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One More Reason… the Republicans will regain the majority in the Senate.
Republican Senatorial Committee ^ | 7 August 2002 | Republican Senatorial Committee

Posted on 08/12/2002 11:45:26 AM PDT by PhiKapMom

“One More Reason… the Republicans will regain the majority in the Senate."

Wednesday, August 7:
...Because Erskine Bowles (aka Poster Boy for Corporate Irresponsibility) can't seem to keep the oh-so-unflattering details of that pesky $4.2 mil job at Forstmann Little off his resume and out of the papers. (That's $4.2 mil a year...)

You may recall, the State of Connecticut lost over ONE HUNDRED MILLION DOLLARS of its pension funds -- dollars that were unwisely (to be charitably delicate) invested by Forstmann Little during Poster Boy's tenure. The real losers? Connecticut retirees who had worked hard and played by the rules...

(Reckon some of them might move south JUST to thank Erskine in their own special way?)

The State of Connecticut has filed suit. But for some reason (a mystery!) Poster Boy is not named in the suit -- although all of the highly questionable investment decisions were made during his tenure.

Now, inquisitive minds want to know why...

Were political deals involved?

Bowles' spokesman ain't sayin'.
Source: www.newmassmedia.com

Tuesday, August 6:
Because according an American Viewpoint poll, Cornyn leads Kirk 46% to 35% among all voters and 50 to 35% among high propensity voters.
Source: Cornyn leads Kirk 46% to 35% among all voters and 50% to 35% among high propensity voters



TOPICS: Extended News; Politics/Elections; US: North Carolina; US: Texas
KEYWORDS: biasedmedia; bowles; cornynup; kirkdown
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To: bimbo
Then they are political naifs, who would rather complain, and be mauled by Dem RATS , than have some of what they want. It's up to YOU , to educate them. :-)
81 posted on 08/13/2002 9:01:50 PM PDT by nopardons
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Comment #82 Removed by Moderator

To: sierradove
We need to WAKE up folks and stop wishing....or GET off our butts and educate everyone around us about how corruptl the demoNRATS reaLLY ARE. WE'RE FIGHTING SCUM, FOLKS!

Wanted to bump these comments! You are so right! Instead of Freepers going after other Freepers on here, we need to band together and go after the real enemy -- the DemocRATS!!!!

83 posted on 08/14/2002 6:54:23 AM PDT by PhiKapMom
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To: deport
Erskine Bowles is running in North Carolina

Is he from anywhere near NC, or is he just a carpetbagger like his pal Hillary?

84 posted on 08/14/2002 6:59:17 AM PDT by ladyinred
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To: crystalk; Coop
"Another question is whether you see any Republican hope at all in my "little 5:"-- IA, GA, MT, LA, and IL. I just see very large imponderables not yet assessed, the campaigns are not fought yet, new faces not yet known, old fogies not yet dissed. Indictments not handed down, whatever."

You are correct that it is difficult to objectively assess most of these races, unless one lives in one of those states (which I do not). The most recent polling in these states are three months old (or older), before the opposition candidates were well known. Montana was clearly a lost opportunity for the GOP; had Marc Racicot run for this seat, he almost assuredly would have defeated Baucus (a January poll had Racicot with a 19-point lead in a hypothetical matchup). As it stands, a mid-April Democrat poll had Baucus with a 33-point advantage. I'd say this will be a very tough prospect for the GOP.

Likewise for GA and LA. Even just one year ago, both of these races were pretty high on the GOP watch-list; both Cleland and Landrieu had razor-thin victories in 1996, and appeared vulnerable. But it seems each has firmed up their support. Spring polling showed both Senators with well-over 20-point leads, but again, that was probably against little-known candidates at the time. I think Cleland will be very tough to beat, considerning his military service and disabilities. The strategy in LA seems to be to try and run enough alternative GOP candidates to keep Landrieu under 50%, and forced into a run-off election against the then-better-known Republican who finishes second.

I can't really comment on IL. Apparently Durbin's approval ratings have not been stellar, but I've seen no discussion of this race since May. At that point Durbin had a 20-point lead, but I would expect that to tighten up a bit. Enough to make it competitive? I'm skeptical.

Iowa would appear to be the best bet for a GOP upset. Harkin's approval ratings are not particularly strong, and Ganske had drawn within single digits in a late June independent poll.

Regarding the most recent polling I've come across in the other competitive races we've discussed:

Colorado: A mid-June Dem poll had Strickland up by 1%. An early July independent poll had Allard up by 9%. And a late July Dem poll had Allard up by 3%.

Minnesota: Two late June independent polls showed Wellstone with 3 and 4% point leads. A mid July poll showed Coleman with a 4-point lead, but it's not clear who sponsored this poll. Aside from that one, the only polls that have shown Coleman with a lead have been GOP sponsored polls.

Missouri: A late July media poll showed Talent with a 6-point lead, but the poll might be a bit suspicious because it adds up to 100%, with no undecideds. An early July independent poll showed Carnahan up by 8 points.

South Dakota: A mid-July GOP poll showed Thune with a 2-point lead. That confirms to me that this race is truly a tossup. As an item of interest, a May GOP poll found that Johnson gets a 10-point bump when it's made clear a vote for Johnson would help to keep Daschle on as majority leader.

Oregon: The last two polls I have information on (early to mid May) showed Smith up by 12 points in each.

A special thanks to Freeper "Coop" for supplementing my polling data!

85 posted on 08/14/2002 7:31:51 AM PDT by BlackRazor
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To: BlackRazor
You're welcome.

Can you show me this mid June Dem poll with Strickland up by one percent? I've seen one mention of it in a Wash Times article, but nobody can show me this poll. It's not even on Strickland's website.

86 posted on 08/14/2002 7:39:18 AM PDT by Coop
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To: BlackRazor
The most likely single outcome is that R will win all five of those last states on your list, which will itself, in the absence of any R losses anywhere (itself another MLSO), give us +4.0 out of the +4.6 my calculation predicted...

Let us just wait and see, and contribute to any races of particular interest. South Dakota is an ancestral home in my family, why on earth did they go out there when they landed in USA, when they could have gone anywhere?

87 posted on 08/14/2002 8:02:35 AM PDT by crystalk
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To: ladyinred
Erskine came by his commitment to public service close to home. Born in Greensboro in 1945, he is the great-grandson of a Methodist minister and the second of four children of Jessamine and Hargrove “Skipper” Bowles. Skipper Bowles was an ardent Democrat, state legislator, head of Governor Terry Sanford's Department of Commerce, Democratic nominee for Governor in 1972, and chairman of the board of trustees of the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Erskine grew up in Greensboro, graduated from UNC, Chapel Hill in 1967, served in the Coast Guard reserves, and earned his MBA from Columbia Business School in 1969.
88 posted on 08/14/2002 8:42:04 AM PDT by deport
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To: deport
Thanks deport for all of that info on Erskine. I had no idea about his background past the years he worked with Hillary. I am sure he still does actually, work with Hillary I mean.
89 posted on 08/14/2002 8:49:04 AM PDT by ladyinred
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To: BlackRazor; Dales; PhiKapMom; eureka!; KQQL; Torie
Just stumbled across this tidbit in The Hill newspaper, from an article dated today:

In Georgia, Sen. Zell Miller (D) is scheduled to campaign for his Democratic colleague, Max Cleland, who is in a tight reelection race against Rep. Saxby Chambliss (R).

I had heard rumors that knowledgeable folks expected the GA race to tighten, but I had not seen or heard any "evidence" of such tightening. This would be the first public comment I've seen supporting a close race between Chambliss and Cleland.

Comments?

90 posted on 08/14/2002 10:08:12 AM PDT by Coop
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To: Coop
Yes. Zig Zag Zell shows his true colors.

As for if the race is tight, that would be nice but it would also be news to me.

91 posted on 08/14/2002 10:09:45 AM PDT by Dales
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To: Coop
My first comment would be as to where all the Zell Miller is becoming a Republican folks are?

If they have Zell Miller out campaigning for Cleland that tells me that Chambliss is making real inroads or they wouldn't be calling in Miller. Now to get Pres Bush down there campaigning for Chambliss. I had heard it was going to be a close race.

Watched Chambliss the other night on TV and was impressed with him and the way he handled questions. Going to be a formidable opponent for Cleland! If everything breaks right, we can pick up this seat.
92 posted on 08/14/2002 10:16:23 AM PDT by PhiKapMom
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To: Coop
"Comments?"

Cool. Nice catch. I guess Zell has to do what he has to do...

93 posted on 08/14/2002 10:33:14 AM PDT by eureka!
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To: Dales
Zig Zag Zell shows his true colors.

On this we disagree, friend. Zell Miller has been quite consistent in his support of the Dem party, but quite disgusted with its national "leadership." I like him a lot, and think his "Zig Zag" tag is undeserved.

94 posted on 08/14/2002 10:37:06 AM PDT by Coop
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To: Coop
It's ok, we are allowed to disagree. :-)

I lived under his Governorship. He talks a good game. He generally talks a good game to ensure that conservatives and moderates keep thinking the left doesn't have total control over the Democrats. All IMO.

95 posted on 08/14/2002 10:39:01 AM PDT by Dales
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To: PhiKapMom
If everything breaks right, we can pick up this seat.

That was starting to look like a very big "IF," but maybe not. The only independent poll I've seen on this race was from July last year, showing Cleland up 46%-39%. Then there are two Dem and one unknown poll showing Cleland up 22-24 points. So I don't have a very good feel for this race at all.

96 posted on 08/14/2002 10:39:34 AM PDT by Coop
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To: Dales
It's ok, we are allowed to disagree.

On FR? NEVER!!!

:-p

97 posted on 08/14/2002 10:40:29 AM PDT by Coop
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To: Satadru
I gave that some thought myself. Except for 1994, it seems that in most races, politics is local. National trends are weak. Maybe I'll write a program of my own (including covariances.)

I'll start with the assumption that the poll results are binomial with the error at a 5% level and then fit a multivariate normal through the poll numbers. (Easier to simulate.) Then fudge some covariance results; probably by taking several polls over time and seeing if they move up or down together. The I can draw samples and see what happens.

This may take some time as I haven't looked for poll summaries. I could also model the drift in polls as Brownian motion and use this to add uncertainty to my results.
98 posted on 08/14/2002 10:41:55 AM PDT by Doctor Stochastic
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To: Coop
Comments?

I've been keeping a close eye out for new information on this race. I have yet to see anything since the two Dem polls you referenced. If someone is saying this race is tightening (as is bound to happen), I sure would like to see their numbers (assuming there are any, and that this isn't just an unfounded 'conventional wisdom' type of speculation).

99 posted on 08/14/2002 6:19:06 PM PDT by BlackRazor
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To: Coop
"Can you show me this mid June Dem poll with Strickland up by one percent? I've seen one mention of it in a Wash Times article, but nobody can show me this poll. It's not even on Strickland's website.

Sorry, that's my mistake. I accidentally transposed the numbers. That should have read Allard up by one percent. I crosschecked my polling data with yours, and I don't have anything listed that you don't already have.

100 posted on 08/14/2002 6:21:17 PM PDT by BlackRazor
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