Posted on 04/28/2007 7:59:26 PM PDT by RobFromGa
FIRST PASS 4/29/07
EIGHTEEN MONTHS AWAY FROM NOV 2008 election, heres a list of the 33 Senate races. The GOP is defending 21 seats, and the Dems defend 12.
THere are 67 Senate seats that are not up for election. The GOP starts with 28 carryover seats, and the Dems start with 39 (counting the 2 liberal independents).
I am just getting into these contests and up to speed regarding many of them, there might be errors here, and I look to get input from fellow Freepers in order to update this information. I plan to put up a new thread in November 2007 with the updates and information on the various Senate primaries.
There are another 18 seats that are essentially SAFE, barring some major change of events between now and November 2008, 12 for the GOP and 6 for the Dems.
SAFE GOP SEATS [12]
AK- (R= current seatholder)- Stevens safe
AL- R- Sessions safe
GA- R- Chambliss safe
ID- R- Craig* safe (may retire- should still be safe GOP)
KS- R- Roberts safe
KY- R- McConnell safe
MS- R- Cochran safe
NE- R- Hagel* safe (may retire)
OK- R- Inhofe safe
NM- R- Domenici safe
TX- R- Cornyn safe
WY- R- Enzi safe
GOP: 12 safe + 28 carryovers = 40 minimum GOP
SAFE DEM/INDEPENDENT SEATS [6]
DE- (D=current status)- Biden safe
IL- D- Durbin safe
MA- D- Kerry safe
MI- D- Levin safe
RI- D- Reed safe
WV- D- Rockefeller safe (I wish we could make this a GOP seat! somehow)
DEMS: 6 safe + 39 carryovers = 45 minimum DEM
The FIFTEEN SENATE CONTESTS (Ranked most likely GOP to least)
TN- R seat- ALEXANDER vs. ??? (80%)
SC- R seat- L. GRAHAM vs. ??? (80%) primary challenge
VA- R seat- J. WARNER vs. M. Warner ??? (70%) might retire
ME- R seat- COLLINS (RINO) vs. ??? (65%)
NC- R seat- DOLE vs. ??? (60%)
MN- R seat- COLEMAN vs. Franken (lol)??? (50%)
SD- D seat- Rounds? vs. JOHNSON (50%) Johnson health issues a big wild card
LA- D seat- ??? vs. LANDRIEU (45%)
AR- D seat- Huckabee? vs. PRYOR (45%)
OR- R seat- SMITH (RINO) vs. ??? (45%) Sizemore primary challenge?
CO- R seat- OPEN* Rayburn? (ALLARD self term limited retiring) vs. Udall? (45%)
NH- R seat- SUNUNU vs. ??? (40%)
MT- D seat- Racicot? vs. BAUCUS (35%)
IA- D seat- ??? vs. HARKIN (30%)
NJ- D seat- ??? vs. LAUTENBERG (20%) dont waste money in NJ!
^^^^^^^^^^^^ We need 11 of these 15 seats to control the Senate 51-49 ^^^^^^^^^^^^
Our best chances to pickup seats: SD, LA, AR
Our toughest seats to defend: NH, CO, OR, MN
It is going to be a very difficult uphill battle to retake the Senate in 2008.
Thanks for the ping!
Jim Webb`s impeachment will go a long way toward taking back the senate.
The question is - Can Giuliani provide coattails to protect Collins, Smith, Sununu, and Coleman?
{I dont see Hilllary or Obama drawing in a lot of the middle}
I agree with you about Hillary. But Obama will get plenty of mushy indies. Should Obama get the Dem nomination, the media shall not say anything negative about him at all. Obama’s strength is proof that the liberal media still has power.
It is official now: Former Rep. Schaffer to run for Senate
Senate Update 2008
Colorado: After the surprise departure from the race of former Rep. Scott McInnis (R), former Rep. Bob Schaffer (R) appears to be the only one willing to take up the mantle for the GOP in this year’s Senate race.
Rep. Mark Udall (D), the putative Democratic nominee, begins with an enormous financial advantage with more than $1.5 million in the bank. Colorado has been trending Democratic, and the loss of the seat of retiring Sen. Wayne Allard (R) would signal another step in this ominous trend for the GOP that already includes the loss of the other Senate seat in 2004, the loss of the governorship, the loss of former Rep. Bob Beauprez’s seat in the Denver suburbs last year, and the loss of both chambers of the state legislature.
Maine: Rep. Tom Allen (D-Maine) is surely a more formidable challenger to Sen. Susan Collins (R) than her 2002 opponent, Chellie Pingree (D). Collins is a moderate who is nonetheless the more conservative of Maine’s two Republican senators. She is beloved in Maine, but after the defeat of so many Northeastern Republican moderates in 2006 — including Sen. Lincoln Chafee (R-R.I.) — there is doubt as to whether they can long survive.
Allen already had more than $800,000 on hand to Collins’s $1.2 million in campaign money as of the end of March. Her fundraising clip was much faster in the first quarter, but this will change as soon as he makes his official announcement over the Memorial Day weekend. Collins is already being attacked by outside groups on television for opposing an Iraq withdrawal timetable.
Minnesota: With no serious top-tier candidate emerging to challenge freshman Sen. Norm Coleman (R-Minn.), Republicans here are breathing a sigh of relief. Coleman caught a break with the prospect that comedian and radio talk-show host Al Franken will likely be his Democratic opponent for re-election next year. Coleman will benefit from the presence of the Republican National Convention in Minneapolis next year.
Minnesota went largely blue in the 2006 elections, and the overriding Republican national outlook for 2008 is poor. However, Coleman leads Franken, a polarizing figure, in the few polls taken so far, and Coleman’s favorables are much better than those of the comedian. Wealthy lawyer Mike Ciresi is also seeking the Democratic nomination, but Franken is equally well financed and is a favorite among anti-Bush activists.
Oregon: Republican Sen. Gordon Smith, considered vulnerable for re-election from the blue state of Oregon, also was fortunate in losing his toughest potential Democratic foe. Rep. Pete DeFazio (D) decided instead to stay in the House, where he is chairman of an important Transportation and Infrastructure subcommittee.
Smith’s fundraising has been excellent, leaving him with $2.8 million on hand at the end of the last quarter. His poll numbers had been problematic, but he has deliberately and vocally distanced himself from President Bush on the Iraq War, which is likely to help him quite a bit. Also helpful will be the non-aggression pact he has with his colleague, popular Sen. Ron Wyden (D), who will basically sit on his hands during the election.
DeFazio holds down a very competitive district, and so his decision to stay in the House makes life a bit easier for Democratic Congressional Campaign Chairman Christopher Van Hollen (D-Md.).
Democrats would like to entice Rep. Earl Blumenauer (D) into this race, but his small war chest (about $400,000) and his majority position on the Ways and Means Committee could deter him from taking such a risk. Smith has been targeted before to no effect, but Oregon has become much bluer since his 2002 re-election. Republicans, already staring down a Senate year in which they will likely lose seats, would love to have this race taken off the map.
credit on info in #66 is to Robert Novak email.
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