Posted on 09/01/2011 3:24:49 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
The seat in New Yorks Ninth Congressional District vacated by Anthony Weiner is due to have a new occupant in less than two weeks. Much to the dismay of Democrats, however a distinct possibility looms that the longtime-blue seat could turn red.
A Siena Research Institute poll released on August 10 shows Democrat David Weprin ahead of his GOP rival, businessman Bob Turner, by a slender 6-point marginclose enough to make the contest a horse race. The breakdown of voter preference shows Weprin with 48%, Turner with 42%, and 9% undecided.
Two factors in how the outstanding votes might break are the presidents high disapproval rating among Democrats (42%) and the profile of the typical voter. Speaking with respect to the latter, the institutes director, Don Levy, observes:
This is not the Upper East Side of Manhattan; this is a conservative, working-class district, and it means something different to be a Democrat. If you hold the president up as a straw man, if he represents complete allegiance to the Democratic Party and rejection of current Republican critique, its not solid in this district; its by no means, right now, a rubber stamp district for the Democrats.
Hank Sheinkopf , a New York Democratic strategist, echoes the view: Its not an Obama Democrat district, its a Harry Truman Democrat district, which means people can do almost anything given an opportunity of alternatives.
What voters do or dont do, moreover, may reflect recent gaffes by Weprin. When asked about the size of the national debt by the editorial board of the New York Daily News, the candidate initially looked lost, then responded that its about $4 trillion. He was only off by $10 trillion.
The day after the Daily News published the story, Weprin canceled his appearance in a debate against Turner, claiming that his schedule had been unexpectedly affected by the cleanup after Hurricane Irene. On top of that, the National Republican Congressional Campaign Committee has injected large transfusions of cash into the race on behalf of Turner.
Yet, the Democrats still have a breeze, if not a brisk wind, at their back. As a press release from Siena notes, voters favor almost two-to-one (65% to 33%) a tax increase on the wealthy (those who earn at least $250,000). The opposition to touching entitlements such as Medicare and Social Security is even more overwhelmingly, at 72% to 24%.
With voting turnout for special elections historically low, the race is one that will be worth watching as it enters the home stretch.
The only hope a Republican could have here is that people be unaware of the election being held.
A republican has absolutely NO chance of winning this seat. NY dems are beyond hope in ever seeing the light. My guess is the final tally will be 58% dem to 42% for the republican. And I’m being generous for the repub.
Poll is complete BS. They just want the GOP to waste their hardearned fundraising dollars on this race.
Don’t fall for it GOP!
furgetaboutit!
This is another trap designed to raise false hopes just like the Harman seat special election in CA was supposed to be close.
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