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| 2010 Elections - Florida House Races |
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| Sunday, October 10, 2010 |
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Rating change: Pundit and generic updates move 3 more House seats |
The GOP wave continues to build. Over the last two days, three of four on my pundit panel updated their House race ratings. The pattern of overwhelming GOP movement
continued. Combined, the three pundits offered 41 updated race ratings. The changes favored the GOP by a 38-3 count. On top of that, the new generic ballot
component of my House calculations also improved GOP numbers.
As a result of all this goodness, Republicans picked up 3 more projected House seats in Saturday's update. Alabama CD-2, Florida CD-22 and West Virginia CD-1 all moved from
Weak DEM Hold to Weak GOP Gain. This is good news, of course, for red team fans, but it is pertinent to note that
in all three races the Republican candidate is ahead by less than one percent. It wouldn't take much to move one or more of them back to blue.
For now though, the GOP is enjoying its largest net House gain to date. Forty-six more Republicans are projected to earn a seat in the House come January. The tally stands at 225 Republicans and 210 Democrats.
Filed under:
Ratings changes
Alabama
AL House
Florida
FL House
West Virginia
WV House
posted by Scott Elliott at 12:20am 10/10/10::
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| Friday, August 27, 2010 |
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| Rating changes: AL, FL, OH House, CA Governor |
Four seats changed parties with today's update. Three factors contributed to that high number of party-switchers. First, a poll from Rasmussen indicates a large jump in
support for Republican Meg Whitman in California's gubernatorial race. According to Rasmussen, Whitman now leads Democrat Jerry Brown by 8 points, 48-40. California
is painted red once again today as a result. The change brings Republican gubernatorial gains back to their high water mark for the year. They are projected to hold 32
statehouses against 17 for the Democrats and one Independent.
In the House, changes abound. Ayers, McHenry and Associates, a Republican-leaning polling firm, continued its tour across America, publishing several polls from House races
in the Midwest. Ohio CD-16, the race between Democratic incumbent John Boccieri and Republican challenger Jim Renacci, is red today due to Renacci's 49-35 lead in an Ayers
McHenry survey of the district.
The third force of change in today's House ratings is a boatload of ratings changes released by CQPolitics yesterday. The online magazine
updated their rating of 37 House races, 33 in favor of the GOP. As a result of a rating change from Lean DEM to Toss-up, Florida CD-2 is projected to
go to recent GOP primary winner, Steve Southerland.
All today's changes do not benefit the Republicans, however. Democratic incumbent Bobby Bright's competitive re-election bid in Alabama's 2nd district appears more likely to
succeed after CQPolitics changed their outlook on his race from Toss-up to Lean DEM. Taken together, then, the GOP gains one more net seat in today's
House projection, moving the tally here at EP to 220 Democrats and 215 Republicans.
Filed under:
Ratings changes
AL House
CA Governor
FL House
OH House
posted by Scott Elliott at 2:03pm 08/27/10::
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| Thursday, August 26, 2010 |
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| Rating change: Florida statewide races flip |
Governor Charlie Crist dropped out of Republican primary contention to run for Florida's open Senate seat as an independent when it was clear Marco Rubio would trounce him.
Soon after his decision, polls began to show him leading a three-way race against Rubio and a Democrat. Reluctantly, I relented to the polls and switched my preliminary projection
to Weak IND Gain. In my Florida primary preview, I stated that
Rubio would eventually overtake
the Governor and pull it a victory to keep the seat in Republican hands.
Yesterday, Public Policy Polling released the first post-primary poll from Florida. The result seems to confirm my hunch that Crist will not be able to beat Rubio. In the
poll, the freshly-crowned GOP nominee leads the turncoat governor by 8 points. That margin is enough to tip the official tracking numbers in his favor, yielding
a Weak GOP Hold. With no additional independent senators projected, the balance of power moves to 50 Democrats,
48 Republicans and 2 Independents. With the two existing independents caucusing with the Democrats, it will take three more pick-ups to give the GOP a majority in the
Senate. Note: A poll from Rasmussen released after today's update was posted further confirms Rubio's lead. In it, he tops Crist by 10 points.
Florida party-switchers for today don't stop in the Senate. Democrat Alex Sink, an easy primary winner on Tuesday, has moved smartly ahead of her Republican counterpart,
Rick Scott. Sink had led a couple of polls prior to the primaries, but because, as I said earlier, my Florida projection was preliminary, she did not move ahead in this race here at EP until
I plugged in real numbers afterward. However, with that same Public Policy poll giving her a sizeable lead yesterday, Sink moves right through "weak" territory. She's now
projected at a Mod DEM Gain. And with Scott having to contend with a reputation that is in some ways soiled, Sink is going to be hard to beat
despite Florida's Republican lean. The statehouse count now stands at 31 Republicans, 18 Democrats and
1 Independent.
Filed under:
Ratings changes
Florida
FL Senate
FL House
posted by Scott Elliott at 8:18pm 08/26/10::
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| Wednesday, August 25, 2010 |
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| Recap of yesterday's House primary races |
Plenty of important House primary action took place yesterday in Arizona and Florida. Eight races from those two states currently live on Election Projection's
hotly-contested House race list. In Arizona, districts 1, 5 and 8, all seats with Democratic
incumbents seeking re-election, are competitive. In district 1, Congresswoman Anne Kirkpatrick will face Republican Paul Gosar. He's probably not the strongest challenger
Arizona Republicans could have picked to do battle with Kirkpatrick, but in this environment toxic to Democrats, he has a shot.
The strongest candidate also failed to win the nod in CD-5, Harry Mitchell's district. But as in district 1, that may not matter this year. David Schweikert will be the one to
test the strength of the red wave here in November. Then there's CD-8. For the third time in as many races in the Grand Canyon State, the weaker general election candidate
took the nomination. According to Karl Raszewski, political media strategist and EP's "on the ground" reporter, incumbent Gabrielle Giffords can breathe a bit easier knowing she'll face
Jesse Kelly, a one-issue (border security) candidate, instead of conservative State Senator Jonathan Paton.
Currently, all three of these seats are projected to stay in Democratic hands, albeit by slim margins.
Florida's results yesterday were much more GOP-friendly. In CD-2, the contested primary actually took place on the Democratic side where incumbent Allen Boyd narrowly
withstood a strong challenge from Al Lawson. Ironically, GOP nominee Steve Southerland will likely have a better shot to take the seat now that Boyd has survived. Another
positive primary result - at least for GOP fans - came down in Alan Grayson's eighth district. Daniel Webster, a favorite of Marco Rubio conservatives, won the nomination over Crist
backers' man, Kurt Kelly. Grayson is not expected to prevail in November, an outlook that became more likely with Webster's win.
In CD-25, a rare vulnerable Republican seat, the strongest Republican candidate, David Rivera, won easily but now faces a serious challenge from Democrat Joe Garcia.
This race should be a tight one all the way to November 2nd. The projection here stands at Mod GOP Hold, but don't be surprised for this one to buck
the national trend and move toward blue as we move toward Election Day.
Filed under:
House
Arizona
AZ House
Florida
FL House
posted by Scott Elliott at 11:42pm 08/25/10::
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| Tuesday, August 24, 2010 |
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| "On the ground" Florida primary election preview |
As promised, here is Karl's on the ground report on today's primary elections in House races in Florida. Again, this report does not attempt to pick winners. Rather, it looks at the impact
the primary winners could have on the general election in November.
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FL-2: There are competitive primaries on both sides of the aisle in this race. Despite the R+6 rating, Democrats have successfully held
this seat since 1990, and Rep Allen Boyd has had it for 7 terms. He's facing State Senator Al Lawson, who has polled strongly against him in
several polls. Boyd, who has a habit for sticking his foot in his mouth, has openly said at political events that many Democrats are racist in
FL-2 and that they'll vote for the Republican over Lawson, who is Black. On the Republican side Steve Southerland is the favorite, with only
Ed Hendry having any shot at catching him. Southerland has out-raised Boyd in campaign contributions this year, and Boyd hasn't faced serious
competition in over a decade. He has a lot of funds saved up but is an inexperienced campaigner. Southerland is certainly the favorite
to bring this seat home for the GOP in November over Boyd. However, despite Boyd's claim of racist democrat voters, a Lawson victory in the
primary could make this race a Tossup.
FL-3: Rep Corrine Brown has face many ethics questions, and could have a tough primary against Scott Fortune. Despite the D+18 rating
and the fact that this is a majority Black district, it is a conservative district because of the high number of Military living in the area.
If Brown survives her primary, she could be vulnerable. However, only black conservative Chris Nwasike has the opportunity to defeat her,
and he has a few primary challengers to get through first.
FL-5: While this is an R+9 district, retiring Republican Ginny Brown-Waite took it from Democrats by a narrow margin in 2002.
While The Democrats haven't fielded strong candidates in a few cycles, this year may be different. Jim Piccillo, who switched from R to D to
run for this seat, is capable of making this race competitive in November. If Republican Sherrif Rick Nugent wins the primary, this seat should
stay with the GOP, however, if Tea Party candidate Jason Sager wins, he'll be more vulnerable to Picollo.
FL-8: Alan Grayson is one of the most likely Democrats to be unseated in November since he won FL-8 almost solely on Obama's coattails.
As a result, Republicans rushed to enter this race. The 2 GOP frontrunners are State Senator Kurt Kelly and conservative Dan Webster. Kelly is
getting the moderate establishment Charlie Crist vote, while Webster has received the endorsement of Jeb Bush. He's getting a lot of support from
Rubio conservatives. Some argue that the moderate Kelly is the better general election candidate, but it's actually Webster who will be more likely
to defeat Grayson. He should be able to cut into the moderate vote and do much better with conservative voters.
FL-24: This R+4 district is one of the most interesting races in the country because of the vulnerability of freshmen Democratic Rep Suzanne
Kosmas. She's very vulnerable in tomorrow's primary to Paul Partyka, who has lead in the 2 most recent polls. On the GOP side, it's been considered
a 3-way race between Craig Miller, Karen Diebel and Sandy Adams. Diebel looked like the leader, but a 911 call surfaced where she claimed a snake was
thrown in her pool by "political operatives." Craig Miller has since attacked her "mental fitness" to serve, even sending out a paid mailer where two
of her co-workers discuss her "delusional" nature. Miller & Diebel have both been damaged by these attacks, and conservative Sandy Adams now looks like
the favorite. If Adams wins the primary, she'll be the favorite over either Partyka or Kosmas. If Miller wins, he'd likely defeat Kosmas, but Partyka
could be a tough race for him. Diebel will have a hard time defeating either of the Democrats after the damage caused.
FL-25: Republican Mario Diaz-Balart is leaving this seat and moving to the safer one that his brother, Lincoln, is retiring from.
Republicans have entered State Rep David Rivera, who is a strong candidate in this heavily Cuban district, and should defeat "Tea Party Republican" Paul Crespo.
However, the Tea Party has also managed to get Roly Arrojo on the ballot as 3rd Party candidate, which will take away some conservative Republican support in
November. Democrats have two candidates running in the primary, and who wins that race could likely determine whether Rivera keeps this seat for
Republicans. If Director of the Cuban American National Foundation Joe Garcia, who almost defeated Diaz-Balart in this district, wins the primary, then Rivera
will have a very tough race, but if Luis Meurice is victorious, Rivera will have an easier time. |
The information in this post courtesy of
Karl Raszewski, Political Media Strategist
R.P.C.Strategies@aol.com
Filed under:
On the ground
House
Florida
FL House
posted by Scott Elliott at 11:20am 08/24/10::
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| Thursday, July 8, 2010 |
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| Rating change: Two seats swap colors |
Larry Sabato, one of my pundit panel for projecting House races, published updated ratings yesterday. The changes include 5 races which moved toward the GOP and 1 which moved
toward the Democrats. Also, CQ Politics, a second pundit panel member, changed their rating of the Idaho CD-1 race from Toss-up to Lean DEM. As a result of these updates,
the projected tally in the House remains unchanged. Idaho's new rating of Weak DEM Hold offsets Florida CD-8's flip to
Weak GOP Gain. Overall, projected GOP takeovers remain at 29 seats against just 3 projected DEM takeovers. Those numbers may very
well change drastically in the coming days, however, as Republican advantages in generic congressional polls are becoming more widespread. On top of that, Stuart Rothenberg will
be posting a new slate of House rating updates in a few days, and Charlie Cook, after posting an article entitled, "Hurricane GOP on the way," will probably be updating his soon as well.
Filed under:
Ratings changes
House
Idaho
ID House
Florida
FL House
posted by Scott Elliott at 8:17pm 07/08/10::
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| Tuesday, June 29, 2010 |
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| Rating change alert: 3 seats move back to Dems |
Generic congressional polling from Rasmussen and Gallup has moved slightly toward the Democrats, resulting in a smaller House projection adjustment. The reduction in that
adjustment affects all tracked House race margins. In three cases, the change is enough to shift the projection from red to blue. Alabama CD-2, Florida CD-8 and West Virginia
CD-1 are all back in the Democratic fold after today's projection update. The projected GOP net gain in the House now stands at 24 seats. The new projected count is
232 Democrats and 203 Republicans.
Filed under:
Ratings changes
House
AL House
FL House
WV House
posted by Scott Elliott at 8:13pm 06/29/10::
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| Sunday, April 18, 2010 |
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| Rating change: Pundit updates net two more GOP seats |
The latest round of updates are in from Charlie Cook and Stuart Rothenberg as well as a few from CQ Politics. There are 61 individual updates between the three sources.
Illustrating how the Red Wave of 2010 is building, the GOP benefited from 55 of them, the Democrats, just 6. With that much positive momentum, you'd expect the GOP to gain
additional seats as well. Such is the case. Florida's CD24, currently held by Suzanne Kosmas, now projects as a GOP takeover, as does Glenn Nye's seat in Virginia's second
district. These changes raise the net Republican haul in the House to 23 seats and leaves the GOP just 17 away from a projected majority.
New tally: 234 Democrats, 201 Republicans.
Filed under:
Ratings changes
Florida
FL House
Virginia
VA House
House
posted by Scott Elliott at 3:27pm 04/18/10::
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| Tuesday, April 13, 2010 |
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| Democats retain FL-19 in special election win |
Democrat Robert Wexler's old seat in Florida's 19th congressional district will be in different hands after today's special election - but not in different parties. Ted Deutch, the new
Democratic congressman-elect, won the election with 62% of the
vote. Not much of a surpise at all in either the victor or the margin.
Filed under:
House
Florida
FL House
posted by Scott Elliott at 9:20pm 04/13/10::
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| Friday, March 5, 2010 |
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| Rating change: Good news for DEMs, 2 seats come back |
After several iterations of pundit ratings changes favoring Republican by vast majorities, we finally have a good round for the Democrats. Both Larry Sabato and Charlie Cook have
moved multiple seats their way recently. Of course, there were changes benefitting the GOP, mostly involving Democratic retirments in MA CD-10 and NY CD-29. However,
the net of the changes in terms of the projected House tally shows the Democrats reclaiming 2 seats previously projected to go red. Bobby Bright in AL CD-2 and Alan Grayson in
FL CD-8 appear less vulnerable in the is latest round of updates. They are now projected to hold onto their seats, reducing the projected GOP haul to 22 seats vs. 2 for the
Democrats. These changes bring the projected balance of power in the House to 237 Democrats and 198 Republicans.
Filed under:
Ratings changes
Alabama
AL House
Florida
FL House
posted by Scott Elliott at 11:37pm 03/05/10::
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| Thursday, December 3, 2009 |
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| Fifty state tour - Florida preview |
Though Florida went for President Obama in 2008, its trend relative to the national vote has been toward the GOP. Nationwide, 2008 saw a 10 point swing in Obama's advantage vs.
John Kerry's performance in 2004. In Florida, the swing was just half that. It would be a mistake, I believe, to interpret Obama's win here last year as a sign that Florida is
becoming a blue state. That assertion is evident in the preliminary predictions for the Florida races I'll be tracking.
Senate: Mel Martinez, a Cuban-born GOP senator first elected in 2004, decided earlier this year not to run for re-election in 2010. In August, he decided to
end his term early and retire. George LeMieux was appointed to replace him, but he, too, has decided against running. Not so for the man who appointed LeMieux.
Governor Charlie Crist has thrown his moderate Republican hat into the race. Mix that moderate ideology and good amount of early backing from national GOP powers that be with
a favorite of the grass roots conservative movement (aka the Tea Partiers) and you have the makings of a lost opportunity. This seat should stay in GOP hands, but a bruising
primary between Crist and former Florida House Speaker and rising GOP star Marco Rubio could give the Democrats a chance to steal this one away. My hunch is that Crist would have
no problem winning the general election if he defeats Rubio in the primary. Rubio's chances, however, are a bit more dicey, but he could win as well. Until the primaries are
over, a prediction in this race is a bit premature. But that's never stopped me before! I'll call it a Weak GOP Hold for now for the simple reason that
this rating probably falls just about in the center of what is a broad range of possible outcomes.
Governor: Since Crist seeks a Washington office, his residency in the Governor's Mansion will end. The vacancy has given cause for a plethora of
individuals to jump in the gubernatorial race. Among the GOP hopefuls, it appears to be a two-man...er...one man - one woman race between State Senator Paula Dockery and
former Congressman and failed Senate candidate Bill McCollum. Polls give McCollum a big edge, though one has to wonder if name recognition may play a part in that.
On the Democratic side, CFO Alex Sink has the inside track to the nomination as things currently stand. This is another difficult race predict this far out. The results of the
primaries loom large as do the candidates' performances on the post-primary campaign trail. I'm going to call this a Weak GOP Hold, but, honestly, it is
without much conviction.
House District 8: Alan Grayson is no softly liberal. Oh, he's a liberal for sure, but he's as hard as nails. He refused to apologize for his now-famous
declaration on the House floor during the healthcare debate that Republicans "want you to die quickly." And this despite the fact that he's a freshman congressman from a
GOP-leaning district. That takes gumption, my friends. It also puts him in a precarious position heading toward the midterms. While the GOP has had several first-tier
folks decline to run, this race is low-hanging fruit, to be sure, and the eventual GOP nominee should send Grayson back to defending whistleblowers and filing lawsuits against big bad
government contractors. This race is one of the most vulnerable. It should end up a Weak GOP Gain.
House District 24: Freshman Democratic Congresswoman Suzanne Kosmas bucked the norm by winning her first term in a Republican district by a landslide.
GOP incumbent Republican Tom Feeney's corruption problems and the big blue wave in 2008 provided Kosmas with an easy path to Washington. Since arriving, she has shown
centrists tendencies and is a member of the New Democrat Coalition. These facts give her a good shot at not being a common one-term wave baby. She will be tested, given
the conservative bent of her constituency. Against a big red wave, she may not get that second term. For now, though, I see her hanging on in a
Weak DEM Hold.
Another possibly competitive race in Florida which Election Projection will be tracking is in district 12, an open GOP seat vacated by Adam Putnam. He declined to seek re-election
in favor of a bid to become Florida's Commissioner of Agriculture.
Please check out the Florida state page for lots more cool stuff on the Sunshine State.
Next stop: Georgia
Filed under:
Florida
FL Senate
FL House
FL Governor
posted by Scott Elliott at 12:53am 12/03/09::
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e-mail Scott at: thebloggingcaesar -at- yahoo.com
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