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Contested Senate Races, Polls and Links for Contributions
self research | 8-28-02 | patriciaruth

Posted on 08/28/2002 3:29:12 PM PDT by patriciaruth

Close, possible pickups: South Dakota, Missouri, Georgia and Minnesota.

Possible losses: New Hampshire, Texas, Arkansas, North Carolina

If lightening strikes, may pickup: Iowa, New Jersey

South Dakota: John Thune, current Congressman, (articulate, affable, attractive in the recent debate with Johnson) running against Tim Johnson, current Senator.
Last poll: 40%-40% announced just before the debate

Link to www.johnthune.com

John Thune for South Dakota
P.O. Box 516
Sioux Falls, SD 57101

Minnesota: Norm Coleman, former mayor of St. Paul, running against Paul Wellstone, current Senator.

Link to www.colemanforsenate.com

Coleman for U.S. Senate
1410 Energy Park Dr, Ste. 11
St. Paul, MN 55108-9865

North Carolina: Elizabeth Dole, former U.S. Transportation Secretary under Ronald Reagan and CEO of the American Red Cross, favored to win GOP primary, may be running against Erskine Bowles, former Clinton chief of staff. Primaries have been postponed to September 10 due to legal squabbling over redistricting. There will be no runoff primaries as a result.

Link to www.elizabethdole.org

Dole 2002 Committee
P.O. Box 2109
Salisbury, NC 28145-9982

New Hampshire: Current Senator Bob Smith is being challenged in the Republican primary by current U.S. Representative John Sununu, son of former Governor, who was ahead in last Republican primary poll I saw. Whoever wins will run weakened against current Democrat governor, Jean Shaneen.

(603) 641-9536 to call Sununu if he wins the primary on September 10.

Missouri: Jim Talent, former Congressman from St. Louis, against current Senator Jean Carnahan, who was appointed when her dead husband narrowly "won" in 2000 election against John Ashcroft.

Last Zogby poll: Talent 47%-46% Carnahan

Link to www.talentforsenate.com

Jim Talent for Senate
9433 Olive Boulevard
St. Louis, MO 63132

Arkansas: Senator Tim Hutchinson challenged strongly by state attorney general Mark Pryor. Sen. Hutchinson, a former Baptist minister, is in trouble for reelection because of his divorce and remarriage after winning the Senate seat in 1996 on a platform of family values. He won his primary by 70% against another Christian conservative so the voters may be starting to forgive him.

Link to www.tim2002.com

Hutchinson for Senate
PO Box 998
Rogers, AR 72756

Georgia: U.S. Rep. Saxby Chambliss against Max Cleland, appointed Senator in 2000 by the Democrat governor when Republican Senator Coverdale died unexpectedly.

Texas: State Attorney General John Cornyn is running close in the polls to Democrat Ron Kirk, former mayor of Dallas. Current Senator Phil Graham is retiring. Democrat Kirk is getting lots of financial support from outside the state because he is black and because Democrats want to embarrass Bush in his home state of Texas.

Link to www.johncornyn.com

Iowa: U.S. Representative Greg Ganske is challenging current Senator Tom Harkin. Although he was behind in last poll, he may gain ground with the ad campaign in urban areas.

New Jersey: Doug Forrester (bio: former assistant state treasurer, now small businessman and university instructor) is running against Senator Robert Torricelli, who was acquitted by a jury but had a reprimand from the Senate Ethics Committee and may be vulnerable.
A poll in June had Torricell-44%, Forrester-36%.

Link to www.forrester2002.com


TOPICS: Activism/Chapters; Announcements; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: arkansas; iowa; minnesota; missouri; newhampshire; newjersey; northcarolina; senateraces; southdakota; texas
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To: patriciaruth
Thanks for the ping, Patty. Important info to have!

Take back the Senate!!!

61 posted on 08/28/2002 7:37:48 PM PDT by ohioWfan
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To: patriciaruth
VOTE FOR CORNYN AND GOD WILL

BLESS AMERICA

62 posted on 08/28/2002 7:40:55 PM PDT by Dubya
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To: dead
I seem to recall a poll which showed Forrester starting to pull away.
63 posted on 08/28/2002 7:44:30 PM PDT by Tribune7
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To: billbears
I really do not understand the anti-Elizabeth Dole feeling on this site. There are many Republican nominees for the Senate this cycle that are more liberal than here. Douglas Forester is one. Incumbents like Susan Collins, Ted Stevens, and maybe even Lamar Alexander. I do not think Elizabeth Dole's voting record would be much different than John Thune's or Norm Coleman's. These people must be the reason the NC GOP is in the sorry state that it is. How many times can you nominate Richard Vinroot and watch him lose before you people can figure out that you need to do something different???
64 posted on 08/28/2002 7:45:45 PM PDT by ACAC
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To: rintense
I really want to be optimistic.

Work and pray, and it will turn out for the best.

But remember what they say about worthy things are worth fighting for.

65 posted on 08/28/2002 7:47:50 PM PDT by patriciaruth
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To: Tribune7
See BlackRazor's post #22.

Lots of time left for Democrat counterpunching but Forrester is evidentally ahead of Torricelli in New Jersey at this point.

66 posted on 08/28/2002 7:50:30 PM PDT by patriciaruth
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To: marajade
Elizabeth Dole stood up for Bush during the primaries... He's paying her back for her support...

Bush should keep his butt out of what is, to the people of North Carolina, a matter of our representation. At least until the primary is over.

Any Republican is better...

This is the very shallowness I referred to in my earlier post.

67 posted on 08/28/2002 7:50:49 PM PDT by Darth Sidious
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To: patriciaruth
Nice post, thanks. Thune's donation selector needs attention for sure. All the smaller amounts and then big jumps. ;-)
68 posted on 08/28/2002 7:51:51 PM PDT by lodwick
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To: patriciaruth
Elizabeth Dole is going to win the primary on September 10, and there will be no runoff.

So you're saying that Liddy has been "picked to win" already by the GOP bigwigs, before a single vote has been cast? Maybe you should explain to us why we should even bother to have primaries, if we're brazenly back to the bad ol' days of the "smoke filled rooms".

Maybe you should also explain why you think Dole is best qualified to represent the people of North Carolina, when you're not even in this state.

69 posted on 08/28/2002 7:54:16 PM PDT by Darth Sidious
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To: lodwick
The fun part is charging the donation on my RNC credit card.
70 posted on 08/28/2002 7:55:17 PM PDT by patriciaruth
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To: marajade
Dole is a stand up Republican and will do what she's told by their leadership...

Translation: she has no spine to call her own.

71 posted on 08/28/2002 7:57:55 PM PDT by Darth Sidious
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To: Darth Sidious
Oh, Darth, you know I don't agree with the Dark Side.

Someone posted Snyder's website, and he has had equal time.

I admit, I want to win the Senate, and I think Elizabeth has a better chance of winning North Carolina that Snyder. Plus I like her, and I don't know Snyder. North Carolina can choose whomever they want, but I put up her website for post primary donations because I believe that North Carolinians are going to choose Elizabeth.

Although Sununu is currently leading Smith in New Hampshire, I haven't put a website there as I'm not as sure about whom the people in New Hampshire are going to choose.

If Snyder wins the primary, I'll make a donation to his campaign.

72 posted on 08/28/2002 8:02:02 PM PDT by patriciaruth
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To: sultan88
Bump to self for later study.
73 posted on 08/28/2002 8:04:44 PM PDT by sultan88
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To: patriciaruth
North Carolina can choose whomever they want, but I put up her website for post primary donations because I believe that North Carolinians are going to choose Elizabeth.

You'd be surprised. I've been waiting for three months to see a Dole sign anywheer around here. With two weeks left before the primary, I still haven't seen any. Meanwhile, Snyder signs are everywhere. Snyder is pulling out all the stops on radio ads too... and I wouldn't doubt some tv spots are coming soon, too. But Dole? Not even in Greensboro or Burlington have I found any support signs.

The extended legal wrangling over districts may well play against Dole's favor: there's more than enough rancor against her getting shoved in our face by outsiders to merit a backlash against her. And my bet is, that passion will overcome blind partisanship come September.

74 posted on 08/28/2002 8:07:27 PM PDT by Darth Sidious
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To: BlackRazor
For starters, in La the Republicans finally got off the dime and committed major funds. This says they agree with me that the chance of throwing this into a runoff is now very strong, at LEAST 70% it DOES go into the runoff.

Both the "indep media" (=RAT) polls you mention are in fact very positive for R candidates. Mr Hutchinson performed well in a debate and polls show conserv/Christian voters will NOT stay home because he is a divorcee. The poll in SD is ridiculous in saying 20% of the voters are unsure, in fact it is in effect programmed to produce a tie.

In GA, which I gave to R in an eyelash, ANY kind of McKinney candidacy or write-in gives Chambliss the seat; and the latter is only now beginning to become known.

In Iowa, a poll of younger voters indicates Harkin slipping, becoming old hat, one more visit to this state by Bush and we have it.

Challengers, even ones destined to win, always take till late in the campaign to catch up to the incumbents, even those destined to lose, just because of mere name recognition.

If these polls asked, "which party do you want your new Senator to be from," it would skew the ultimate result less, than these polls that ask "If the election were held today, would you vote for Sen. Bigstaff Forever, or Joey Jones?"...do in fact skew it. Whoever heard of Joey Jones? This is programmed to get a RAT result. If you ask, "Do you think Sen. Bigstaff deserves re-election, or do you think we should let someone else have a chance?" --once again, also skewed perhaps, but not as badly.

75 posted on 08/28/2002 8:19:15 PM PDT by crystalk
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To: rintense
See my thread from Sunday on this matter. "GOP 2003 ASSured" etc.
76 posted on 08/28/2002 8:20:40 PM PDT by crystalk
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To: patriciaruth
I watched some of the Thune-Johnson debate and Hutchinson-Pryor debate on CSPAN. One Pubbie won rather cleanly, and one lost. We will see if it makes any impact in the polls, assuming my judgment is not idiosyncratic (and it sometimes is on the debate thing), and assuming any locals were watching that were swing voters.
77 posted on 08/28/2002 8:24:24 PM PDT by Torie
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To: patriciaruth; Darth Sidious; Constitution Day
I admit, I want to win the Senate, and I think Elizabeth has a better chance of winning North Carolina that Snyder.

I understand what you're saying but understand from OUR point of view. Elizabeth Dole epitomizes everything that is wrong with this state. Someone coming into our state who hasn't lived here and doesn't know what the conservative side of the house should look like in NC. Her idea of conservatism might be conservative in NY, California, heck even some of the Midwest states. But it's not what many would call conservative down here.

Am I sectionalizing this? You bet I am. I have been flamed for this before and will get flamed for it again and again. But it's true. Your idea of conservative to many in my state would be considered moderate at best. Conservative and liberal don't necessarily break down to Democrat and Republican. I know many Democrats that are close personal friends, and some even family, that are generally more conservative than I am. And they won't vote for Bowles. They probably would vote for Jim Parker except for the R in beside his name. But they do cross from time to time and we saw some of that as far back as Reagan. There are some areas in this state that if you are not a Democrat, you don't run for office. And they're not liberal areas either. They are you might say areas that hold a long grudge.

And what has happened over the past 20-30 years is that liberals realized this and capitalized on it. We have a lot of straight ticket voters in this state. On one side you have the Democrats who would vote for a Democrat because that's just what you're supposed to do. They think Democrat because that's what their father's father's father was and the Democrats are the Southern party. Along with the backing by the teachers' association that pretty much describes how Jim Hunt got into office four times. Not that anybody actually agreed with him, it's just you vote Democrat. Then over the past 20 years, you've got a HUGE influx of population. A bunch of yuppie yankees (no offense). They don't necessarily agree with the liberal Democrats but their ideas of conservative are more fiscal than social. Save me money but don't tell me the difference between right and wrong. And the RNC sees this so they give us someone like Liddy. So we have a quandry.

Guys I don't know if this is how you see it, but from my perspective of living in the Piedmont, the mountains, and the sandhills over the years, it's my opinion

78 posted on 08/28/2002 8:36:23 PM PDT by billbears
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To: billbears
You nailed it.
79 posted on 08/28/2002 8:41:16 PM PDT by Darth Sidious
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To: billbears; Darth Sidious
So, you guys may be right about the primary, but it means we lose the seat.

All the dyed in the wool conservatives here did the same thing in our Republican primary. No outsiders going to give us a RINO for our Republican gubernatorial nominee. A pure conservative is the only thing they'll vote.

Fine, now we have a pure conservative that Republicans don't even know for sure is honest after Davis chewed him to pieces. So, we say goodbye to the governor's chair to a man who most voters don't want in a bet, but they want a crook even less.

So Bowles is going to be your new Senator? I feel as sorry for you as I am for us stuck with Davis for another four years.

80 posted on 08/28/2002 11:05:12 PM PDT by patriciaruth
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