Posted on 09/26/2002 8:05:37 AM PDT by BlackRazor
Gekas On the Ropes?
By Lauren W. Whittington
At a closed-door meeting Tuesday, National Republican Congressional Committee Chairman Tom Davis (Va.) told party leaders that Rep. George Gekas is the only GOP incumbent currently trailing in tracking polls, sparking efforts to aid the endangered Pennsylvanian in his race against Rep. Tim Holden (D).
The 72-year-old Gekas, facing his first serious re-election challenge in two decades, is battling Holden, 45, in a race set up by redistricting.
Davis' assessment was backed up by a recently conducted Democratic poll that showed Gekas trailing Holden by 10 points.
The survey, conducted Sept. 19-21 by the Alexandria-based polling firm Cooper & Secrest Associates, found Holden with the support of 48 percent of those polled to Gekas' 38 percent. The polling also indicated that the two incumbents had almost equal name recognition within the redrawn district.
"The national Republicans' palpable panic about Gekas' prospects arises from numbers like these," the polling memo stated.
Republicans contend, however, that the race is much tighter but still not where they would like it to be.
"It's essentially a tied race," said one GOP strategist. "Which it should not be."
The two Members were forced to run against each other after their districts were merged by the GOP-controlled state Legislature. The redrawn 17th contains about 40 percent of Holden's current 6th district and about 60 percent of the current 17th, now represented by Gekas.
The district favors Republicans but Democrats note that Holden, an energetic campaigner, has run and won in a marginal district before. In 2000 he won re-election with 66 percent of the vote, while the district voted 54 percent to elect President Bush.
In the redrawn district, Bush would have taken 57 percent, according to Republican estimates, a drop from the 61 percent Bush won in Gekas' current 17th.
In the three other Member-versus-Member matchups, the NRCC chairman told leaders that Republicans are strongly positioned to win two of the races, according to sources who attended Tuesday's meeting.
In Connecticut, Rep. Nancy Johnson (R) led Rep. Jim Maloney (D) by 9 points in Republican tracking polls. Meanwhile, in Mississippi, Rep. Chip Pickering (R) had a solid 17-point lead over Rep. Ronnie Shows (D).
In the only other incumbent matchup, Republican Rep. John Shimkus (Ill.) had only a slim lead over his opponent, Rep. David Phelps (D-Ill.), according to Republican tracking numbers. Davis said polls showed Shimkus' lead at 4 points.
Democrats recently released a poll that showed Phelps leading Shimkus 40 percent to 38 percent, a lead within the survey's margin of error. Shimkus currently represents about 63 percent of the territory, while Phelps represents 34 percent.
Although the redrawn district favors the GOP, the growing backlash against Republicans in Illinois could have an impact on the race. State Attorney General Jim Ryan (R) trails Rep. Rod Blagojevich (D) badly in polls, while current Gov. George Ryan's (R) approval ratings are abysmal.
Pennsylvania is also holding a gubernatorial election this year, but so far there is no indication either party will get a trickle-down benefit from a tide in the state.
But while Gekas has become a focal point of concern for GOPleaders, they are hardly ready to write the race off. National Republican Congressional Committee spokesman Steve Schmidt said it would be difficult for any Democrat to overcome the demographics of the central Pennsylvania seat.
"This race is very simple: This is a Republican district," Schmidt said. "At the end of the day this very Republican district will elect Republican George Gekas."
Holden campaign manager Bruce Andrews disagreed with that assertion, insisting "voters in central Pennsylvania are too smart to fall for a blatant partisan appeal."
Schmidt also said Holden's ads "claiming he is a conservative ... will not stand up under scrutiny."
In a further effort to help tout his conservative credentials Holden campaigned this week with Rep. Charlie Stenholm (D-Texas), the ranking member on the Agriculture Committee. Both are members of the conservative Blue Dog Coalition.
The Keystone State appearance by Stenholm, one of the most conservative Democrats in the House, was also meant to illustrate Holden's history on the panel.
Holden, a former Schuylkill County sheriff, has served on the Agriculture Committee since entering Congress in 1993. Gekas, elected in 1982, was given a seat just prior to the House adjourning for the August recess this year.
Holden has consistently outpaced Gekas in fundraising, the only Democrat in a Member-Member matchup to achieve that feat.
But Gekas' campaign is being heavily supported by national Republicans, who have sent staff and other resources to Pennsylvania on his behalf. The NRCC has done several mailings for Gekas and will likely spend somewhere between $1.5 million and $2 million on ads alone before the race is over.
Holden's campaign said the Republicans' "Monopoly money" won't be able to make up the difference in the race.
"They can keep spending as much as they want but people know the two candidates, and having an independent centrist rather than a rubber stamp for his party's leadership is what people want," Andrews said.
No real surprises in any of the polling discussed in this article. It's been obvious that Gekas was in a tough fight for quite awhile. I've had PA-17 as a toss-up from the start. The numbers that really concern me are the IL-19 numbers. Most people had given Shimkus the edge there, but GOP polling only gives him a 4-point lead. With the GOP troubles in Illinois, Blagojevich's coattails in the Governor's race might give the Democrats a good chance at a win there.
If you want on or off my poll ping list, let me know!
I agree that the lopsided gubernatorial race is going to hurt Shimkus, but thought that the US Senate and US House races come first on the ballot. Please advise, many thanks!
As for Shimkus-Phelps, it's obvious the latter has been closing, but I don't necessarily think the GOP meltdown in IL will be as bad as previously thought (though it may be bad enough). Probably a slim win for Shimkus, 52-48%.
Pickering has done a very good job of campaigning...he recently started a very hard hitting ad on country radio stations straight up calling Shows a liberal who claims to be a conservative. The clear message is the southern whites to vote for new conservative party and not the old -and liberal- democratic party.
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