PDT

Pat McCrory, the Repub candidate for governor of North Carolina, has been the mayor of my hometown, Charlotte, for 13 years.  He's been able to pull it off in an increasingly blue city because he's a moderate Republican by North Carolina standards--and in part because the Democrats haven't put up a real fight in a mayoral race in recent memory despite a huge advantage in registration.  

So you'd think that he'd want to stay away from the most unpopular president in recent memory, right?  Wrong.

A fundraiser today for Republican gubernatorial nominee Pat McCrory is set to feature a big name and a small profile.
President Bush is scheduled to visit the North Carolina capital to help raise money for the Charlotte mayor's statewide campaign. But the event -- at a private home and closed to the media -- is not designed to draw attention.

Focus On...NORTH CAROLINA!!!

Mon May 12, 2008 at 07:12:19 AM PDT

This is number seven in a planned series of 50 entries between now and November, looking at each of the 50 states in terms of every race on that state's ticket--Presidential, Gubernatorial, Senate, House, State legislatures--the whole pack of cigarettes.  Special attention paid to identifying and promoting the most important contests per state.

This time, we look at North Carolina, the state that made Barack Obama the Democratic nominee for President!

Poll

Will Obama win some Southern states in November?

40%43 votes
0%0 votes
9%10 votes
0%0 votes
14%15 votes
8%9 votes
1%2 votes
11%12 votes
10%11 votes
3%4 votes

| 106 votes | Vote | Results

House, Senate, Governor Roundup 5/6

Tue May 06, 2008 at 02:30:17 PM PDT

Senate/Governor Races

Scott Kleeb NE-Sen: With just a week left until Scott Kleeb's primary, help him raise $20,000 by Friday! mcjoan wrote an excellent piece yesterday on the efforts of Kleeb's primary opponent, ex-Republican businessman Tony Raimondo, to buy this primary with his vast personal fortune. Let's show Raimondo what people power is capable of, and show Kleeb some love!

NC-Sen: Today is primary day in North Carolina, and aside from the presidential race, there are three major statewide races of interest; the Democratic primary for U.S. Senate, and the Democratic and Republican primaries for Governor.

In the Senate race, State Senator Kay Hagan looks poised to deliver a convincing victory in her primary. Public Policy Polling shows her leading her closest challenger, Jim Neal, by 30 points, while SUSA shows her ahead by twenty-five.

Assuming she wins, she'll go into the general election as a clear underdog against incumbent Elizabeth Dole. Still, Hagan should be considered one of the strongest second-tier Senate challengers this cycle. Real Clear Politics has an interesting article about this race, comparing Hagan to Jim Webb:

But Hagan has raised an impressive $1.52 million, much of which she has spent on making the primary with Neal a blowout. And trailing by just seven points in public polls is on par with Webb and others from the 2006 cycle; a Democratic poll taken in late June, 2006, showed Webb trailing Allen by a 46%-39% margin, and a Mason-Dixon poll in late July had Allen leading by a whopping 16 points. And Hagan's campaign brags that only Missouri's Claire McCaskill and Ohio's Sherrod Brown have raised more money through the First Quarter of 2006.

As for the North Carolina gubernatorial primaries, Lieutenant Governor has a wide lead over State Treasurer Richard Moore in the Democratic primary, while Charlotte Mayor Pat McCrory (considered the strongest Republican general-election candidate) faces a tough challenge from State Sen. Fred Smith. I'm hoping that Smith manages to pull off the upset today.

IN-Gov: There's a primary tonight in Indiana, of course, and one of the hottest races here will be the Democratic primary for Governor of Indiana, where architect Jim Schellinger faces former Congresswoman Jill Long Thompson. The winner will get to take on unpopular GOP incumbent Mitch Daniels in what should be one of the closest gubernatorial races of the fall.

Polling has indicated a dead heat in the primary race, and that both candidates are competitive with Daniels. We'll see how things shake out tonight.

House Races

NY-13: Vito Fossella may face jail time for drunk driving, should he be found guilty. It's difficult to say how much of an effect this scandal will have on his chances for reelection. He had already been targeted by the DCCC, his district leans very slightly Democratic, and he has two challengers in the race; attorney Steve Harrison, who gave him his toughest challenge yet in 2006, and New York City Councilman Domenic Recchia, who currently has more cash-on-hand than the incumbent Fossella.

However, one major advantage for Fossella is geographic; his challengers both hail from Brooklyn, while Fossella-and the majority of NY-13 voters-live in Staten Island.

LA-06: The fallout from the Democratic pickup in LA-06 is looking pretty severe for the Republicans. The Hill notes serious infighting in the GOP caucus, following their second humiliating special-election loss in a row, with NRCC chairman Tom Cole lashing out at his Republican brethren:

Rep. Tom Cole (R-Okla.) chastised his colleagues Tuesday for not contributing to the GOP candidate in an increasingly crucial Mississippi special election, saying those who have not helped "ought to be ashamed of themselves," Republican sources said.

The harsh admonition from the head of the National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC) was the latest rallying cry from GOP campaigners, who have repeatedly cited a lack of enthusiasm and giving from members. House Minority Leader John Boehner (R-Ohio) told his colleagues earlier this year that they needed to get off their "dead asses" and raise money for the NRCC.

Boehner and Cole continued that theme Tuesday at a House GOP meeting, asking members to focus on the Mississippi race just days after the party suffered a second loss of the cycle in former Rep. Richard Baker’s (R) conservative Louisiana district.

There had been rumors that Cole would be relieved of his position if the GOP lost the special election in IL-14. Obviously, this has not occurred, but I doubt the GOP caucus is especially happy with Cole's stewardship of the NRCC, and he certainly doesn't seem happy with their contributions.

Cole's biggest mistake may have been to rely on demonizing high-profile national Democrats in this race; the traditional media is already pushing the narrative that that strategy has failed. From Roll Call:

Vulnerable House Democrats, touting their independence in their re-election efforts, might be breathing more easily this week after Republicans failed in their bid to make Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) a political albatross.

In the first test-case for the strategy, the special election Louisiana’s 6th district, Democrat Don Cazayoux pulled out a win, making him the first Democrat to hold the seat in 32 years.

Donna Brazile agrees:

While Cazayoux was busy campaigning about helping those still struggling in Louisiana and bringing positive change to Washington, Republicans were trying to win by hook or by crook. National conservative groups, a veritable who’s who of Washington special interests, spent nearly a million dollars trying to brand Cazayoux as an Obama/ Clinton/Pelosi tax-and-spend liberal Democrat. The National Republican Congressional Committee and Freedom’s Watch even brazenly skirted federal campaign finance law by coordinating their attacks.

At the end of the day, they failed, making this race the second time this year that Republicans unsuccessfully tried to hold onto a conservative-leaning House seat by injecting national politics into the race.

Ultimately, the Republicans can scream all they want about Clinton, Obama and Pelosi. It won't disguise the fact that their candidates are bad and their ideas are bad.

CA-50: Greenberg Quinlan Rosner has polled this race, and finds surprisingly strong numbers for Democrat Nick Leibham in his quest to unseat Republican Brian Bilbray, who won a relatively close special election in June 2006 against Dem Francine Busby. Bilbray leads Leibham 52% to 34%, but there are several reasons for optimism. Swing State Project's James L. notes:

That's about where you'd expect this race to be at this point.  But looking deeper into the numbers, Democrats have a 43%-39% generic congressional ballot preference advantage here, and a 47%-40% generic presidential advantage.  And after a positive bio is read of both Leibham and Bilbray, the gap closes to 49% Bilbray, 46% Leibham.

Bilbray's re-elects aren't stellar either, with only 42% of voters saying that they will vote to re-elect him, while 39% say that they'll cast their ballots for someone else.

MS-01: The DCCC keeps putting money into this race, with an additional expenditure of $100,000 now increasing the total spent to just shy of $1.4 million. That's insane for an R+10 district.

The Republicans are pulling out the big guns, sending Dick Cheney himself to campaign with Greg Davis. Frankly, I know this is solidly Republican territory, but even so, I'm not sure Cheney's going to help much. For more, check out Cotton Mouth Blog.

WV-02: Kossacks clammyc and thereisnospoon have conducted an exclusive interview with Democratic candidate Anne Barth, as part of an ongoing series of radio interviews with progressive candidates. Check it out!

Update: Check out Swing State Project's terrific list of Competitive House Race Rankings. Seriously, don't miss it.

Race tracker wiki: NE-Sen NC-Sen NC-Gov IN-Gov NY-13 LA-06 CA-50 MS-01

May 5 Downballot Predictions

Mon May 05, 2008 at 06:46:53 PM PDT

Beyond the presidential race, there is a buttload of statewide and congresional prmaries taking place tomorrow. With some, the outcome is obvious. Others will be close and no one knows for usre how they will shake out. Here are my prediction below the fold.

Ah to live in NC and deal with the NC Republicans

Fri Apr 25, 2008 at 05:16:56 AM PDT

As if we needed any proof to what depth the Republican Party will go to in an attempt to smear a Democratic candidate for Governor we need to only look at the state I reside in.

More below the fold.

Push polling in NC Dem Governor primary

Sat Mar 01, 2008 at 09:35:19 AM PDT

Here in North Carolina, we go to the polls on May 6 for our primary.  Regardless of whether the presidential nomination is secured for one or the other candidate by that point, North Carolina Democrats have two contested statewide primary races: Governor and U.S. Senate.

In the Democratic primary for governor, the candidates are current Lt. Gov. Beverly Perdue and current State Treasurer Richard Moore.  Both have been advertising on television since New Year's Day, and polls have shown that Perdue has a consistent (but not insurmountable) lead over Moore.

I am an attorney in Raleigh, and although I do not personally know either Perdue or Moore, I work with colleagues who know and have worked with both.  My law partners are uniformly supporting Beverly Perdue, and I've heard nothing but good things about her from them.

FOLLOWING THE POLLS: The January Edition

Fri Feb 01, 2008 at 04:12:22 PM PDT

There has been an absolute deluge of polling in the month of January. Alas, virtually all of it is of the primary election variety, which this diary series (for the sake of my own sanity) does not cover.

That said, there were still new numbers this month from a total of 32 general election contests. Some of them have been diaried on DKos over the course of month, while others appear to be exclusive to this diary.

Follow me past the jump for the numbers....

Poll

Turning To Congress: The Democrats Will Pick Up ____ Seats in the Senate.

1%1 votes
0%0 votes
3%2 votes
9%6 votes
9%6 votes
26%17 votes
13%9 votes
9%6 votes
27%18 votes

| 65 votes | Vote | Results

NC-GOV : Debate Tonight on UNC-TV

Thu Jan 10, 2008 at 05:23:29 PM PDT

If you're in the Tar Heel State and can pull yourself away from the Republican Debate on Fox News...

FOLLOWING THE POLLS: The December Edition

Tue Jan 01, 2008 at 10:37:56 AM PDT

This will probably be the last of the MONTHLY installments of the FTP series, as the election is bound to ramp up with the new year. Perhaps this will become a weekly deal. I am sure that by October, it will be a daily installment. For now, brace yourself for a statistical flood, as there were 67 polls released over the course of this month, covering a total of 44 general election contests.

A few caveats, for those new to this particular corner of the community: I only do general election polls in this diary, and I average the polls for the time period (so, yes, a poll from December 1st gets lumped in with a poll from December 29th).

Follow me past the jump for all of the numbers.

Poll

The Outcome Of the 2008 Presidential Election Will Be ____.

36%14 votes
36%14 votes
2%1 votes
0%0 votes
21%8 votes
2%1 votes

| 38 votes | Vote | Results

Governor 2008 outlook

Sat Nov 10, 2007 at 05:56:24 PM PDT

It's been quite a long time since I've done one of these. Obviously, I was waiting for the '07 elections to be done before I did the next diary about '08 gov races. I planned it this way! Yeah, that's it.

These gov races have been predictably slow to develop thanks to the battle for the White House, and don't yet have the level of excitement that seems to hit Senate races weekly.

  1. Missouri - Matt Blunt (R) running for reelection

Rating: Tossup

Blunt's approval has inched out of dead-politician-walking territory and is now around 45-50%. Still, he is neck-and-neck with the presumptive Democratic nominee, State Atty. Gen. Jay Nixon. Missouri Gov races are always interesting because of the presidential-year dynamic, and the Show Me State seems to have moved past its 2002-2004 red state phase. It is now right back where it has been for a century: bellwether for the nation. Remember that oft-cited fact that Missouri picked the winner in every presidential election from 1904-2004, except 1956. A September series of SUSA matchups showed the Dem prez contenders carrying Missouri in almost every matchup, and that does not bode well for Blunt if the race remains tight.

The other races below the fold...

Richard Moore: Taking on Exxon (NC-Gov)

Wed Jun 27, 2007 at 08:10:22 AM PDT

I'd like to use this diary to introduce you to my friend and our Treasurer down here in North Carolina, Mr. Richard Moore. He's running for Governor in 2008.


Treasurer Richard Moore and Yours Truly

You might be sick of hearing about North Carolina; Daily Kos has experienced a deluge of NC news this week. Brad Miller decided to stay in the House after a strong draft movement tempted him to run against "Do-Nothing" Liddy Dole, and Larry Kissell has been on dKos almost every day week.

BUT - with news yesterday of another plant closing in the county next to mine -  in part to pay the salary of the nation's 32nd most highly compensated executive - I just have to tell you about the great work Richard Moore is doing for North Carolinians and Americans - standing up to greedy CEOs.

Al Franken and Brad Miller: You Say It's their Birthday? (MN-Sen, NC-Sen)

Mon May 21, 2007 at 02:30:28 AM PDT

What Do I Have in Common with Al Franken & Brad Miller? Is it a socially-conscious sense of humor (Franken)? Is it how we frequent Daily Kos, or how we have a North Carolina voter registration card (Miller)?  

It could be a strong dislike for our current White House leadership, but that's something most of America has in common now. And I'm not running for Senate any time soon ... so I'll cut the bull and get straight to the point:  we all have birthdays this week!

... and there's nothing I'd like more that to help out my fellow birthday boys through ActBlue.

What Do I Have in Common with Al Franken & Brad Miller?

Mon May 21, 2007 at 02:21:39 AM PDT

Is it a socially-conscious sense of humor (Franken)? Is it how we frequent Daily Kos, or how we have a North Carolina voter registration card (Miller)?  

It could be a strong dislike for our current White House leadership, but that's something most of America has in common now. And I'm not running for Senate any time soon ... so I'll cut the bull and get straight to the point:  we all have birthdays this week!

... and there's nothing I'd like more that to help out my fellow birthday boys through ActBlue.

Governor 2008 early look (POLL!)

Tue Mar 06, 2007 at 12:13:58 PM PDT

Maverick that I am, I have decided to devote no more than 1/5 of my diaries to discussion of the presidential race, with the other 80% of my diaries discussing Senate races, House races, Governor races (in 2007 and 2008), or something else altogether. I have made this decision based on human nature: I am already getting tired of prez talk from the media, and if I am, you certainly are.

That said, here's an early look at the gubernatorial elections of 2008. Below the fold, friends...

Poll

Which is most likely to flip?

23%20 votes
69%59 votes
7%6 votes

| 85 votes | Vote | Results

NRSC's Nick Dumps Dole For Another Loser

Wed Dec 20, 2006 at 09:16:08 AM PDT

How Stupid Is Brian Nick?

You know things are falling apart in the Party of Greed when an aspiring gubernatorial candidate in North Carolina has to scrape the bottom of the competency barrel to find help with his hapless campaign. The Charlotte Observer broke the story yesterday.

Salisbury lawyer Bill Graham says he is not officially running for the Republican nomination for governor, but he now has an unofficial campaign strategist. Brian Nick, a veteran of Sen. Elizabeth Dole's office and of national Republican politics, has signed on as a senior adviser to Graham's N.C. Conservatives United.

For the past two years, Nick has run the communications operation at the National Republican Senatorial Committee, which Dole chaired. The group recruits and supports Senate candidates across the country. Prior to that post, he was Dole's communications director. (Emphasis added.)

Doh'l: Liddy's fortunes

Fri Oct 27, 2006 at 09:11:25 AM PDT

Liddy's to lose
The fight for control for the U.S. Senate is a close call. Last week, a sudden decline in GOP spending suggested that fortunes had shifted in Ohio, which, along with Missouri and Tennessee, constituted the GOP's firewall. Should the Senate swing Democratic, expect the grousing about Liddy Dole to expand with gusto. Dole, who has spent more time in Montana than Salisbury this year, has already been roundly criticized for slow fund-raising.

(Her debate with Chuck Schumer yesterday (Oct. 25) at the National Press club is on the C-Span homepage. She talks about Iraq, redefines Stay the Course and issues a scary warning about Iran. "Are we now going to give them the perfect situation by leaving Iraq before we're finished?" she asks. A few seconds later she laments that Iraq is being used by the Democats as a "political football" and trots out a stability-of-the-world argument. She also notes that the president is not on the ballot.)

Poll

Who should run against Liddy Dole in 2008?

0%0 votes
0%0 votes
0%0 votes
0%0 votes
0%0 votes
0%0 votes
0%0 votes
0%0 votes
0%0 votes
0%0 votes
0%0 votes
0%0 votes
0%0 votes
0%0 votes
0%0 votes

| 0 votes | Vote | Results


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