Thought
premeditated, well calculated/The air's been tested, the people can't
wait/So, ahh, we agreed to send one, to swim from lost and found/See
truth be the life preserve, we can't drown/Drunk with the victory,
the Wu cavalry.
Whoof. Enough about New Jersey for the moment, huh? Let's take us a
breather and cool down with some scattered special elections
scheduled for 2013. We'll take a look at the Jersey gubernatorial
race in a few days.
Once again, Blue the Nation is a project for letting all my friends and family--and all their friends and family--know how they can help push this country to the left. It's not just about Presidential elections. It's not just about midterms. It's about the state legislatures. It's about statewide executives. It's about special elections. It's about every elected office. Every Democratic candidate, and even some moderate Republicans in states like Kansas and Georgia, needs your money, your time, your support, your energy. Here's a look at a few of those candidates, a few of those races.
Once again, Blue the Nation is a project for letting all my friends and family--and all their friends and family--know how they can help push this country to the left. It's not just about Presidential elections. It's not just about midterms. It's about the state legislatures. It's about statewide executives. It's about special elections. It's about every elected office. Every Democratic candidate, and even some moderate Republicans in states like Kansas and Georgia, needs your money, your time, your support, your energy. Here's a look at a few of those candidates, a few of those races.
We're all just gonna take a break and chill out with Rape-Face Paul Ryan. |
U.S.
House of Representatives
Until the DeMint/Scott situation, the only two special elections for the U.S.
House were extremely safe seats for the incumbent party. That doesn't
mean I don't think we should take a shot at MO-8, however. Remember,
aim high, everything can be winnable, blah blah blah.
Missouri
- 8th House District – date TBD, likely Spring 2013 or
early Summer 2013
Republican GOP representative Jo Ann Emerson is retiring. I kind of
understand politically-motivated timing of retirements—i.e.,
winning your seat before immediately retiring to keep it in your
party's control as long as possible—but it's not like the Eighth
was really up for grabs whether or not Emerson ran. She didn't need
to run to keep the seat red, is my point. I half-expect some crazy
scandal involving rent boys to crop up out of Emerson's past. Until
then, however, let's busy ourselves with figuring out what to do
about the MO-8 Congressional seat.
The election date has not been announced, but Emerson's retirement is
effective February 2013. By Missouri law, the election has to be
announced 10 weeks in advance, so we're already probably looking at
sometime in March at the earliest. Still, this one's probably going
to be the first of the national special elections (of which, so far,
there are three planned for 2013, with a fourth one almost 100% certain.)
Not to worry. Governor Jay Nixon has already dispatched a team of vampire hunters to drive a stake through the beast's heart before it rises again. |
Winnability:
Emerson—easily one of the
most awful human beings to ever darken the door of the United States
Congress—won her district by 47 points in 2012. Although that's her
largest-ever victory, it's pretty close to what all her other victory
margins were. She hasn't had a competitive campaign since her first
go-round, in 1996, when she ran as an independent. Arcane ballot
rules prohibited her from getting on the ballot after her incumbent
husband died, but she was still able to climb up just past 50%, with
the official GOP candidate taking another 10%. Taken together as a
conservative Republican bloc, they still beat their Democratic
opponent 61-37. So that's the best the Dems have done in MO-8 in the
era of Jo Ann Emerson. In this special election, I'm going to put the
over/under on Democratic performance at 40%. We're not gonna win this
thing. But if Democrats ignore it, they'll be making a grave mistake.
Who's on the
bench: We have a unique
opportunity to use this election as a laboratory. There's nothing to
lose, right? So let's try something novel. One of the most
fascinating Senate stories of 2012 was Heidi Heitkamp's upset of Rick
Berg up in North Dakota. At the outset of that race, nobody gave
Heitkamp a shot. But she went at the campaign in an old-fashioned
way, a way you just don't see that often anymore. So much of American
politics has become focused on urban centers—and rightly so,
because that's where the people are—that the game has become
totally urbanized. It's begun to feel like even the politicians with
a more rural constituency end up campaigning like city politicos. A
lot of advertising, lit-dropping, poll-checking...cookie-cutter
campaign stuff, the things any political hack can tell you to do.
"...add two parts progressive populism to one part down-home folksy appeal..." |
Heitkamp switched gears and engaged in what today's pundits call
“retail politics.” It used to just be called “campaigning.”
She went all over the state, connecting and, in many cases,
re-connecting with her electorate. As a lifelong public servant at
various levels of the state, she'd come into contact with many of her
voters over the years, and she remembered a lot of them, sometimes
decades later. I remember one observer writing that it was actually
possible that Heidi Heitkamp had personally met every single North
Dakota voter over the course of her life. That's huge, and it's a key
lesson in how Democrats can reclaim populism from the right.
"Yeah, haven't you heard? 'Retail politics' is the new jam. So call me a political consultant then, I guess. Shop smart. Shop S-Mart." |
The modern political dualism of “Democrats=liberal and elitist,
Republicans=conservative and populist” is not really correct, but
to the extent that it's perceived to be true, it's directly owed to
two things: Nixon's Southern strategy and the emergence of elements
like the Democratic Leadership Council. On the one hand, Republicans
began appealing to base, obvious racism, nativism, and the
generalized bigotry of the proudly undereducated rural masses. They
found their populist issues, which eventually grew to include “family
values” (really just striving to create a white Christian
theocracy.)
Family values. |
At the same time—and especially after the McGovern
fiasco—the Democratic Party came to be, if not dominated, then
certainly strongly informed, by fiscal conservatives like the guys on
the DLC. These centrists didn't care for “class warfare,” which
was the Democrats' populist issue and had been for decades. The
Republicans had a way to be populists; Democrats hamstrung theirs.
And so we lost the South. We lost the farmers. We lost the Midwest.
We lost the working class. We lost the very people we were most in a
position to help.
The idea that the Republican Party, an organization that exists
solely for the enrichment of the already-wealthy, would be the party
of populism is fucking disgraceful. And it's only possible because
Democrats abandoned their populist issue. But that issue's been dead
for so long that we can't just bring it back up. We have to do what
Heidi Heitkamp did. We have to remind the voters that populism,
speaking to voters' concerns, isn't just about piggybacking on
whatever issue has been declared to be What People Care About In The
Heartland by the pundit class, nor is it just about parroting the
Democratic party line. It's about actually going out there and
talking to voters. And not just at the occasional baby-kiss rally.
Heitkamp went everywhere. She trudged up and down, north, south,
east, west, front and back, all over North Dakota. And she won
herself an election. And I'll be damned if she loses that seat
anytime soon. Folk know who she is.
Pictured: A better encapsulation of What People Care About In The Heartland than anything Newt Gingrich wants to talk to you about. |
Missouri can be a perfect laboratory for testing this idea. In a way,
it's the perfect place to rally populists against the establishment.
In this special election, there will be no primaries. Parties will
select their nominees. The GOP will pretty much just be handing this
to whoever's been the most loyal and wants the seat. We're going to
be looking at a lazy, unproven campaigner, picked for being a
lifelong party hack, not expecting a vigorous challenge until the
scheduled election in 2014. Meanwhile, we get to pick the best
candidate with which to run the experiment. I think the ideal person
is somebody very local, with a long shadow all over the district. Not
a politico. Someone like a local business owner, or a longtime
sheriff. And it really shouldn't be anybody that a queer commie
tree-huggin' San Francisco Muslim Jewish gay Democrat Nazi socialist
like me, with my marijuana and my long hair, should have heard of.
So basically we need Joe Don Baker to be a Democrat, and to move to the Eighth Missouri Congressional District. Think you can take him? Well go ahead on. |
Importance: If
we win it's extremely important. If we lose it's meh. If we lose—even
if we lose big—we'll have lost nothing we had before the campaign.
You try to run a Big Blue Machine, straight-ahead Democrat with
political connections and history, Russ Carnahan type out there,
you're gonna get spanked in the Eighth. You try to run a conservative
Democrat like Claire McCaskill, who only won re-election statewide
because Todd Akin is
insane in the membrane, you're gonna get spanked in the Eighth. Run a
moderate Republican pretending to be a Democrat for the sake of a
major-party endorsement like Rich Carmona over in New Mexico, and
you're gonna get spanked in the Eighth.
That's a lot of spanking. |
Hell, Governor Jay Nixon
himself could run for the seat and he'd lose. There's no conventional
way to try to get this seat that's going to win you this election as
a Democrat, so let's try something weird and see what happens. If we
win, we gain an incredible new (old) way to campaign for blue collar
white votes. If we lose, we're in the same place we are right now.
Price Tag: Find
the candidate, build a ground army, get independent expenditures to
go negative hard and early and then back off as the election
approaches, while stressing that the candidate's campaign won't go
negative at all. I see $4M being a worthwhile investment here. That's
roughly seven times more than what Emerson raised through October
2012 for her re-election, and about double what she raised in 2010,
but you gotta go big on this experiment.
Illinois
- 2nd House District – April 9, 2013
Oh Jesse Jackson, Jr. We hardly knew ye. I mean, really,
we hardly knew ye. All ye did was constantly try to build another
airport in Chicago. I think ye were even successful, although I don't
think I give a shit. At any rate, the era of the ol' Triple-J is now
over, and it's time for the Democratic machine to churn out an
establishment candidate who will win a special election very easily.
Pictured: The raw material used by the two major parties to create a machine candidate. Michael Breyer was sculpted from this batch. |
Winnability:
Winning this race will not be
like shooting fish in a barrel. It will be like shooting a barrel.
From right next to it. Let me explain something: Jesse Jackson, Jr.
won re-election in 2012 while
not campaigning at all and convalescing in a mental hospital
somewhere, while under investigation for mismanagement of campaign
funds and other various acts of corruption.
And he won extremely easily. Now sure, part of that is that he's
Jesse Jackson's son. Part of it is also that this race is literally
impossible for a Republican to win.
Who's
on the bench: Dude, you could
run Tommy Carcetti for this seat and he'd win. And he's from
Baltimore! And he's fictional!
Hey there. Hey buddy. I'm comin' for your state. |
Importance:
In the sense that it's a seat
in the House of Representatives? Yeah, it's super important. In the
sense that no one outside of Chicago political insiders should give a
damn who wins? Pretty much not gonna pay attention to this one.
Price
Tag: Remember
way back when this all started and I mentioned that the Democrats and
their allied interests shouldn't spend one dime on non-competitive
races? This is the kind of race I was talking about. Whoever gets the
nomination should feel free to raise whatever funds he or she wants,
and I suppose the candidate will probably need a few thousand bucks
for, I don't know, staples and stuff like that, but if you're trying
to figure out what to do with your money, don't spend it on the
special election in IL-2. The amount of money that the candidate, the
party, and the allied interest groups will need to spend on this race
is pretty much an accounting error compared to what we'll be spending
on other races.
South
Carolina - 1st
House District – TBD, probably sometime in May
Jim
DeMint resigns from the Senate. Tim Scott is selected by the Governor
as his replacement. Tim Scott's seat in the House becomes vacant.
Special election time. People say this seat is a Republican hold for
sure. I have my doubts.
Every fiber of my being wants to make a mint-related pun right now. So instead, this is happening. |
Winnability:
History,
and conventional wisdom, say the Republicans are heavy favorites
here. I understand that viewpoint. Tim Scott has been very
successful, winning both of his elections to the seat by nearly 30
points. Before him, Henry E. Brown won with huge margins in 2000,
2002, 2004, and 2006. 2008, however, should give us pause.
That
year, Brown was challenged by Linda Ketner. Linda Ketner is openly
gay. She is a progressive. She is (obviously) a woman. She is a
Democrat, and she was running in a district that had elected its
current incumbent Republican Congressman four times by an average
margin of 56 points and 103,383 votes. This was a district, by the
way, that would elect Tim Scott by 36.7 points and 85,747 votes two
years later.
No
way this lady can win, right? Wrong. Well, I mean, she didn't win,
but she came really close. She lost by four points and about 14,000
votes. Now it's true that 2008 was a wave year for the Democrats, but
South Carolina's Congressional delegation didn't change one bit, in
terms of partisan makeup. All six incumbents—four Republicans and
two Democrats—kept their seats. And it's also true that the First
District has been redrawn since that election, but it was arguably
redder in 2008 and 2010 than the new version is today, and certainly
not any less red.
Back
then, it contained most of light-blue Charleston County, part of
light-red Georgetown County, and most of solid-red Horry County.
Today it consists of most of light-blue Charleston County, pieces of
solid-red Dorchester and Berkeley Counties, a little bit of
light-blue Colleton County, and most of solid-red Beaufort County. So
you have to give a lot of credit to Ketner, and also to what must be
called a slowly shifting electorate on the South Carolina coast. 2008
isn't a complete aberration.
Pictured: Linda Ketner at a campaign rally in late October 2008. |
So
why the disparity in results? Leaving aside the presence of Barack
Obama at the top of the ticket and 2008's wave election, what can
Democrats recapture from Ketner's candidacy? Keep in mind that 2012
was a minor Democratic wave election, but it didn't help whoever was
running against Tim Scott. Neither did Obama's coattails.
Tim
Scott is a charismatic candidate, much more so than Brown, who never
really had to run in a competitive race until 2008. He had the power
of a Republican wave on his side in 2010 and the incumbency in 2012.
It's unclear who will get the nomination from either party in 2013,
and it's just as unclear what the political temperature of this
district will be come May. But with no incumbent and no clear
election wave—at least nothing overwhelming—materializing
nationally, this race is much more up for grabs than pundits think it
is.
2012
was the first election held in the new First District, so that's all
the data we can go on in terms of turnout. Just a hair over 290,000
people cast ballots in the House race. About 160,000 people voted in
Charleston County, most of whom were voting in the First District.
Based on coastal South Carolina's usual turnout trends, I would
expect about 190,000 D1 voters overall, 90,000 from Charleston
County, in a normal midterm Congressional election such as 2010 or
2014. But this is an off-year special election, which should drive
turnout down even further. Expect about 130,000 voters in the
election, with about half of them coming from Charleston County.
Pictured: One of the busier precincts in the last South Carolina special election. |
Obviously
a huge part of making this race interesting will be a concerted
effort to get the Democratic base to the polls for an off-year
special election. But assuming the county's usual 54-46 Democratic
tilt, a Dem candidate here can expect to win the county about
35,000-30,000. To win the seat, the candidate would then need to find
30,000 more votes somewhere else in the district. Put another way,
the candidate would need to lose the rest of the district by no more
than about 5,000 votes.
Who's
on the bench: Well,
there's Ketner, and I think she would make by far the most sense, but
she doesn't seem interested in running for elected office right now.
She politely declined numerous requests that she run against Scott in
2010, and she again declined to run in 2012. More recently, and more
to the point, sources close to her are saying she's ruled out running
in 2013 as well. I don't really understand why, but whatever.
The
Democratic bench in the district isn't phenomenal, but it isn't
horrible either. We've got Stephen Colbert's sister Elizabeth, who
works in the administration at Clemson. We've got the state
Representative for the 119th
district, Leonidas Stavrinakis (awesome
name.)
And we've got Ashley Cooper, who didn't lose that badly in 2010 when
he ran for Lt. Governor. Other possibilities include D121 state
Representative Kenneth Hodges, D116 state Rep Robert Brown, D111
state Rep Wendell Gilliard, D103 state Rep Carl Anderson, and D43
state Senator Robert Ford. Personally, my pick would be Ford, but any
of these candidates would be a formidable opponent for the GOP,
particularly given that the Republican nominee is probably going to
be treating the election as a formality.
THIS! IS! SPARTA! ...actually, this is Leonidas Stavrinakis. |
Importance:
The
most important race we've looked at since the beginning of the blog. Hands down. It's a winnable
seat in the U.S. House of Representatives, but widely seen as a
likely Republican hold. If we win here, we make a statement that the
2012 Democratic coalition is going to keep showing up at the polls.
We pick up a seat in the House, cutting the GOP lead to 233-202. We
strike fear into every Southern Republican politician. And we
probably position ourselves well to make serious runs at both
South Carolina Senate seats in 2014.
Price
Tag:
As much as we have to spend on it. I'd like to see two or three
million Democratic dollars spent on the race, at minimum. Up next: The Big Blue One...