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| 2010 Elections - Pennsylvania House Races |
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| Sunday, October 17, 2010 |
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Rating change: Pundit updates galore net 5 more GOP gains in the House |
Thursday I got wind of major updates to CQ Politics House race ratings. Previously, I had been following CQ Politics'
Race Rating Change Stories page to keep up-to-date on their ratings. It turns out that wasn't a good
idea because the race ratings were changing substantially without any mention on that page. As a result, when I finally checked
the ratings list, I found I had a lot of updating to do. Thirty-three races sported new ratings since
the last time I inspected the list in detail.
Since I had been keeping up with changes made by the other three on my pundit panel, CQ Politics' new set of updates, numbering 31-2 in favor of the GOP, had a major impact on EP's projections in the House.
Several races had moved to the brink of flipping with the other pundits' changes. In five races, a fourth pundit update was the catalyst to flip them to red. Those five include
Arizona CD-8, New Jersey CD-3, Ohio CD-18, Pennsylvania CD-10 and Texas CD-23. All five move from Weak DEM Hold to
Weak GOP Gain giving Republicans the largest projected net gain of House seats so far at 53. The House tally stands at
Republicans 232 and 203 Democrats. That's precisely what the House count was on Election Eve in 2006 (counting Bernie
Sanders' socialist seat in Vermont among the Democrats).
Filed under:
Ratings changes
House
AZ House
NJ House
OH House
PA House
TX House
posted by Scott Elliott at 10:54pm 10/17/10::
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| Saturday, October 9, 2010 |
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| Rating change: Catching up, House of Representatives |
Continuing our catch-up rating change tour, we turn to the House. Three seats in the House changed hands this week (before today's update, that is - I'll get to that
shortly).
Positive polling this week for incumbent Democrat Chris Carney moved his PA-10 re-election bid against Republican Thomas Marino back to the blue column. On Wednesday, his
race moved from Weak GOP Gain to Weak DEM Hold.
The next day, Thursday, Larry Kissell saw his race move in the opposite direction. He currently represents North Carolina CD-8 but is projected to concede that right to
Republican Harold Johnson. This one moved from Weak DEM Hold to Weak GOP Gain.
Then on Friday, the razor close race for South Dakota's at-large district also flipped from a Weak DEM Hold to
Weak GOP Gain. Democrat Stephanie Herseth-Sandlin, the incumbent here, and Republican Kristi Noem have been running neck and neck
for some time. This one should go down to the wire.
All told, that's two new GOP gains minus one former GOP gain now back in the Democratic fold. That brings the net projected GOP gain in the House (again, before today's
update) to 43 seats, 4 more than they need to win the majority.
Filed under:
Ratings changes
North Carolina
NC House
Pennsylvania
PA House
South Dakota
SD House
posted by Scott Elliott at 11:56pm 10/09/10::
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| Saturday, September 18, 2010 |
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| Rating change: Weekly generic composite update reduces projected GOP House gains by one |
Each Saturday, I update the generic composite average used in calculating EP's House projections. The generic ballot average tracked by
Pollster.com is my composite number of choice, and this week it has moved from a +5.3 advantage for the GOP
to a +3.6 edge. As a result, several House ratings have been impacted. One, Patrick Murphy's Democratic seat in PA-8, flips from red to blue. Now that he's projected
to keep that seat for the blue team, the projected House tally has changed to 219 Democrats and 216 Republicans.
Last week, we saw the GOP briefly take the projected majority in the House. That lasted but a couple days. Now, it seems, the Republican wave may have crested. Still, of 13 new House rating updates published by Charlie Cook and Stuart Rothenberg, 12 favored the GOP. With the primaries behind us, we appear to be in a holding pattern right now as the political climate takes a respite to consolidate itself. In the coming weeks, we should see it start to move again. But in which direction remains
to be seen.
Filed under:
Ratings changes
Pennsylvania
PA House
posted by Scott Elliott at 3:43pm 09/18/10::
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| Saturday, September 11, 2010 |
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| Rating change: Four House party switchers net no change in House count |
Two metrics moving in opposite directions have changed the colors of four House districts, without altering the projected balance of power in the House. First, very favorable
GOP-leaning generic polls released this week swelled the composite generic average and moved Arizona's 5th district and Pennsylvania's 8th from Weak DEM Hold
to Weak GOP gain as a result. On the other hand, several district polls came out lately showing Democratic incumbents performing very
well. Two of these polls, one by American Future Fund (R) from Iowa's CD-3 and another by Rasmussen taken in South Dakota, produced two red to blue conversions.
Leonard Boswell's and Stephanie Herseth-Sandlin's races moved from Weak GOP gain to Weak DEM Hold. The net
of all this movement is the same 218 Democrats and 217 Republicans tally we had yesterday.
If you want to get these Rating Change Alerts in your inbox as well as weekly newsletters from Election Projection, you can sign up for them here.
I will never give or sell your email address to anyone.
Filed under:
Ratings changes
AZ House
IA House
PA House
SD House
House
posted by Scott Elliott at 11:01am 09/11/10::
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| Saturday, September 4, 2010 |
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| Rating change: Generic poll update nets two House seats for Democrats |
Yesterday in this space, I trumpeted the arrival of a new projected majority party in the House. Pundit rating changes and a plethora of House polls moved 5 seats from blue to
red. Today, my weekly refresh of Pollster.com's generic congressional poll average reclaims two of those seats for the Democrats. This week's composite generic poll average
dropped from a +5.2% advantage for the GOP to just 3.0%. As a result, Arizona's 5th district, currently held by Harry Mitchell, and Patrick Murphy's 8th district in Pennsylvania
move from Weak GOP Gain to Weak DEM Hold. Republicans still retain control in the House in today's projection,
however, but by just one seat. The new count: 218 Republicans, 217 Democrats.
Filed under:
Ratings changes
Arizona
AZ House
Pennsylvania
PA House
posted by Scott Elliott at 12:49pm 09/04/10::
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| Friday, September 3, 2010 |
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| Rating change: GOP takes 5 more seats, House majority |
Larry Sabato's latest bounty of House race rating updates was a long time in coming. But the wait was worth it. He now projects a 47-seat gain for Republicans in the House,
8 more than they need to gain the majority. On the polling front, Republican pollster Ayers, McHenry and Associates has released its last batch of House race polls from
their August tour of the nation. This latest set of polls tests west coast races.
Combine Sabato's changes and Ayers/McHenry's polls, and mix in a new ten-count of rating changes from Charlie Cook, and you have the perfect recipe for the first projected GOP
House majority since early 2006. Five new seats are colored red in today's EP update, two more than the GOP needs to demote Speaker Nancy Pelosi and regain control of the
House.
On the weight of Ayers' polling, two seats in Arizona (CD-1 and CD-5) move from Weak DEM Hold to Weak GOP Gain. Sabato's update to the SC-5 race produces the same outcome, and rolling off an old poll favoring incumbent Democrat Baron Hill in Indiana's 9th district switches
that race as well. Rounding out the changes, Pennsylvania CD-8 moves to red thanks to a GOP poll giving Michael Fitzpatrick a 7-point lead over incumbent Patrick Murphy.
The new House tally stands at 220 Republicans and 215 Democrats. That's a net gain of 41 seats.
By the way, Sabato and Cook offered 39 rating changes, taken together. Every one of them favored the Republicans. This wave that is already of tidal proportions continues
to strengthen.
Filed under:
Ratings changes
AZ House
IN House
PA House
SC House
posted by Scott Elliott at 1:05pm 09/03/10::
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| Wednesday, August 4, 2010 |
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| Rating change: PA-3 becomes third Keystone State pickup for Republicans |
Mike Kelly joins Patrick Meehan and Louis Barletta as Republican challengers now projected to win Democratically-held seats in Pennsylvania. An internal GOP poll taken in late July
puts him 11 points ahead of District 3 incumbent, Kathy Dahlkemper. Even after adjusting for partisanship, that poll is enough to tip the projection in his favor. The switch
gives the Keystone State 3 projected GOP pickups, more than any other state. It also moves the projected seat count in the House to 224 Democrats
(-32) and 211 Republicans (+32) and marks a new high water mark for the GOP here at Election Projection.
Filed under:
Ratings changes
House
Pennsylvania
PA House
posted by Scott Elliott at 7:10pm 08/04/10::
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| Wednesday, May 19, 2010 |
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| Pennsylvania primary results - race tracking initiated |
Pennsylvania held the headliner election yesterday. Two races here captured the attention of the entire nation, and the outcomes have political observers everywhere debating their
significance heading toward November's midterm elections. Joe Sestak closed out Arlen Specter for the Democratic Senate nomination, and Democrat Mark Critz won easily over Tim
Burns to retain John Murtha's seat in the House for the blue team.
On a night when expectations of GOP fans were running high, both these results were good for Democrats.
Sestak's win gives them a stronger candidate in the general election against Republican nominee Pat Toomey. And, aside from the obvious benefit of a seat held, Critz's victory will
fuel optimism among Democratic observers that the alleged red wave coming in November may not be as strong as advertised.
I believe that thinking is premature and ignores the
impact the blockbuster battle that was Sestak vs. Specter had on Democratic turnout. While Specter's base in Philadelphia and suburbs were nominal at best, Sestak was very strong
in western PA, wracking up 15 to 20 point victories in some counties - including several of the 8 counties which hold at least of sliver of the gerrymandered 12th. I interpret these numbers as an indication of an anti-incumbent mood that drove many Democrats to the polls and muted the anti-Democrat mood motivating Burns supporters. Looking forward, this
seat is still very vulnerable. As I posited in my primary preview on Monday, this seat is more likely to go to the GOP in November when Seatak will be battling Toomey instead of
Specter and independents will makeup a larger slice of the vote.
On to the winners...
Senate
| |
Democratic Primary Joe Sestak |
Republican Primary Pat Toomey |
Governor
| |
Democratic Primary Dan Onorato |
Republican Primary Tom Corbett |
District 3
| |
Democratic Primary Kathy Dahlkemper - inc |
Republican Primary Mike Kelly |
District 4
| |
Democratic Primary none |
Republican Primary Keith Rothfus |
District 6
| |
Democratic Primary Manan Trivedi |
Republican Primary Jim Gerlach - inc |
District 8
| |
Democratic Primary none |
Republican Primary Michael Fitzpatrick |
District 10
| |
Democratic Primary none |
Republican Primary Thomas Marino |
District 11
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Democratic Primary Paul Kanjorski - inc |
Republican Primary none |
District 12
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Democratic Primary Mark Critz |
Republican Primary Tim Burns |
District 13
| |
Democratic Primary none |
Republican Primary Carson Dee Adcock |
District 15
| |
Democratic Primary none |
Republican Primary Charles Dent - inc |
District 17
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Democratic Primary Tim Holden - inc |
Republican Primary Dave Argall |
District 19
| |
Democratic Primary none |
Republican Primary Todd Platts - inc |
|
The only rating change coming into the general election season in Pennsylvania impacts the gubernatorial race. Corbett leads Onorato by 6 points in the only recent poll testing the
two. That poll changes the projection from Weak GOP Gain to Mod GOP Gain.
With 12 total races on the tracking lists here at Election Projection, Pennsylvania state page
will be one stop you'll want to make often.
Filed under:
Pennsylvania
PA Senate
PA House
PA Governor
posted by Scott Elliott at 10:54pm 05/19/10::
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| Monday, May 17, 2010 |
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| May 18 primary predictions - PA, KY, AR, OR - updated |
Tomorrow four states will hold party primaries, and a special election will determine who serves out the rest of John Murtha's term in PA-12. Among the primary combatants are two
Democratis incumbents under serious fire. One, Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania, may lose his party's nomination; the other, Blanche Lincoln of Arkansas, is in a bit better position
heading into the primary. And, while her nomination is by no means secure, her prospects in the general election if she does prevail tomorrow are significantly less rosy.
Also capturing the attention of political observers are Kentucky's Senate primaries. Both parties are holding intriguing matches to decide who will battle for outgoing Republican
Senator Jim Bunning's seat. Democrats will choose between Lt. Governor Daniel Mongiardo and Attorney General Jack Conway. A few weeks ago, Mongiardo appeared to be
cruising to the nomination, leading by 15 points or more in the polls. That lead has shrunk to almost nothing in recent days, however, and Election Day will dawn with Conway having
a legitimate shot at a stunning come-from-behind victory.
On the Republican ballot, the son of Texas congressman and former GOP presidential candidate Ron Paul has moved well ahead of Kentucky Secretary of State Trey Grayson.
Rand Paul now seems set to earn the nomination tomorrow. Though both Grayson and Paul currently lead either Democrat in the polls, Grayson's margins are more
substantial, a fact that re-enforces doubts about Paul in some Republican circles. Time will tell how he connects with a general election electorate once the primaries have past.
Rounding out tomorrow's primary schedule is Oregon. The Democratic gubernatorial race features two prominent Oregon politicians in Secretary of State Bill Bradbury and
former Governor John Kitzhaber. The winner of that battle will enter the general election campaign as a decided favorite to succeed term-limited Democratic Governor Ted
Kulongowski.
Sometime tomorrow I post links to primary results so you can watch the returns come in. For now, let me venture a few predictions. In Pennsylvania, I predict Arlen
Specter's party-switching gambit will end in defeat and Joe Sestak will advance to face Pat Toomey in November. In PA-12, I have to give the slightest of edges to Democrat
Mark Critz (Election Projection's margin of victory: 0.5%). Turnout at the top of the ballot will propel Critz to a narrow win over Republican Tim Burns. In Arkansas,
Blanche Lincoln will survive by a margin you can fit on one hand. Finally, it'll be Rand Paul vs. Dan Mongiardo in Kentucky as Conway's frantic comeback bid falls just short.
I have to add that I'm least confident about the PA-12 prediction. Given the difficulty of polling House races in general and measuring turnout in this district specifically,
projecting a winner can be little more than guesswork. If Burns does pull it out, I think the ramifications for November will be great. A Burns victory despite heavy
get-out-the-vote motivation provided by the Specter/Sestak matchup will indicate just how much the enthusiasm gap truly favors the GOP.
Update: You can follow primary election returns here. Polls close in Kentucky at 6pm, in Pennsylvania at
8pm, in Arkansas at 8:30pm and in Oregon at 10pm. (All times EDT)
Filed under:
Arkansas
Kentucky
Oregon
Pennsylvania
PA Senate
PA House
KY Senate
posted by Scott Elliott at 11:01pm 05/17/10::
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| Saturday, May 15, 2010 |
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| Two seats: Different colors, same story |
On Tuesday, voters in Pennsylvania will decide who will finish out the rest of the late John Murtha's term. Next Saturday, Hawaiians will choose an interim representative to fill the
vacant seat left open by Neil Abercrombie's gubernatorial run. These two districts were previously held by Democrats, but the GOP hopes to earn pick-ups in both of them this
month. Polls indicate a split is upcoming, with Murtha's seat likely to stay in Democratic hands and Abercrombie's seat almost certain to move to the red column.
Ironically, there a good chance neither will remain that way after November. Unique circumstances are at play in both situations which will make it difficult for the winner this
month to be the winner again later this year. In Hawaii, Republican Charles Djou is way out in front despite the fact that this area is strongly Democratic. His lead can be
attributed to the presence of two well-known Democrats in the race. In the "winner-take-all" format governing this election, Djou is polling around 40% while Democrats Ed Case and
Colleen Hanabusa are dividing up most of the rest of the vote.
Up in the Keystone State, a different dynamic is at work benefiting former Murtha staffer, Mark Critz. While the tide in Pennsylvania is moving toward the GOP, Democratic
turnout here will be fueled by a classic top-of-the-ballot all-out primary war. Incumbent Senator Arlen Specter is in danger of losing the nomination to Congressman Joe Sestak, and
interest in that race overshadows any on the Republican slate. So, despite a strong GOP wind in general, the race for Murtha's seat may be decided by a gale-force intra-party storm
raging above it on the ballot. Polls have moved away from Republican Tim Burns of late and now favor Critz to win.
Victories by Critz and Djou may be short-lived, however. Once November arrives, the unique aspects of May's contests will no longer be present. In their stead, we'll
see more expected tendencies exert their influence. Specifically, in Hawaii, Djou will face just one Democrat on November 2nd - and that presents him with heaps of trouble.
As next Saturday will confirm, Djou can do well against a split Democratic vote, but he'll be unlikely to survive against the sole Democratic opponent he will face in November. Likewise,
in Pennsylvania, Critz will be seeking re-election in the midst of a red wave election in a district Charlie Cook gives a slight Republican lean (PVI R+1). If Critz does win on Tuesday,
his seat will remain on the hotly-contested list and should immediately be considered a more likely Republican gain than it currently is.
Filed under:
House
Hawaii
HI House
Pennsylvania
PA House
posted by Scott Elliott at 3:51pm 05/15/10::
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| Sunday, April 25, 2010 |
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| Rating change: GOP projected to win Murtha's seat |
With the Pennsylvania preview comes one more projected GOP takeover. On May 18th, a special election will be held to fill the seat vacated by John Murtha's unexpected
passing. The pundits call it a toss-up, but polls give Republican Tim Burns an slight edge over Democrat Mark Critz. As a result, the race moves to a
Weak GOP Gain. I'm looking forward to seeing if the momentum displayed in Massachusetts in January will still be going strong in May in
southwestern Pennsylvania. This change brings the projected House tally to 233 Democrats and 202 Republicans, a net
gain of 24 seats for the GOP.
Filed under:
Ratings changes
House
PA House
posted by Scott Elliott at 11:53pm 04/25/10::
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| Fifty state tour - Pennsylvania preview (part 2) |
House District 7: Democratic incumbent Joe Sestak has left this seat in search of the Senate seat currently held by turncoat Arlen Specter. First elected
in the blue wave year of 2006, Sestak's entrance and exit from the House is synchronized to the good fortunes of the Democratic Party, and he leaves a seat that will be difficult
at best for the Democrats to retain. The primary front runners are established for both parties and are nearly even in cash on hand. Combine that with the marginal
nature of this district, and you have a race that should be about tied all things being equal. But all things are not equal this year. I say the GOP tide will be
enough to upset the balance and give Republican Pat Meehan a Weak GOP Gain over Democrat Brian Lentz.
House District 8: Some districts, such as Pennsylvania's 4th, have races that seem to be moving toward the incumbent party candidate. Others have
the opposite feel. This district is an example of the latter. Initially thought of as safe, it has moved now to a Mod DEM Hold.
One main reason for the shift is Mike Fitzpatrick's decision to try again for the seat he won in 2004. Though Democratic incumbent Patrick Murphy ousted him just two
years later, Fitzpatrick brings to this race name recognition and the current letter-of-the-day after his name. He also brings the support of local Republican machinery
which should enable him to effectively play catch-up in the fundraising arena. It's true that Murphy has a substantial war chest ($1.3 million), but Fitzpatrick's $470,000
ain't too shabby, especially considering his late start relative to the incumbent. I predict this race will tighten before November, and, if the night meets moderate
expectations for the GOP, don't be surprised to count it among the list of Republican takeovers.
House District 10: This district has a legitimate rightward lean. Its Cook PVI is R+8. Incumbent Democrat Chris Carney has the
requisite "conservative" label attached to the D after his name, otherwise he probably would not be the incumbent right now. His victory in 2006 was largely due to the
sex scandal that was Don Sherwood's undoing, but he relied heavily on conservative credentials for his 2008 triumph. This year, his bid for a third term is a microcosm
of the political forces at work nationwide. Like so many other Democratic incumbents, he faces both the consequences of a yes vote for Obamacare and a
Republican candidate backed by Tea Party activists. Chiropractor David Madeira is just the type of novice candidate that could excite this conservative-leaning area no
doubt reeling from Carney's Obamacare vote. And this is just the type of race that can be impacted by the Tea Party movement. Right now this race projects as a
Weak DEM Hold, but it exudes the urge to flip to red by Election Day. However, if that is to be the case, Madeira or Tom Marino, the
other possible nominee, will have to overcome a substantial financial deficit. Carney has $665,000 in the bank. Neither Madeira nor Marino has eclipsed six
figures yet in that department.
House District 11: Democrat incumbent Paul Kanjorski has faced Republican Lou Barletta before - twice, in fact. In 2002, Kanjorski won the first
match up with 56% of the vote. Six years later, the two butted heads again. This time, even while President Obama was garnering 57% of the vote in
the district, Kanjorski needed all the help he could get to make it to 52%. The climate has changed for round three, and, for Barletta, that could make all the
difference. Two factors to keep in mind as we move toward the primaries and then onto the general election. First, how much fight will Corey O'Brien,
Kanjorski's primary opponent exert on the incumbent, and, second, how effective will Barletta be in closing an enormous fundraising gap which Kanjorski now leads 6 to
1? Time will tell, of course, but for now this race is classified as a Weak DEM Hold.
House District 12: The late John Murtha's unexpected passing has left this seat open and very much in play. At a Cook PVI of R+1, this district is
about as balanced as you can get. However, the coincidence of the special election to fill Murtha's seat with the statewide primary on May 18 may help Democrats
retain it. That's because in Pennsylvania's closed primary format, the Democrats' 2-1 edge in voter registration here provides them with a structural turnout
advantage. Yet, polls and pundit ratings would give the GOP a slight edge right now with Republican nominee Tim Burns leading the Democrats' pick Mark Critz by 3
in Public Policy Polling's mid-April survey. In light of that, the projection for the special election is a Weak GOP Gain. Given
the potential for Democratic turnout to be higher proportionally for this special election than they can expect to see in November, if they do lose the seat in 3 weeks, it will be a
very difficult task to take it back in 6 months. On the other hand, if Critz is victorious, this district is sure to land right back on the highly-vulnerable list once the
special election dust settles.
House District 15: At first glance, Bethlehem Mayor John Callahan appears to sit in an unusually strong position as a congressional challenger. He is
the party's first choice to run against the Republican incumbent in a district which boasts a slight Democratic lean, and his cash on hand outpaces the incumbent by $6000 -
something almost unheard of this early in a congressional race. Yet, the projection for this race is not all that close. Callahan's main problem is an issue of
timing. Had he contested for this seat two years ago, he would no doubt be poised to win it. This year, however, the climate just doesn't suit Democratic candidates
who have a penchant for raising taxes. (As Bethlehem mayor, he advocated a 17% increase in the local sales tax.) Illustrating voter sentiment, a
January poll conducted for incumbent Charlie Dent's campaign shows Dent with an overwhelming 53% to 27% lead over Callahan. Yes, this is a partisan poll, but
Callahan's climb is undeniably substantial even with the positives he has going for him. The opening projection is a Mod GOP Hold for
Dent. While this race could tighten, if could also widen if Callahan cannot counter the tax and spend mantle Dent is sure to try to pin on him.
House District 17: After re-districting gave this district a much stronger Republican lean, Democratic incumbent Tim Holden should have had a difficult,
if not impossible, challenge holding onto the House seat here. Instead, Holden has used a conservative voting record and strong personal ties to the more Republican
areas of the district to win the last several elections without any trouble - he claimed 64% of the vote here while President Obama could manage just 48%. Republicans
attribute his easy re-elections to a lack of formidable challengers, a shortcoming they think they can remedy this cycle. State Senator Dave Argull, they believe, can be
the threat Holden has not yet faced, and his strength is enhanced by the prevailing political winds. It remains to be seen if voters in the district will forgive him for
voting in his current job for an unpopular legislative pay raise, a move for which he has since apologized. Pundits appear to view Argull's candidacy in a positive light,
rating this race as competitive even considering Holden's previous overwhelming victories. Based on those sentiments, I rate this race a Mod
DEM Hold.
The Pennsylvania state page is one resource you'll want to take full advantage of.
Next stop: Rhode Island
Filed under:
Pennsylvania
PA Senate
PA House
PA Governor
posted by Scott Elliott at 6:51pm 04/25/10::
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|
| Saturday, April 24, 2010 |
|---|
| Fifty state tour - Pennsylvania preview (part 1) |
If you had to choose one state to focus on for the 2010 election cycle, Pennsylvania would be the best choice. If there is a red wave on the horizon, it could be a
tsunami in the Keystone State. Both the Senate race and the Governor's race are very much in play here, and an astonishing 10 of 19 total House seats are too.
After enjoying a high level of success in Pennsylvania over the last several election cycles - they've picked the governorship, both Senate seats and 5 House seats since 2000
- Democrats face a potential backlash that could cost them many of their recent gains.
Senate: As a former Republican, Arlen Specter cannot be happy with his current situation. Seeing easier access to power and a less doubtful path to
re-election, Specter granted the Democrats a then-filibuster-proof majority in the Senate by switching parties last April. That move, in his mind I'm sure, should have made
another term a strong likelihood for him. (At that time, he was trailing badly to his primary opponent Pat Toomey.) Unfortunately for him, the switcharoo did not work as he
had planned. Instead of breezing to another term against Toomey in the general election, he's now facing a strong primary challenge from within his new party in
Congressman Joe Sestak - and he continues to trail Toomey in the polls. Sestak's fortunes have faded a bit here lately, so it looks like Specter will at least win the
nomination. Once he gets to the general, though, I've become more convinced with each passing poll that Toomey can actually beat him. That sentiment is
reflected in the Weak GOP Gain projection I'm giving this race to start.
Governor: Any misgivings I have about Pennsylvania's willingness to elect a Republican to statewide office (i.e. Toomey beating Specter) is somewhat
allayed by the current outlook in this race. It appears at the moment that outgoing Democratic Governor Ed Rendell will take the (D) with him as he leaves. That's
because State Attorney General Tom Corbett, the presumptive GOP nominee, leads all Democratic contenders by double-digits in the polls. His closest rival is Dan
Onorato, an Allegheny county executive. That's good news for Democrats as he is also the front runner for the nomination. Corbett's strength in the polls is
another demonstration of what may be in store for the Democrats nationwide come November. In what should be at worst an even-money race for them, this contest is
projected as a Weak GOP Gain, and it could be argued that projection is calling it too close.
House District 3: In a classic partisan wave victory, Democrat Kathy Dahlkemper defeated incumbent GOP Congressman Phil English in 2008. In
2010, the classic power of incumbency gives her a good early position in her quest to keep the seat. If the current political climate did not favor the GOP, she would
probably coast to victory. That, however, is not the case, and she does face a rocky road to re-election. Republicans Paul Huber and Mike Kelly are
self-fundable candidates who can give Dahlkemper a run for her money. Either could win the nomination, and either would point to Dahlkemper's Obamacare
cave in the general election. Like Bart Stupak, she changed her vote from no to yes at the last minute. That decision alone brings her race into play. Time will tell if the
eventual GOP nominee can tighten this race from its current Mod DEM Hold rating.
House District 4: This district claims a Cook PVI rating of R+6, and Democratic incumbent Jason Altmire has won two elections here during Democratic wave years. Given those facts, one might expect this seat to be imminently vulnerable for the blue team. While it is certainly in play, it is not, however, on anyone's short list of
probable GOP takeovers. Sure, the GOP might win here if the Republican wave is of tidal proportions, but Altmire has sticking power this year due to the fact that he has nearly $1.2
million on hand - and no formidable Republicans challenging him. For the moment, this race is a Mod DEM Hold, though it's a coin flip as to whether it even
stays on Election Projection's tracking list.
House District 6: With his less-than-stellar conservative voting record, GOP incumbent Jim Gerlach isn't particularly well-liked in purist conservative circles, and he has
biennially had a major target on his back fastened by Democrats eager to get rid of him. Nevertheless, he keeps on winning elections - even in huge Democratic cycles. Last
year, Democrats appeared to finally get their wish as he opted to run for governor. That plan soon changed, and in January he announced his intent to run for re-election to his
House seat. His change of heart had a profound effect on this race. As Charlie Cook observes, "ever since Gerlach abandoned his run for governor and filed for re-election,
Democrats have been a total mess." And though he trails mightily against wealthy Democrat Doug Pike in fundraising, Cook attributes that to his "gubernatorial detour" and says
"come the fall, Gerlach should have the money he needs to make his case." With that in mind, this race has moved from likely Democratic pickup without him in the race to lean and
now likely GOP retention since he's jumped back in. We'll see how long the current Mod GOP Hold rating lasts, or if the prevailing trend eventually removes
him from the vulnerable list altogether.
That's enough for this first installment. In this pivotal state, we still have seven more competitive House races to go. I'll cover the rest in the next post.
Filed under:
Pennsylvania
PA Senate
PA House
PA Governor
posted by Scott Elliott at 10:00pm 04/24/10::
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| Friday, April 9, 2010 |
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| Rating change: Stupak's retirement colors MI-1 red |
Bart Stupak announced today he is not going to seek re-election to the seat in Michigan's first congressional district. While he claims the decision has nothing to do with his 11th hour
59th minute cave on Obamacare, he had to feel the pressure from the anger trained on him by conservative and pro-life groups in the aftermath of his last-minute betrayal.
Regardless of what actually moved him to quit, the open seat he leaves behind instantly becomes a toss-up in the minds of most pundits. Here at Election Projection, it's enough
to move the race over to the Republican column. In a flash, this seat goes from an uncompetitive Democratic hold to a Weak GOP Gain.
The projected balance of power in the House now reflects a net gain of 20 GOP seats. Current tally: 237 Democrats, 198 Republicans
Filed under:
Ratings changes
House
Pennsylvania
PA House
posted by Scott Elliott at 10:11pm 04/09/10::
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| Friday, February 19, 2010 |
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| Rating change: CQPolitics ratings updates net two more GOP House seats |
Twenty-four updated House race ratings were posted by CQ Politics today. Twenty favored the GOP. Among them, Democrat Baron Hill's bid for re-election in IN-9 was
downgraded from Likely DEM to Lean DEM. That change, aided by a poll out last month showing him 8-points behind former U.S. Rep. Mike Sodrel, moves the projection for that race
into the red here at Election Projection. Also, a previously projected Democratic takeover in IL-10 (Republican Senate nominee Mark Steven Kirk's old seat) has moved back to the
Republican column by virtue of CQ's rating change from Lean DEM to Toss-up. These two developments bump the projected GOP gain in the House up to 20, the halfway mark in their
quest for the House majority.
Filed under:
Ratings changes
House
Illinois
IL House
Pennsylvania
PA House
posted by Scott Elliott at 11:46pm 02/19/10::
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