Posted on 09/06/2009 4:04:12 AM PDT by Kaslin
The best observation that any politico can offer on the three-way U.S. Senate race in Pennsylvania between Republican Pat Toomey and two Democrats, U.S. Rep. Joe Sestak and incumbent Sen. Arlen Specter, is that its complicated.
So many unpredictable dynamics can affect it, including the economy, health care, the war in Afghanistan, and people's perceptions of President Obama, Congress and the two political parties.
Pretend the Pennsylvania electorate is normally distributed in a bell-curve along an ideological spectrum. Now pretend two different scenarios divide the electorate; the candidate with the most people on his side wins, right?
If the candidates are Toomey versus Sestak, the electorate divides more evenly because of where each is positioned relative to the other. When they split the difference between them, they also split the electorate nearly in half.
Villanova professor Lara Brown says that electoral math is why Toomey should prefer Sestak over Specter: (If) Specter were his opponent in a general election, Specter might be able to squeak out a win by pulling Democrats who would have no one else to vote for, independents who lean Republican, and liberal Republicans who voted for Specter in the past.
Toomey should prefer to run against Sestak, in other words, because those former Specter GOP-aligned voters are more likely to side with him.
Sestak is likely to be okay with helping Toomey at this stage because Sestak, first and foremost, wants to be able to have a chance to compete in the general election.
If Sestak does the math, he knows that if he wins the primary, he should be able to win the general election. Even if they split the electorate, the electorate favors Dems at the moment; there are 1.2 million more registered Democrats than Republicans in the state.
Toomey and Sestak also are savvy enough to know the 2010 Senate race will be all about Arlen Specter, not about either of them.
Villanovas Brown says the centerpiece for either challenger is contrasting his civil campaign with Specters crass political maneuvering first being a Democrat, then running and serving as a Republican, then switching back to Democrat when it appeared he might lose, then being for, against and once more for labors Employee Free Choice Act.
I mean, really, Brown says. What is he going to say at the AFL-CIO convention in a couple of weeks?
Which brings us to Sestaks huge Obama problem: Next week in Pittsburgh, the president and Specter will address the national AFL-CIO convention; Sestak was excluded. An interesting decision, considering that labor has sent out plenty of mailers to members asking them to elbow Specter on his tepid labor positions.
This is only the tip of the iceberg that Sestak will face in the form of the Obama political machine.
If his primary race appears to be close (and in all likelihood it will), Sestak can expect a ruthless campaign to defeat him, orchestrated by Obamas best operatives.
He had best be prepared for the Chicago politics coming his way and run as fast as he can to the netroots for support. And he had best be prepared to tell voters and the media about the tactics being used against him by his own party.
If not, we will once again see a Toomey-vs.-Specter race.
Specter, for his part, is counting on Obama and Gov. Ed Rendell to put him over the top. Both politicians may not necessarily be an asset as 2010 approaches, however.
Obama's numbers have fallen and continue to slide. Rendell's numbers have fallen, too; if he allows a state cigarette tax to pass, it will hurt blue-collar voters more than white-collar voters and that could hurt him with the voting demographic he plans to help deliver to Specter.
Right now Obama is losing ground but Republicans are not gaining any, which makes any assessment premature. Yet one thing to note is Toomeys maturing as a candidate: He is edging to the center in his campaign, thanks to the Sestak-Specter battle, running more like the guy who once ran for and won a Democrat-leaning congressional seat.
Toomey still will have a tough time. Yet if a sizeable national trend toward the GOP occurs in 2010, then anything is possible; thats how Rick Santorum won his U.S. Senate seat in 1994.
Interesting times in Pennsylvania. But interesting, in this case, means unpredictable.
Specter has always survived by playing both sides against the middle.
Specter’s party switch has hurt him on both sides....Republicans do not like the switch and Democrats never viewed Specter as one of their own....and still don’t.
Sestak is an opportunist who is backed by the Clinton cabal.
This Dem primary fight may be Obama vs Clinton.
Sphincter is a craven party-shopper.
Republicans ought to give him a taste of his own medicine by switching parties in order to vote against him in the Democratic primary.
Wouldn’t that be deliciously ironic?
Correct. Which is why, at this moment, I’m leaning toward keeping my jackass registration and voting for Specter in the primary. He needs the rematch with Toomey which he tried so hard to avoid and he’ll have “Obama Rubberstamp” written all over him.
The proble was, is, and will be still the people of PA and their desire for big government.
An understatement.
A dream scenario for Toomey would be Sestak winning the Dem. primary and Specter deciding to run as an Indie.
In this political and economic climate, I think Toomey has a very good chance regardless of who runs against him.
An empty suit who enjoys his role and the backing of the Clintons. I think Sestak can win over Specter - Specter's played both sides against the middle too long and now pi$$ed off both. I hope Toomey can beat either one.
I disagree with the author. I think Specter will be easier for Toomey to beat than Sestack. 2010 is going to be an anti-incumbent year, unlike any we have ever seen. Toomey will do better in blue PA against an incumbent turncoat Republican than an unknown Democrat who can distance himself from the establishment.
An understatement.
Rendell is rapidly becoming the most hated Governor in the history of the commonwealth, outside of his native Filthadelphia.
The two-month long budget impasse has cost him dearly, and it may not be resolved until Chirstmas. HO HO HO!
Have to disagree with Salena on this one. Specter's a dead man walking with Obama. Arlen's already been thrown under the bus.
I agree with your Post #9.
[Right now Obama is losing ground but Republicans are not gaining any, which makes any assessment premature.]
Not true. Republicans have gained ground according to the polls.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.