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Democratic Losses Hit State Farm Teams Hard
Roll Call ^ | 11/9/10 | Steve Peoples

Posted on 11/10/2010 9:42:23 AM PST by randita

Back to Article Democratic Losses Hit State Farm Teams Hard

By Steve Peoples

Roll Call Staff

Nov. 9, 2010, 11:30 p.m.

While the GOP celebrates historic gains in the House, Republicans in state capitals across the country are cheering massive pickups that wiped out key Democratic bench players — a shift that they say may shape elections for years to come.

From Minnesota to Montana, Democrats lost state Speakers, Senate Majority Leaders, lieutenant governors and other up-and-comers whose political futures are now uncertain at best.

Nowhere is the shift more apparent than in New Hampshire, where the GOP won all three federal races and picked up a record 124 seats in the 400-member state House of Representatives.

“We didn’t just beat them. We cleaned out their entire bench. Everyone they talked about running for Congress, governor, down the line. They’re all gone,” said Ryan Williams, spokesman for the New Hampshire Republican Party. “They were building a good farm team. But the farm team is not around anymore.”

The high-profile losses include Maggie Hassan, the state Senate Majority Leader rumored to have greater ambitions. Another is Deb Pignatelli, a member of the governor’s executive council, also thought to have interest in running for Congress.

Granite State Democrats acknowledge the painful losses but insist their bench remains strong.

“We’re feeling very confident moving forward,” New Hampshire Democratic Party spokesman Harrell Kirstein said. “In a state that’s as fiercely independent as New Hampshire, politics are very cyclical. The pendulum swung one way and will swing back the other way.”

He added that President Barack Obama personally phoned unsuccessful 2nd district Congressional candidate Ann McLane Kuster (D) the day after the election to encourage her to challenge Rep.-elect Charlie Bass (R) in 2012. “Annie Kuster is on track to beat Congressman Bass in two years,” Kirstein said.

The Granite State is just one example, however, in a landslide election that saw the GOP pick up at least 675 seats in state legislatures across the nation, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. Republicans flipped 19 chambers, including the House and Senate in six states: Alabama, Maine, Minnesota, New Hampshire, North Carolina and Wisconsin.

“They’re going to have to do some serious rebuilding,” said Mark Jefferson, executive director of the Wisconsin Republican Party. “Some of their best talent, or people considered to be their best talent, have really taken it on the chin.”

Wisconsin Democrats lost Assembly Speaker Mike Sheridan, Senate Majority Leader Russ Decker, a rising star in lieutenant governor candidate Tom Nelson and state Sen. Pat Kreitlow, a former television personality thought to have statewide appeal.

Jefferson also said that Democratic Rep. Ron Kind may have narrowly survived his re-election bid in the 3rd district, but negative press that surfaced in the campaign’s final weeks could hurt his prospects for running for statewide office in the future. Kind is viewed as having Senate aspirations whenever Sen. Herb Kohl (D), who is up for re-election in 2012, decides to retire.

“He came out of that race seriously wounded,” Jefferson said of Kind. Like their colleagues in other states, Wisconsin Democrats admit to having a disappointing cycle but downplay the lasting effects of the 2010 drubbing.

“Let them do their victory lap, but it’ll be one lap exactly. ... We have a pretty deep bench here,” said Graeme Zielinski, communications director for the Wisconsin Democratic Party. “They will have to own their record at some point soon. A week in power, they have been talking about gays, guns, banning fake weed. They haven’t been talking about creating jobs. They’ve been talking about their weirdo, right agenda.”

In Minnesota, Republicans claimed 41 seats between both chambers, taking control of the state Senate for the first time in history. State GOP Chairman Tony Sutton says the political landscape may have changed forever.

“You had a thinning of the herd,” he said of Democrats. “And it thinned out those that are more middle-of-the-road Democrats. In some respects it will make it hard for them legislatively; the people that are left are very liberal. And they’re left with an urban-centric delegation in a state that is largely suburban and rural.”

For example, Senate Majority Whip Kathy Saltzman (D) was defeated in her Washington County district, despite having won the endorsement of the state Chamber of Commerce.

While the GOP cheers the loss of up-and-comers like Saltzman, last week’s shift also elevates the Republican farm team’s prospects. Minnesota’s Senate will now feature the first female Republican president and Majority Leader combination, according to Sutton, who added that the likely new Republican House Speaker, Kurt Zellers, “is a real rising star” at just 41 years old.

In New Hampshire, however, there are signs that the defeated Democrats might not be gone for long. In addition to Kuster’s likely candidacy, Pignatelli offered supporters cause for optimism in a message posted on her website.

“It’s clear that what happened here in New Hampshire was stunning, even for politics. There will be lots written about it, that’s for sure,” she wrote. “A favor — as you travel on the roads in District 5, if you see any of my signs along the roadside, will you please stop and pick them up? Would appreciate it. Maybe you’d be willing to save them for a couple of years.


TOPICS: Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Alabama; US: Maine; US: Minnesota; US: New Hampshire; US: North Carolina; US: Wisconsin
KEYWORDS: 2010; 2010election; 2010midterms; democrats; elections; fail; gop; governor; obama; statelegislature
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With the energy of the Tea Party movement at the local and state levels, this phenomenon will continue to grow.
1 posted on 11/10/2010 9:42:34 AM PST by randita
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To: Impy; Clintonfatigued; Coop; AuH2ORepublican; InterceptPoint

*


2 posted on 11/10/2010 9:43:47 AM PST by randita
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To: randita

Conservatives everywhere have known for years that the country was headed for an Obama-style dictatorship... we just didn’t know in advance which of the dicks would be the tator.

Now we have Obama and everybody knows.

I guess it took us to get this far for the average voter to realize what conservatives have known for years: the demonrat party is the party of dictatorship.


3 posted on 11/10/2010 9:47:21 AM PST by samtheman
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To: randita
Swinging thoughts back to the Democrats (their miserable plight the topic of this news piece), seems to me that they'll continue to have capable candidates but they'll be coming at us more directly from the special interests that make up the Democrat party.

Instead of the "bought" representative who does the bidding of his masters in Planned Parenthood, we'll have one of the old bulldykes herself out there running as a Democrat ~ in the open.

I'm sure that's in their emergency fallback plan ~ we'll lose an edge in name-calling chits because we'll no longer be able to call them "corrupt", simply "evil" and "barbaric".

4 posted on 11/10/2010 9:47:29 AM PST by muawiyah (GIT OUT THE WAY ~ REPUBLICANS COMIN' THROUGH)
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To: randita

The GOP doesn’t have much time to stop this inflationary debt spiral at the federal level. We can’t have a 10-year strategy to balance the budget, it needs to be balanced this coming year.


5 posted on 11/10/2010 9:49:36 AM PST by GeronL (http://libertyfic.proboards.com <--- My Fiction/ Science Fiction Board)
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To: randita

I agree with you 100%. Im attending a meeting tonite sponsored by the T party groups..in BROWARD county Florida of all places. They are working on a plan to have a mass call/email/fax system during the next couple of yrs. Hits issues on local/state/Fed levels.

America is coming back..it will take a couple of elections but we are on the right track.


6 posted on 11/10/2010 9:52:41 AM PST by rrrod (at home in Medellin Colombia)
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To: randita
“We didn’t just beat them. We cleaned out their entire bench. Everyone they talked about running for Congress, governor, down the line. They’re all gone,” said Ryan Williams, spokesman for the New Hampshire Republican Party.

I think our NH party chairman John Sununu deserves tremendous credit for 2010's success.

7 posted on 11/10/2010 9:52:41 AM PST by billorites (freepo ergo sum)
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To: randita

The real advantage to the conservative movement is now in all those states that have Republican guvs and state houses a small army of ready campaign workers exists for candidates in future elections. The “Progressives” will have to build their own next time. Not that Soros doesn’t have the money but even his pit isn’t bottomless and it takes time.


8 posted on 11/10/2010 9:53:26 AM PST by Don Corleone ("Oil the gun..eat the cannolis. Take it to the Mattress.")
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To: randita

Well, unfortunately two of the things that the Republicans need to do for the good of the country is:

1. End the ethanol scam. To avoid hardships to farmers who have been sucked into this, this should be done over a period of maybe three or four years, cutting back the amount of ethanol in gasoline year by year.

2. Cut the farm subsidies. Not sure if they can be ended entirely, but we have to stop biasing them toward the big factory farm/political contributors, and we have to cut them way back.

The problem with this is that the last time the Republicans tried this, quite a few years ago, they promptly lost all the midwestern farm states to the Democrats.

AT LEAST cut the ethanol scam, starting ASAP. I think even the greenies now understand that that was a stupid idea.


9 posted on 11/10/2010 9:54:40 AM PST by Cicero
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To: randita

At first glimpse, I thought this was about State Farm Insurance. Boy was I glad I read on.


10 posted on 11/10/2010 9:57:08 AM PST by bamagirl1944 (That's short for Alabama, not Obama)
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To: billorites

I’m not from NH, but I’ve found a new tagline-see below.

I love baseball and I love baseball metaphors. This one is perfect.


11 posted on 11/10/2010 9:57:09 AM PST by randita (“We didn’t just beat them. We cleaned out their entire bench"...Ryan Williams, NH Republican Party)
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To: kingattax

Lepanto Destruction PING!!


12 posted on 11/10/2010 9:59:23 AM PST by DarthVader (Nov 2 2010: That which supports Barack Hussein Obama must be sterilized and there are NO exceptions!)
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To: randita
400-member state House of Representatives

400 for NH? The whole US only has 435.

13 posted on 11/10/2010 10:01:25 AM PST by xp38
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To: randita
Nowhere is the shift more apparent than in New Hampshire, where the GOP won all three federal races and picked up a record 124 seats in the 400-member state House of Representatives.

New Hampshire needs 400 state House reps ????? are you kidding me ????

14 posted on 11/10/2010 10:09:05 AM PST by kingattax (99 % of liberals give the rest a bad name)
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To: DarthVader

Remember Lepanto !!!


15 posted on 11/10/2010 10:10:05 AM PST by kingattax (99 % of liberals give the rest a bad name)
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To: kingattax

That’s what I said. The state is no bigger than a borough of Alaska.


16 posted on 11/10/2010 10:16:58 AM PST by Extremely Extreme Extremist (The Republic of the United States of America)
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To: bamagirl1944
At first glimpse, I thought this was about State Farm Insurance. Boy was I glad I read on.

That's what I thought. That somehow removing democrats from offices took the insurance industry down the path of doom. LOL

17 posted on 11/10/2010 10:17:18 AM PST by madison10
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To: xp38
Yeah, New Hampshire has 425 state representatives and only 24 in the state senate.

You can't go to the market without running into a couple of your state reps. That's not such a bad thing.

Oh yeah. We pay them $100 a year plus mileage.

18 posted on 11/10/2010 10:28:12 AM PST by billorites (freepo ergo sum)
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To: billorites

ok...$100 a year makes that much more reasonable. Makes being a legislator more like a part time thing.


19 posted on 11/10/2010 10:37:40 AM PST by xp38
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To: randita
I read the headliner and thought that the Insurance Company "State Farm was hit hard by Democrats losing. Whats with the title?
20 posted on 11/10/2010 10:50:58 AM PST by Amos McCoy (I am, The Real McCoy!)
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