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Archive for the ‘Lieutenant Governor News’ Category


LA: 5 Republicans and 3 Democrats running to be Lt. Governor

From Nola.com:

Early voting begins Saturday and runs through Sept. 25 — the sites are closed Sunday — but political pundits say turnout is expected to be low.

If no candidate gets more than 50 percent of the vote, the top two vote-getters will meet in a Nov. 2 runoff to fill the 14 months left in the term of former Lt. Gov. Mitch Landrieu, a Democrat, who resigned after being sworn in as mayor of New Orleans in May. Since then, Scott Angelle, a Democrat and Gov. Bobby Jindal’s chief legislative liaison, has filled the job on an interim basis but was barred by Jindal — who named him — from running for it.

Jindal aides said the governor is not backing a candidate in the Oct. 2 primary.

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WI: Republicans pick Lt. Governor Candidate

From Channel3000.com:

The candidates for lieutenant governor took a much different route to their party nomination than the people at the top of the ticket.

Rebecca Kleefisch, of Oconomowoc, is a former anchor for WISN-TV in Milwaukee who won a five-way GOP primary.

Assembly Majority Leader Tom Nelson, of Kaukauna, won a four-way Democratic primary.

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Poll in Georgia shows Republicans Leading in top 5 races

From 13WMAZ:

A statewide poll conducted for 13WMAZ shows Republican Nathan Deal leading in the race for governor.

In the SurveyUSA poll, Deal had the support of 49 percent of likely voters, Democrat Roy Barnes had 38 percent and Libertarian candidate John Monds had 9 percent.

Four percent of voters in the poll said they were undecided.

The poll’s margin of sampling error is plus or minus 4.1 percentage points. The poll was taken Friday through Sunday and the results cover 599 registered voters who said they were likely to vote in the fall election for governor.

In the Governor’s race, 54 percent of independents supported Deal, while 34 percent favored Barnes. John Monds picked up support of 18 percent of independents.

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WI: Candidates for Lt. Governor Want Position to have more Power

From WQOW.com:

Nine candidates are in the running for one job at the state capitol, a job that raises a key question: voters wonder what power that job actually has. We’re talking about the race for lieutenant governor.

With the primary less than a week away, the race for lieutenant governor is shaping up to be a tight one.

Two Democratic candidates made stops in Eau Claire on Wednesday. Henry Sanders visited the UW-Eau Claire campus, to find out what issues are on the minds of younger voters. “No matter where I am in the state of Wisconsin people are concerned about jobs,” said Sanders. “We have got to get people educated and get them into the workforce. Especially if we want to focus of the future of jobs like manufacturing jobs, new manufacturing jobs like green jobs and clean tech jobs.”

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Florida Republican Nominee for Governor Picks House Rep as Lt. Governor Running Mate

From Rick Scott:

Even more importantly, I am honored that Jennifer is the first African American Republican woman to be part of a statewide ticket in Florida.

We are launching today a new website to share with you my outstanding running mate and the remarkable story of Jennifer Carroll. She is the embodiment of the American Dream. She came to America as a young girl, decided to serve her country with the United States Navy, pursued a higher education, started a small business, and then was elected the first African American female Republican in the Florida State Legislature. Take a moment, if you don’t already know her to meet Jennifer by visiting www.ScottCarrollforFlorida.com.

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Indiana: Lt. Governor to run for Governor?

From Post-Tribune:

– On a hot afternoon at the Indiana State Fair, a cool blonde caught the attention of two men from southern Indiana taking refuge in a shaded tent.

“Is that Becky Skillman?” asked one. “Can’t be,” said the other.

Absent an entourage and surrounded by hog farmers in ball caps, the woman they spotted eating a pork burger may not have looked like the constitutional successor to Gov. Mitch Daniels.

She looked, as she described herself earlier that day, like an “average Hoosier.”

That, say political experts, may be why Indiana’s first elected female lieutenant governor could make history again as the state’s first female governor, if she decides to run.

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Alaska Republican Wins GOP Lt. Governor Nomination

From JuneauEmpire.com:

– Mead Treadwell has won the Republican nomination for Alaska lieutenant governor in his first campaign for elected office.

With 49 percent of Alaska’s 438 precincts reporting, the Anchorage resident has collected more than 53 percent of the GOP vote in Tuesday’s primary election.

His main GOP rival, state Rep. Jay Ramras of Fairbanks, followed with slightly more than 31 percent of the early vote.

Treadwill will join Gov. Sean Parnell in the Nov. 2 general election against the Democrats. Diane E. Benson of Chugiak has won the Democratic nomination for lieutenant governor. At the top of the ticket with be either Ethan Berkowitz or Hollis French

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Lt. Governor Nominees Picked in Alaska

From adn.com:

Mead Treadwell won the Republicans race for Alaska lieutenant governor Tuesday and will run on the November ballot paired with Gov. Sean Parnell.

In the Democratic primary for lieutenant governor, Diane Benson easily bested two opponents to win. She’ll run on a ticket with the apparent Democratic nominee for governor, Ethan Berkowitz.

Also running in November will be Libertarian Jeffrey D. Brown of Anchorage, who ran unopposed in Tuesday’s primary.

The Republican race was the highest profile of the three.

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RSLC REDMAP Rundown – August 24th, 2010

REDMAP

Welcome to this week’s edition of REDMAP Rundown, a synopsis of redistricting news brought to you by the RSLC’s REDistricting MAjority Project (REDMAP).  This weekly update gives you the latest on what those in the Beltway, and across the country, are saying about the impending reapportionment and redistricting process.

In this week’s REDMAP Rundown: Democrat darkness, Alabama’s handshake and the state legislative coattails of Obama and Blago.

Politics Daily’s Lou Cannon kicks off, writing, “Republicans are … optimistic about gaining seats in the 88 legislative chambers (of a total of 99) for which there are elections this year. These legislative elections will determine which party holds the upper hand in the 2011 congressional and legislative reapportionments that will be based on the 2010 census. Several legislative bodies are closely balanced, among them the Texas House, which Republicans control by a two-seat margin. Texas is the largest prize in the redistricting sweepstakes; it will gain four additional House seats (for a total of 36) because of population increases.  Republicans are favored to hold the Texas House and are in no apparent danger of losing any other legislative body they now control. Democrats, in contrast, are playing defense in attempting to hold onto at least a dozen chambers. ‘It looks dark for the Democrats,’ says Tim Storey, a political analyst for the National Council of State Legislatures (NCSL). … Now, with the pendulum swinging back, Republicans stand to gain some 500 legislative seats.

“Republican candidates hoping to end Democratic dominance of the Alabama Legislature unveiled an agenda Monday,” according to The Associated Press. “House Minority Leader Mike Hubbard, who’s also chairman of the Alabama Republican Party, said all Republican candidates for the Legislature are supporting the ‘2010 Republican Handshake with Alabama,’ and its passage depends on Republicans taking control of the Legislature for the first time in 136 years. To try to accomplish that, GOP candidates are doing more than saying what they will do. Hubbard said they are tying Alabama Democrats to Washington to capitalize on voters’ uneasiness with the national economy and dislike of some new federal policies, particularly health care. ‘The Democrats in Alabama are no different than the Democrats in Washington. They have the same philosophy,’ said state Sen. Del Marsh, R-Anniston. Marsh, the GOP’s state finance chairman, was one of 17 legislative candidates who joined Hubbard to unveil the legislative agenda.”

“With less than three months until Election Day 2010, Republicans celebrated one of the most hard fought special elections – at any level – with the victory of Sam Blakeslee for California’s 15th Senate District. Blakeslee’s marks the 62nd state legislative special election victory for Republicans, nationwide, since President Barack Obama was elected. While Democrats hold a six-point voter registration advantage in the 15th District, Blakeslee topped Democrat John Laird 48 percent to 44 percent.  The race, which was the determining factor in whether Democrats would be one step closer to achieving a super-majority in the senate, became a preview of Democrat efforts, drawing millions of dollars spent by liberal interests and heavy involvement from President Barack Obama.”  Hotline On Call noted, “Here’s the rub: Dems outnumber Republicans 41% to 34% in the district and the Dem in the race – former Assemblyman John Laird – was backed by…wait for it..Pres. Obama. Blakeslee was backed by GOP Gov. nominee Meg Whitman.”

In Illinois, The Associated Press repots, “The unfinished business of the Blagojevich trial poses a major new hurdle for Illinois Democrats, who already are facing a difficult election season. After hoping Blagojevich’s trial would wrap up well before the November vote, a retrial could begin in the final weeks of campaigning. … Republicans are counting on voters to be angry about Blagojevich. The GOP says it won’t have to keep harping on him because voters will have plenty of reminders. ‘I think maybe in their minds they can say, I’ll send my own guilty verdict so to speak and my own message by voting for Republicans in the fall,’ said Illinois House Republican leader Tom Cross. ‘I don’t know that we need to say that. It’s not like Rod Blagojevich is going to be hiding in the back room over the next two months.’”

The RSLC is the only national organization whose mission is to elect down ballot state-level Republican office-holders. To sign up for the REDMAP Rundown, or for more information or media inquiries, please contact Adam Temple at 571.480.4891.



Does PA need a Lt. Governor?

From PennLive.com:

This much is true: Being elected lieutenant governor in Pennsylvania is somewhat akin to calling shotgun first while taking a late summer road trip.

The lucky one in the passenger seat on the driver’s right enjoys the best view, better leg room and a good chance to be first in line when the family caravan pulls into the roadside restaurant. If you called it first, then you’re sitting pretty.

For much of its history, the state job of lieutenant governor has amounted to about as much.

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