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Sen. Mary Landrieu makes big changes in her campaign as runoff vs. Bill Cassidy looms
The (Baton Rouge, LA) Advocate ^ | November 5, 2014 | Melinda Deslatte

Posted on 11/05/2014 1:13:06 PM PST by abb

Democratic Sen. Mary Landrieu heads into a Dec. 6 runoff as a clear underdog, struggling for another six-year term against a wave of conservatism and Republicans looking to pad their new Senate majority.

Fifty-eight percent of voters chose another candidate on Tuesday over the 18-year incumbent. She has the distinction of being the last Democratic statewide elected official in a state where President Barack Obama remains highly unpopular. And her main campaign theme of clout was undercut when her party was forced into minority status: Even if she’s re-elected, Landrieu will lose her vaunted chairmanship of the Senate’s energy committee to a Republican.

And with that national question answered — Republicans will control the Senate with at least 52 of 100 seats, whether Landrieu wins or loses — the urgency of her quest for campaign cash and new voters has drained away.

Landrieu insists she can defeat Republican Rep. Bill Cassidy in the head-to-head matchup, despite consistent polling that shows her running behind in the runoff contest. She’s strung together victories in other runoffs. GOP leaders say they aren’t taking victory for granted, and Democrats say Cassidy has vulnerabilities Landrieu can exploit.

At a Wednesday event in New Orleans, Landrieu characterized the race so far as having been aligned against her because of the “national atmosphere” of frustration with Obama, from whom she distanced herself in many campaign speeches. Now, she said, voters in Louisiana will focus on the differences between her and Cassidy, and on what each can do for the state.

“I am encouraged, really, to be still standing in a night that was very difficult for the Democratic Party,” she said.

Immediate criticism came from some quarters of the Democratic base.

In New Orleans, state Sen. J.P. Morrell said the Landrieu campaign and the Democratic Party in general did a “lousy job of engaging African-Americans and keeping them engaged.”

“Mary’s got to realize that her success in Louisiana has always and will always depend on whether she can energize the African-American vote,” Morrell said, “and showing how much you disagree with the president doesn’t do it.”

Fundraising solicitations quickly went out from both campaigns, with Landrieu at a disadvantage. Cassidy, both political parties and outside groups booked millions of dollars in TV air time for the runoff before it was a certainty — locking in lower rates — but Landrieu’s campaign staunchly refused to reserve the space.

The Koch-backed Freedom Partners Action Fund rushed to the airwaves on Wednesday, starting a more than $2 million blitz of anti-Landrieu ads. The Karl Rove-backed American Crossroads network planned to keep throwing cash at the race, too, having spent $2 million ahead of Tuesday’s first round of voting.

“We’re determined to remain involved until Bill Cassidy is elected,” Crossroads spokesman Paul Lindsay said.

Senate Republicans’ campaign arm had booked $2.8 million in ads and Senate Democrats’ committee already had planned $1.8 million in ads. Neither had canceled their reservations.

While Cassidy skipped public events Wednesday, Landrieu unveiled a website highlighting votes she said Cassidy took against women, the elderly, students, veterans and disaster victims and kicked off a statewide tour to pan the congressman’s record.

Shifts in her campaign theme were evident.

On Wednesday, Landrieu switched from focusing on her chairmanship in energy-rich Louisiana to direct hits to Cassidy, calling him a “wishy-washy” politician who voted with his party’s leaders against his home state’s interests on such matters as the Social Security retirement age and disaster aid for his congressional district.

Cassidy wasn’t backing down.

“Sixty percent of the people in Louisiana have voted for change,” he said.

For his part, Cassidy will have to move beyond selling his candidacy as part of the GOP Senate takeover — any win by Cassidy would be irrelevant to Senate control. He’ll also need to coalesce support from voters who backed Republican candidate and tea party favorite Rob Maness in the primary.

Cassidy ran only 16,400 votes behind Landrieu among the crowded field of eight candidates. Maness carried more than 202,000 votes and hasn’t directly endorsed Cassidy.


TOPICS: Extended News; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Louisiana
KEYWORDS: 2014midterms; billcassidy; blackkk; cassidy; hurricanekatrina; katrina; landrieu; louisiana; marylandrieu; robmaness; senate; wherewasbill
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To: Gaffer

The Hayride
SADOW: Mary Is On Life Support
by Jeff Sadow
November 05

http://thehayride.com/2014/11/sadow-mary-is-on-life-support/

Such was the Republican wave Nov. 4 that, had one not known the date, upon hearing Democrat Sen. Mary Landrieu’s reflective, almost elegiac in content, remarks as the vote nearly had come in, one would have thought it was Dec. 6 and she was issuing a concession speech.

GOP gains nationally were on the high end of Congressional picks, including taking control of the Senate, and even the gubernatorial contests that they were expected to have small net losses turned out to be a net gain. It won’t be known for days, but hundreds of state legislative seats in net will turn over from Democrat to Republican as well.

The wave manifested itself in her contest for reelection by having her pull only 42 percent of the vote – a bare 16,000 votes ahead of her runoff competitor Republican Rep. Bill Cassidy with mid-major Republican candidate Rob Maness pulling over 200,000 votes. Only in Louisiana with its blanket primary system could an incumbent with such a terrible total against major party competition be in any contention to hold onto to the seat – as if. Those numbers alone make her a politically dead woman walking, yet it gets worse.

For one, there’s little opportunity for her to scare up more votes to make up ground. Turnout in this contest was about 200,000 more than the last time she ran in an off-year election, 2002, which represents a 5 percent increase in turnout percentage, even as her vote total increase ran a percentage point behind that. For another, she roughly doubled up Cassidy in campaign expenditures, and, when all is said and done with both money reported and not, probably more was spent independently for her than for Cassidy as well. If she couldn’t spend her way to leading Cassidy by at least 100,000 votes on the basis of that, she’s not going to make up nearly 200,000 in a runoff.

Nor do the runoff dynamics favor her. While she showed resiliency in 2002 when that runoff turnout declined by less than a percentage point, she was at 46 percent in the general election then and probably held her own with her base in the runoff. Her worse initial performance this time means she has to improve dramatically with dynamics that already make it easier for Cassidy to hustle his voters – and most of Maness’ – back to the polls.

Another indicator of her, and Democrats’, weakness in the state in this election as a whole was that her quality colleagues running in House contests, in the Fifth District Monroe Mayor Jamie Mayo and in the Sixth District Prisoner #03128-095, each only settled for around 30 percent of their districts’ votes. This means they won’t boost turnout much for her next month.

And perhaps worst of all, that the GOP already has bagged the Senate takes away perhaps her biggest selling point this cycle, that she was an experienced senator who could leverage that to get stuff for Louisiana. But she’s a nothing now in a Republican-run chamber, and on every issue where she claimed she broke from national Democrats to benefit the state, now she cannot seriously argue that she would be more effective than Cassidy on those issues when he sits with the majority that has the power to do those things. Why go lite when you can have the real thing?

That turnout was higher demonstrates that any more than just a trivial number of Republican supporters are unlikely to yawn and stay home the first Saturday in December since the Senate is settled. More than anything, these results show a critical mass of Louisiana voters simply want her out of office.

In short, the result was a disaster for her. She’ll hang in because there’s always that live boy or dead girl possibility, but you might as well start forming the second line to her political funeral.


21 posted on 11/05/2014 1:46:11 PM PST by abb ("News reporting is too important to be left to the journalists." Walter Abbott (1950 -))
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To: TruthWillWin

22 posted on 11/05/2014 1:52:01 PM PST by outofsalt ( If history teaches us anything it's that history rarely teaches us anything.)
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To: abb

She’s putting an Apple in her mouth this time


23 posted on 11/05/2014 1:55:30 PM PST by molson209 (Blank)
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To: Kartographer
So will Obama throw Mary under the bus by going with Executive Amnesty for illegals now?

Not much talk about the Keystone Pipeline by 0bama?

24 posted on 11/05/2014 2:13:45 PM PST by DUMBGRUNT (The best is the enemy of the good.)
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To: tcrlaf

Cassidy needs to ask her if she will help getting to the bottom of the IRS scandal, Benghazi, F&F and all the scandals that the dems have been so busy hiding evidence and helping in cover-ups. Ask her if she believes Lois Lerner should go to jail. This is why I think they got wiped out. People are sick of the felons that are ruling us and getting away with it.


25 posted on 11/05/2014 2:16:41 PM PST by dandiegirl
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To: abb

Is Maness going to throw his name and support behind the R?


26 posted on 11/05/2014 2:29:47 PM PST by spacejunkie2001
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To: abb

nevermind....

last sentence says Maness is endorsing him


27 posted on 11/05/2014 2:30:50 PM PST by spacejunkie2001
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To: spacejunkie2001

http://www.nola.com/politics/index.ssf/2014/11/tea_party_candidate_rob_maness_1.html#incart_related_stories

Tea Party candidate Rob Maness falls short in Louisiana Senate upset bid; plans to endorse Republican Bill Cassidy


28 posted on 11/05/2014 2:35:57 PM PST by abb ("News reporting is too important to be left to the journalists." Walter Abbott (1950 -))
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To: abb

The mid-November info release of the Obama-commie care rate hike/explosion will take care of Mrzz Mary...

.


29 posted on 11/05/2014 2:55:04 PM PST by TLI ( ITINERIS IMPENDEO VALHALLA)
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To: outofsalt

Striking resemblance.


30 posted on 11/05/2014 3:03:10 PM PST by TruthWillWin (The problem with socialism is that you eventually run out of other peoples money.)
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To: TruthWillWin

I’d love to see this obese, unattractive degenerate from a crime family in prison for her many crimes against many things...including sanity.


31 posted on 11/05/2014 3:27:31 PM PST by hal ogen (First Amendment or Reeducation Camp?)
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To: TLI

http://www.nola.com/politics/index.ssf/2014/11/bill_cassidy_is_likely_to_use.html

Bill Cassidy likely to use the same message in the runoff campaign


32 posted on 11/05/2014 4:55:43 PM PST by abb ("News reporting is too important to be left to the journalists." Walter Abbott (1950 -))
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To: Kartographer
Executive Amnesty would cook Landrieu's goose to ashes. Thankfully the run off is in December, so a the lame duck congress won't have time to take this up before the Christmas break.

Hopefully this is the last peep we hear from Obama on the matter.

But I somehow doubt he got the message sent last night.

33 posted on 11/05/2014 5:04:30 PM PST by boop (I was unaware that beating up people is wrong. Until the NFL seminar told me.)
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To: abb
Cassidy wasn't my choice, Maness was, but I would walk 200 miles to vote for Cassidy now.

Miss Piggy is done for.

34 posted on 11/05/2014 5:13:11 PM PST by The Cajun (Ted Cruz, Sarah Palin, Mark Levin, Mike Lee, Louie Gohmert....Nuff said.)
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To: TruthWillWin
No, now she has nothing to offer anyone!

She is going to lose big!

35 posted on 11/05/2014 10:36:32 PM PST by fortheDeclaration (Pr 14:34 Righteousness exalteth a nation:but sin is a reproach to any people)
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To: goldstategop

Ask yourself this....if you were a wealthy guy and your Democratic lobbyists came knocking at the door for last-minute support for Landrieu...what are the odds?

The two Republicans together....got 800,000 votes. Mary? 618,000.

Even if Republican voters lost twenty percent of the voters between now and the election day....Mary would still need every single voter that came Tuesday....to come back again, and it would still NOT be enough to win.

It’s a foregone conclusion that Lendrieu will now lose. I just don’t see anybody contributing significant money (say another $500,000) to keep some ad flow going on and hope that people might show up on election day. I’ll go out on the limb and predict that she gets 100,000 fewer votes on the second time around.


36 posted on 11/06/2014 12:35:12 AM PST by pepsionice
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To: abb

If 0bunghole legalizes millions via executive order this will kill Landrieu chances for sure. 0bunghole will have to wait until after the Louisiana runoff


37 posted on 11/06/2014 12:43:55 AM PST by dennisw (The first principle is to find out who you are then you can achieve anything -- Buddhist monk)
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To: pepsionice

as another freeper said “stick a fork in her fat butt she is done”


38 posted on 11/06/2014 12:45:32 AM PST by dennisw (The first principle is to find out who you are then you can achieve anything -- Buddhist monk)
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To: abb

http://theadvocate.com/news/10752388-123/incumbent-sen-mary-landrieu-comes

Incumbent Sen. Mary Landrieu comes out swinging but faces an uphill battle

http://www.nola.com/politics/index.ssf/2014/11/sen_mary_landrieu_uses_campaig.html#incart_river

Sen. Mary Landrieu uses LaPlace campaign stop to criticize Rep. Bill Cassidy’s voting record

http://www.nola.com/politics/index.ssf/2014/11/some_reasons_sen_landrieus_tue.html#incart_river

Some reasons Sen. Landrieu’s Tuesday vote fell short of expectations


39 posted on 11/06/2014 1:50:45 AM PST by abb ("News reporting is too important to be left to the journalists." Walter Abbott (1950 -))
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To: fortheDeclaration

Hope so (lose big).


40 posted on 11/06/2014 6:17:22 AM PST by TruthWillWin (The problem with socialism is that you eventually run out of other peoples money.)
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