Tag: 2014 elections georgia
Five Tea Party Favorites Headed For Defeat In GOP Primaries

Five Tea Party Favorites Headed For Defeat In GOP Primaries

Republican Party

The 2014 midterm elections are kicking into high gear, with GOP primaries throughout the nation being watched closely as “establishment” Republicans and Democrats alike anticipate the defeat of several Tea Party candidates.

Just four years ago, the Tea Party emerged as a powerful and, for some, fresh force in the Republican Party. Today, however, ultraconservatives are struggling to maintain their foothold against party leaders. As a result, the GOP’s ongoing civil war has been exposed, as the far-right faction battles “establishment” Republicans for control of the party.

The political impact of this infighting is especially transparent ahead of the midterm elections: The Republican Party is increasingly more conservative as even its more moderate members recognize the threat posed by their Tea Party challengers.

But even as Tea Partiers enjoy their influence on the GOP platform, establishment Republicans seem likely to run up the score in primaries across the nation.

Read on to learn which Tea Party candidates are headed for defeat in 2014.

Photo: Steve Rhodes via Flickr

Matt Bevin

Matt Bevin

In Kentucky, Democrat Alison Lundergan Grimes is more of a threat to Republican Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell’s re-election hopes than his primary challenger, Matt Bevin.

Ahead of Tuesday’s primary, incumbent McConnell enjoys support from 55 percent of his state’s likely Republican voters, according to the most recent Bluegrass Poll. Bevin holds only 35 percent of likely voters’ support.

Photo: BevinForSenate via YouTube

Bryan Smith

Bryan Smith

U.S. Representative Mike Simpson (R-ID) is seeking a ninth House term and his once-hyped Tea Party challenger, Bryan Smith, seems unlikely to stop him.

Backed by other prominent Republicans like House Speaker John Boehner (OH) and former Massachusetts governor and GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney, Simpson’s widely anticipated victory over Smith, a local attorney, could mark one of the greatest establishment victories over the far right as it takes back control over the state previously labeled as “ground zero” for the GOP’s civil war.

Photo: Bryan SmithID2 via YouTube

Milton Wolf

Milton Wolf

 

Tea Partier Milton Wolf did the impossible when he launched a campaign to the right of conservative senator Pat Roberts of Kansas. In an effort to completely remove his rival from the race, Wolf then unsuccessfully challenged Roberts’ Kansas residency.

And with Roberts still on the ballot for the August primary, Wolf’s campaign is expected to be equally unsuccessful. According to a February poll, Roberts leads Wolf 49 to 23 percent.

Photo: Milton Wolf via YouTube

Paul Broun

Paul Broun

In Georgia, five Republicans are battling it out to succeed retiring senator Saxby Chambliss (R). Among them, U.S. Representative Jack Kingston and businessman David Perdue – both of whom have embraced the GOP establishment while maintaining ultra-conservative positions on an array of issues — seem like the top two contenders for the nomination.

Meanwhile, U.S. Rep. Paul Broun has launched harsh Tea Party-themed attacks on both candidates. Broun may be doing the Tea Party’s dirty work, but just two months before the primary, he is hardly a threat to win the race. According to the most recent polling data collected by Morris News Service/Fox5, Broun enjoys only 10 percent support from likely voters — leaving him in last place among the five candidates.

Photo via Paul Broun

Tim Donnelly

Tim Donnelly

Prominent Republicans are uniting in their fight to ensure that Tea Party favorite Assemblyman Tim Donnelly goes nowhere in California’s gubernatorial race.

Donnelly is up against Bush administration official Neel Kashkari in the June primary. Even though Donnelly has enjoyed a solid lead over Kashkari for months, the GOP is fighting back hard against his campaign. Even if Donnelly wins the primary, he hardly stands a chance against incumbent Jerry Brown for California’s governorship.

Photo: Ernie Tyler via Flickr

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GOP Divide Is Democrat’s Gain As Georgia Senate Primary Nears

GOP Divide Is Democrat’s Gain As Georgia Senate Primary Nears

By Lisa Mascaro, Tribune Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — The freewheeling Republican primary for an open Senate seat from Georgia was always expected to be a bruising affair. New polling confirms just how much.

Ahead of next week’s primary election, voters remain highly divided among the five main candidates, all but guaranteeing a tough, costly runoff in July. Meanwhile, the Democrat, Michelle Nunn, is in a statistical dead heat with each of them.

In a year in which Republicans hope to take control of the Senate, the Georgia race is one of only two where Democrats currently see an opportunity to go on offense. Republicans need to win a net of six seats to gain the Senate majority. If Democrats can grab the seat being vacated by Republican Saxby Chambliss, the GOP task would be much harder.

In the primary, the top spot among the Republicans currently goes to David Perdue, the millionaire former executive who has never held public office — but shares a family name with his cousin, a former governor. Perdue has maintained an early lead among about one-fourth of primary voters, according to surveys released Monday by the NBC News/Marist Poll and the St. Leo University Polling Institute.

But Perdue’s hold is tenuous, despite his high favorable ratings. None of the GOP candidates appears likely to reach the 50 percent needed to avoid a runoff.

The question of who else makes the runoff appears to be a textbook case of the tea-party-versus-the-establishment party warfare that has defined Republican Senate campaigns this cycle.

Karen Handel, the former secretary of state who is backed by Sarah Palin, and Jack Kingston, the affable Savannah-area congressman with Chamber of Commerce support, are battling for the No. 2 spot, according to both polls.

Kingston leads slightly, with 18 percent in the St. Leo poll and 16 percent in NBC/Marist, but just nominally. Handel has about 15 percent.

Two other members of Congress trail. Libertarian-leaning Rep. Paul Broun and conservative Rep. Phil Gingrey have run less than stellar campaigns and are likely pulling from each other’s bases of conservative support.

The Nunn team likely would have preferred one or more of the conservative candidates to emerge from the primary. Nominating one of the hard-right Republicans would provide Nunn a contrast — and an opening among moderate-minded Republicans, particularly suburban women outside metro Atlanta, who find tea party politics too extreme.

But Nunn’s campaign has largely refrained from meddling in the GOP primary as Senate Democrats have been known to do (see the 2010 races of Harry Reid in Nevada and Claire McCaskill in Missouri and, in this cycle, Kay Hagan in North Carolina). That rough-and-tumble approach is not Nunn’s style, as the former nonprofit executive for George H.W. Bush’s Points of Light foundation positions herself above the partisan fray.

Nunn faces a tough climb to turn Georgia from red to blue, but with her own famous family name and the state’s changing demographics, she has a number of advantages.

Both polls found a tight general election matchup at this point, regardless of the Republican nominee. Although some GOP candidates did slightly better against Nunn than others, the differences were generally within the polls’ margins of error. An Atlanta Journal-Constitution poll released over the weekend also showed a tight race between Nunn and the Republicans.

Photo: Be The Change, Inc via Flickr
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5 Elections Obamacare May Help Democrats Win

5 Elections Obamacare May Help Democrats Win

Obamacare RS

Want to reduce the number of uninsured people in your state three times faster?

Here’s a crazy idea: Stop sabotaging Obamacare!

A new poll from Gallup finds that states that built their own insurance exchanges and expanded Medicaid reduced their uninsured population by 2.5 percent, compared to .8 percent in states that did not, despite the fact that state-run exchanges in Maryland and Oregon suffered from technological problems even more severe than HealthCare.gov.

The Washington Post‘s Greg Sargent points out that that the conversation on Obamacare is changing. Republicans are relying on embracing the law’s goals while still rejecting the law itself.

The Federalist‘s David Harsanyi notes that Republicans have been saying things like “we want every American to have quality, affordable access to health care” since 2009. That statement was hollow after they did nothing to expand insurance coverage as the number of insured Americans went down by 7.9 million under George W. Bush. And it’s even more hollow in 2014, after President Obama was re-elected on defending the law, around 12 million more Americans have coverage, and Republicans have never voted on a plan to replace the Affordable Care Act.

It’s likely — as Democracy Corps’ Stan Greenberg has suggested — that this issue will result in a draw in 2014, with the economy being the deciding factor for whether Democrats can keep the two of seven seats in states Mitt Romney won that they’ll need to maintain their Senate majority. Other issues, like the minimum wage and personhood, may prove to be the wedges that help Democrats win tough races.

But there could be an echo of what happened in 2012 — when a slew of new voting restrictions were enacted to help elect Republicans — on the horizon.

“But the GOP’s suppression strategy failed,” The Nation‘s Ari Berman wrote. “Ten major restrictive voting laws were blocked in court and turnout among young, black and Hispanic voters increased as a share of the electorate relative to 2008.”

There’s also an echo of who was most affected by the GOP’s War on Voting in the Republican refusal to expand Medicaid, The Atlantic‘s Ta-Nehisi Coates noted last year:

Approximately a fifth (about 18 percent) of all people who will remain untouched by the Medicaid expansion are black. When you start drilling down to the states where those black people tend to live, it gets worse. In Virginia and North Carolina, 30 percent of those who are going to miss out are black. In South Carolina and Georgia, the number is around 40 percent. In Louisiana and Mississippi, you are talking about 50 percent of those who would be eligible for the expansion but who will go uncovered.

If these voters showed up at the polls with the intent of getting the expansion of health insurance their state is paying for anyway, it could change several elections and help Democrats keep the Senate.

Here are five states where Obamacare may help Democrats win.

Photo: LeDawna’s Pics via Flickr

New Hampshire

Scott Brown truck

Does Scott Brown support Medicaid expansion?

Does even Scott Brown know the answer to that question?

The new New Hampshire resident says he’s in the race to oppose Obamacare, but he hasn’t come out against Medicaid expansion, which just became law in the Granite State this March. The truck-driving, O’Reilly Factor guest-hosting Wall Street lawyer has two choices: oppose the popular extension of insurance coverage to 50,000 New Hampshirites, or muddy his entire rationale for running.

Photo: Beckwith-Zink (Diane) via Flickr

Louisiana

Mary Landrieu

Senator Mary Landrieu (D-LA) is tied with her likely opponent Bill Cassidy. But the member of one of the state’s true political dynasties knows how to win by attacking the president when convenient. And she’ll embrace Obama’s accomplishments, like Medicaid expansion, and take on unpopular governor Bobby Jindal (R-LA) when it helps her.

“The governor has clearly put his political future ahead of the future of the state of Louisiana,” she said earlier this month. “Let the people decide what is fair, whether they want to expand and use over $16 billion [in federal funds].”

If expansion is literally on the ballot, it could be a huge boost for the senator. Last year, Families USA found that more than 60 percent of the state viewed the program favorably.

Photo: Mary Landrieu via Flickr

North Carolina

Kay Hagan

Groups backed by the Koch brothers are outspending their opponents 10-1 this election cycle, and no one has taken the brunt of their attacks more than Senator Kay Hagan (D-NC). The senator was elected as President Obama won her state in 2008. The tide turned in 2012, when a deluge of right-wing money helped Republicans sweep into power. Their far-right agenda — which included slipping abortion restrictions into motorcycle safety bills — made the state a laughingstock.

But the big money is still flowing and the far right wants Hagan out. Even though the senator is trying to distance herself from the president, the real pain coming from turning down Medicaid expansion is becoming more obvious every day. Two studies released this year showed that rejecting expansion for hundreds of thousands of people in the state could “cost North Carolina the lives of hundreds of low-income uninsured people per year and leave businesses on the hook for tens of millions of dollars annually in tax penalties, beginning in 2015.”

The Moral Monday movement was born to oppose the right’s resurgence in North Carolina, and this is the kind of moral issue that could make residents endure the new restrictions on voting to show up at the polls.

Photo: Third Way via Flickr

Georgia

Michelle Nunn

Protestors inspired by North Carolina’s Moral Monday movement have been calling on Georgia’s legislature for months.

Georgia has the fifth highest uninsured rate in the nation and expansion would create 70,000 jobs, according to one study. Because Republicans refuse to take the federal money being offered, hospitals are closing.

Michelle Nunn, the likely Democratic nominee to replace Senator Saxby Chambliss (R-GA), has embraced the Medicaid expansion. But she’s done it in a way that harkens back to her strong-on-defense father Sam, who served in the Senate for decades. She’s focused on uninsured veterans as an argument to expand Medicaid. This stand — along with the fact that she’s a moderate who has worked for George H.W. Bush and is facing several candidates who are most likely to be this year’s Todd Akin — could help her pick up a seat in a red state that’s on its way to turning purple.

Photo: Be The Change, Inc via Flickr

Kentucky

McConnell

Only one state Mitt Romney won in 2012 both built its own exchange and expanded Medicaid — Kentucky.

Led by Democratic governor Steve Beshear, the state’s KyNect program has been a model for the nation, with more than 370,000 Kentucky residents signing up for coverage — reducing the state’s uninsured population by about half.

Senator Mitch McConnell (R-KY) is hoping to be the Senate Majority Leader next year as he fights for his promise to repeal “root and branch” of the health care law.

President Obama is extremely unpopular in the state, as unpopular as McConnell. So McConnell’s likely challenger, Alison Lundergan Grimes, often sounds like a Republican when she embraces the law’s goals, but not the law itself.

However, that race, which shows McConnell and Grimes neck-and-neck, could swing toward the Democrats if Grimes — as the Washington Post‘s Sargent suggests – starts attacking the senator for trying to repeal Kentucky’s own KyNect program.