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California AG Candidates Face Off in only Debate

From The Sacramento Bee:

Republican Steve Cooley and Democrat Kamala Harris presented stark differences but no “gotcha” moments Tuesday in the only scheduled debate between the two candidates for attorney general.

Cooley vowed to be the people’s attorney, abiding by their will regardless of his personal views, while Harris said voters elect an attorney general to exercise independent judgment on issues from the environment to same-sex marriage.

Polls show Harris and Cooley running neck and neck with about one of every three voters undecided, raising the stakes for the one-hour session at the University of California, Davis, School of Law.

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Ohio GOP AG Candidate Points out Democrat’s Shortcomings

From Cleveland.com:

Republican challenger Mike DeWine lashed out at Attorney General Richard Cordray Tuesday, accusing him of blowing cash on a “bloated” public relations staff while ignoring vacancies in the state’s crime lab.

At a news conference in Columbus, DeWine pointed to a pair of unfilled forensic scientist jobs in the DNA section of the state crime lab as signs of the Democrat’s mismanagement and misplaced priorities. Overall, DeWine said there were at least 11 vacancies at the state crime lab and potentially dozens.

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Disgraced former Ohio AG Broke the Law from Day One?

From The Columbus Dispatch:

Lawbreaking in former Attorney General Marc Dann’s tenure may have begun on day one, with party-hearty staffers keeping the booze flowing at an inauguration event past the time allowed by the hotel’s liquor permit, according to a newly released investigative file.

Last week, the State Highway Patrol released its long-awaited investigative file on Dann’s 17 months in office in 2007 and 2008. The case wasn’t officially closed until Sept. 17, some four months after Dann pleaded guilty to one misdemeanor and declined to challenge another.

The patrol file covers mostly familiar ground: Dann aide Anthony Gutierrez’ fondness for hard liquor and driving — sometimes crashing — state vehicles after imbibing, misuse of campaign funds by Dann and others, and sexual indiscretions at the Dublin-area condo Dann shared with Gutierrez and spokesman Leo Jennings III.

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OH: Secretary of State Candidates Say they’ll improve Elections

From the Columbus Dispatch:

Republican Jon Husted said Ohio’s early-voting period creates “incumbent protection” by going on too long, and that the rules need to be uniform so they don’t result in some counties mailing applications while others do not.

Democrat Maryellen O’Shaughnessy said the 35-day early-voting period is allowing more people to vote, but that it might be cut to 21 days to get rid of the controversial “golden week,” a span where people can register and vote on the same day.

“It is important that people have access to the ballot, and this is a good way to do it,” she said of early voting.

In the battle over who will lead Ohio’s election system as the next secretary of state, Husted and O’Shaughnessy met today at the Fawcett Center at Ohio State University in a debate hosted by the Ohio News Network. They were joined by Libertarian Charles Earl.

The two major-party candidates offered few significant disagreements but fired a few shots. O’Shaughnessy criticized Husted’s residency issue – he stays in Upper Arlington but maintains a legal residence near Dayton, an arrangement deemed proper by the Ohio Supreme Court – and questioned whether he was getting undeserved tax breaks. He criticized her vote while on the Columbus City Council to approve a 42 percent pay raise for council members.

As his opponents traded barbs, Earl lamented that political contests have come down to nitpicking. “If you’re going to get into a street fight, for God’s sakes, kneecap ’em. Don’t go around with this Mickey Mouse stuff.”

Earl said he would be the one to keep major-party politics out of Ohio elections.

“I don’t owe either party anything, and they certainly don’t own me,” he said.

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MT: GOP Has Edge in Battle for Legislature

From GreatFallsTribune.com:

National polls indicate Republicans are poised to ride a wave of anti-Democratic Party sentiment to major gains in Congress on Election Day, and according to some of the state’s top political observers, the GOP could be headed for gains in the Montana legislature as well.

In 2009 Republicans held a 26-seat majority in the 50-member Senate, while Democrats controlled the evenly divided 100-member House because their party controlled the Governor’s Office.

As Gov. Brian Schweitzer heads into the final session of his eight-year term, he’d like nothing more than to have Democratic allies in command of both houses, but unless Montana bucks national trends — something the Treasure State has done in each of the past two legislative elections — Republicans are well-positioned to control both houses when the legislature convenes in January.

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Texas: Republican AG and Lt. Governor Candidates Lead in Poll

From The Texas Tribune:

Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst is leading Democrat Linda Chavez-Thompson 47 to 30 percent, and Attorney General Greg Abbott leads Democrat Barbara Ann Radnofsky 56 to 29 percent. Compared to the gubernatorial race, these matches have larger groups of undecided voters — 12 percent and 11 percent, respectively.

A Republican has a 41-to-29-percent advantage over a Democrat on a generic congressional ballot, and a 7-point lead, 38 to 31 percent, on a generic statehouse ballot.

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CA: Republican AG Candidate Leads Democrat in Fundraising

From SFGate:

Well, the numbers are in in the increasingly contentious attorney general race between SF District Attorney Kamala Harris and LA District Attorney Steve Cooley, and we have to admit — we’re a bit surprised. Cooley is leading the way, with more than $2.1 million collected since July 1, to Harris’ $1.8 million. Cooley also has more cash in the bank — about $500,000 more — which could make a difference in this tight contest. (Cooley also spent just half as much as Harris from July through September; not surprising given she’s launched some ads.)

Here’s why it matters: A recent Field Poll found a whopping 34 percent of likely voters undecided in the attorney general race, with Cooley leading Harris by just 4 points — within the margin of error. Both candidates’ biggest challenge may be simply getting the word out, and introducing themselves to voters in a year when the governor’s race has dominated most of the headlines. More money means more opportunity to communicate with said voters. It also remains to be seen whether independent groups — such as the 47 law enforcement groups that are backing Cooley — will throw their cash and weight around, or whether Cooley will use his stockpile of cash to attack Harris.

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RSLC REDMAP Rundown – October 5th, 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: Obama’s gift to the GOP, Dems losing sleep over Ohio, Conspicuous losses, Pennsylvania battle is on and Hurricanes in North Carolina.

Kim Strassel opines in the Wall Street Journal, “Come Nov. 3, the bigger criticism may be the extent to which the White House has cost Democrats their grip on the electoral map—not just this cycle but for some time to come. … Mr. Obama’s other gift to Democrats is that he’s managed all of this in a year ending with ‘0.’ We just had a census. Come 2011, state legislatures and governors will use the results to redraw congressional lines. The party that controls the state is able to draw the lines in ways that benefits its side for the next 10 years.  And as big as the GOP revival is looking nationally, it’s looking even bigger from a state level. Republicans are expected to finish this election with between 30 and 36 of the governorships. The Republican State Leadership Committee, which backs state legislative candidates, is already claiming victory in six state chambers and estimates that another 11 are in play.  More important is where these gains take place—Michigan, Ohio and Pennsylvania, for starters. These are states expected to lose House seats because of the census, and the GOP may control the cutting. Or, consider this: Of the 75 most competitive House districts, 35 are in areas where Republicans feel confident they will take control of a legislative chamber. The GOP could be redrawing the map in its favor for nearly half the nation’s swing districts.”

Eleanor Clift writes in Politics Daily that state legislative races are “hugely important, and the political professionals are working these races like crazy, with Republicans pouring money into them and Democrats ringing the alarm bell that their party better wake up or risk being the minority in Washington for a decade.  ‘Losing a few seats in Massachusetts won’t cost us any sleep,’ says Tom Bonier with NEC Services, a group that advises Democrats on redistricting. But losing seats in Ohio, where Democrats have a 53-to-46 edge over Republicans, could cost Democrats three or four House seats next time around.  After gaining state legislative seats in the ’04, ’06 and ’08 elections, the Democrats are looking at a scenario where these gains could be swept away in the one election that particularly matters, the one that creates the power grid for redistricting.”

“A new study has blue states seeing red,” according to the American Spectator.  “Illinois, Iowa, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Michigan, Missouri, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania will likely each lose a congressional seat in redistricting. New York and Ohio should lose two seats. … Conspicuously, states that voted for Barack Obama in 2008 are projected to lose eleven of those twelve subtracted seats. Conspicuously, states that voted for John McCain are expected to gain ten of the twelve new seats. Should Election Data Services, Inc.’s numbers hold up, Texas would gain four seats, Florida would add two, and Arizona, Georgia, Nevada, South Carolina, Utah, and Washington would each claim a new seat.  Red states are gaining political clout at the expense of blue states. This makes the electoral map an even more elusive puzzle for President Obama to solve in 2012.”

“The battle for control of the state House of Representatives is on” in Pennsylvania, reports The Patriot-News.  “Republicans see nothing standing in the way of them regaining the majority after four years of Democratic control. … House Democratic campaign operatives … want a seat at the table next year when the Legislature and governor tackle the once-in-a-decade task of redrawing congressional district boundaries.  Republicans are virtually assured that they have a say in that process. The GOP holds a 10-seat advantage in the 50-member state Senate. … Rep. Dave Reed, chairman of the House Republican Campaign Committee, expressed optimism that Election Day will end on a happy note for the GOP.  ‘We feel very good about where we’re at,’ said Reed, R-Indiana County. ‘Our incumbents are very strong across the board. Certainly, a couple of them will be targeted along the way just as there will be a number of Democratic incumbents targeted. But we feel overall we’re going to be back in the majority.’”

“No hurricanes for North Carolina so far this year. But we know one storm that is coming to our state this fall. In fact, we know the exact date: Nov. 2.”  UNC-TV’s D.G. Martin writes, “the early political hurricane-watch reporters are predicting it could be a Category 5 storm, blowing away everything in its path.  North Carolina Republican leaders are drooling at the prospect of taking charge of both houses of the legislature and overseeing the post-census redistricting of every congressional and state legislative seat.  Some North Carolina Democrats are walking around in a daze, shell-shocked at the turn in public opinion from the time of the great Democratic victories of two years ago.”

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.

VA AG Campaigns for Iowa Republican AG Candidate

From Radio Iowa:

Virginia’s Republican attorney general is in Iowa, campaigning with the Republican who hopes to oust Iowa’s current attorney general, a Democrat.

Virginia’s Ken Cuccinelli is among the state attorneys general who have filed lawsuits challenging the federal health care reform law. ”It’d be nice to have another ally, which we don’t really have here in Iowa now, on health care, on EPA — on any of the things that the federal government is doing that are frankly so threatening to future opportunity and the economies of every state,” Cuccinelli says.

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CA: Democrat AG Candidate Too Liberal for California?

From LA Times:

In Kamala Harris’ successful, hard-fought campaign for San Francisco district attorney in 2003, the Democrat and her two rivals found rare common ground on the nationally hypercharged issue of the death penalty. All three adamantly opposed it.

Doing otherwise would have meant almost certain political excommunication in a city where House Speaker Nancy Pelosi once faced catcalls for not being liberal enough. San Francisco, after all, is where wedding bells rang loudest for same-sex couples before California voters banned gay marriage and where Democrats currently outnumber Republicans six to one.
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“Labels are relative here. Our conservative is L.A.’s liberal,” said David Lee, a political science professor at San Francisco State and director of the nonpartisan Chinese American Voters Education Committee. “San Francisco voters poll so much more to the left than the rest of California that politicians have to adjust.”

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