Today is Monday, 16th September 2024

State Legislatures Looking Red

By: Brian Bolduc
National Review: The Corner

This morning, the Republican State Leadership Committee released its second report on the “REDistricting MAjority Project” (REDMAP). Led by former Republican National Committee chairman Ed Gillespie, the committee is supporting Republican candidates for state legislatures across the country with the hope of influencing 2011’s redistricting efforts in the GOP’s favor. The report has four major findings:

1. At least 30 state house seats in districts won by President Obama in 2008 could go Republican this year and thereby grant the GOP control of the Michigan, Ohio, and Pennsylvania state houses.

2. Democrats are expected not to win control of a single chamber this year.

3. The GOP is expected to win six chambers easily: the Indiana House, Michigan House, North Carolina House, Ohio House, Pennsylvania House, and Wisconsin Senate.

4. Eleven Democratically-controlled chambers are in play: the Alabama House and Senate, Colorado House and Senate, Iowa House and Senate, Illinois House, New York Senate, North Carolina Senate, Oregon Senate, and Wisconsin Senate

Read the full article here …

New REDMAP Report Indicates Greater Number of Legislative Gains

ALEXANDRIA, VA – The Republican State Leadership Committee (RSLC), through its REDistricting MAjority Project (REDMAP), released the September edition of the REDMAP Report today, finding that the 2010 state legislative elections have become a referendum on the Democrat approach to the recessional and budgetary matters, leading to an even larger pick-up of legislative chambers than previously thought.

“In state after state, Democrat Governors and Legislatures responded to the economic crisis by increasing taxes and failing to cut spending, mirroring the approach so aggressively pursued by President Barack Obama and Congressional Democrats. The result is that in numerous legislative districts across the country that President Obama won in 2008 and are held by incumbent Democrats, voters have dramatically moved away from the Democrat Party and in the direction of a strong crop of fresh new Republican candidates seeking office,” the REDMAP Report states.

The report cites at least 30 legislative seats won by President Obama in 2008 that could determine control of the Michigan, Ohio and Pennsylvania Houses where the Democrat incumbent voted for larger state budgets and massive tax increases in the face of a recession.

In addition, the report increases the number of expected Republican pick-ups to six legislative chambers – adding the North Carolina House and Michigan House, with at least 11 Democrat controlled chambers solidly in play – adding the Illinois House since the last report. The finding that Democrats will not take control of a single state legislative chamber, including key REDMAP chambers such as the Texas House, Michigan Senate and Tennessee House and Kentucky Senate, remains unchanged.

This report has previously stated that if Republicans win only half of the legislative chambers in play, the result will be a net gain of 10 legislative chambers. This projection is starting to look more and more conservative as each week passes.

To view the complete REDMAP Political Report, follow this link.

The RSLC is the largest caucus of Republican state leaders and the only national organization whose mission is to elect down ballot, state-level Republican office-holders. Since 2002, the RSLC has been working to elect candidates for the office of attorney general, lieutenant governor, secretary of state and state legislator. The RSLC consistently raises and spends an average of more than $20 million, per two-year cycle, from more than 80,000 donors and from all 50 states. In February, The RSLC announced the creation of REDMAP which is on pace to raise record amounts dedicated to winning seats and legislative majorities that will critically impact redistricting in 2011.

Democrat AG Candidate Keeps Tainted Money

From The LA Times:

Democratic attorney general nominee Kamala Harris, whose campaign has criticized her Republican rival for keeping donations from a donor convicted of campaign finance fraud, has kept $1,250 from a donor found guilty of similar charges.

Disgraced political fundraiser Norman Hsu, a major contributor to the campaigns of Hillary Clinton and other Democratic candidates, made two contributions in 2006 to Harris, the San Francisco district attorney. The following year, it was revealed that Hsu had been a fugitive for 15 years on grand theft charges in San Mateo County.

Clinton returned $850,000 in contributions raised by Hsu for her presidential campaign, and other candidates also returned money when his past became known. A federal judge in New York sentenced Hsu last year to more than 24 years in prison for violating campaign finance laws and defrauding investors in a multimillion-dollar Ponzi scheme.

Read the Rest…

SC: Lt. Governor Candidates Focus on Job Creation

From The State:

Republican Ken Ard and Democrat Ashley Cooper face off Nov. 2 in the race for lieutenant governor, a position that includes presiding over the state Senate and overseeing the state’s Office on Aging.

The part-time job, which also includes stepping in for the governor if necessary, has an annual salary of $46,545.

Ard, a Florence County councilman since 2004, said he is a small business owner who wants to “run the state like a business,” starting with the Office on Aging.

The Pamplico resident said he would examine the office to make sure “tax dollars are being wisely spent.”

“We need to be about customer service and efficiency,” Ard said.

Read the Rest…

TX: GOP Leads Attorney General and Lt. Governor Races

From mySAnews.com:

While the governor’s contest has had numerous polls, a University of Texas/Texas Tribune survey is the first to look down the ballot. The results of the Sept. 3-8 poll:

Lieutenant Governor: GOP incumbent David Dewhurst, 41 percent; Democrat Linda Chavez-Thompson, 26 percent; Libertarian Scott Jameson, 5 percent; Green Party candidate Herb Gonzales Jr., 1 percent.

Attorney General: Incumbent Republican Greg Abbott, 43 percent; Democrat Barbara Ann Radnofsky, 26 percent; Libertarian Jon Roland, 5 percent.

Read the Rest…

NH: Former Attorney General wins Senate Primary

From the Washington Post:

New Hampshire has certified former state Attorney General Kelly Ayotte (AY’-aht) as the winner of the Republican primary for U.S. Senate.

Ayotte was endorsed by former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin and won a narrow victory over Ovide Lamontagne (LAH’-mohn-tayn). His conservative credentials and courting of the tea party pulled him close in the final days of the campaign.

Lamontagne has until 5 p.m. to decide whether he’ll seek a recount because the margin of victory fell within 1.5 percent of the total votes cast.

The secretary of state’s office says Ayotte’s official margin of victory was 1,667 votes.

Read the Rest…

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.

Read the Rest…

WV: Democrat AG to look into complaint against Democrat Secretary of State’s office

From Charleston Daily Mail:

Attorney General Darrell McGraw’s office is looking into a complaint that Secretary of State Natalie Tennant’s office has misinterpreted state election law.

The complaint, which was filed by an independent candidate running for the state House of Delegates, alleges the layout of the U.S. Senate election ballot is illegal.

The current layout of the Nov. 2 ballot lets voters cast one straight-ticket vote for both elections – the special Senate election and the one for all the other races.

It’s not clear how seriously McGraw’s office is taking the complaint.

Read the Rest…

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.

Read the Rest…

Mass. Republican says he’ll be on the Ballot for Attorney General

From newstelegram.com:

Republican James McKenna of Millbury is claiming success in his bid to get on the November ballot as a challenger to Democract Attorney General Martha Coakley.

Mr. McKenna and a team of supporters set out yesterday to get the required 10,000 write-in votes that would earn him a spot on the Nov. 2 ballot. Ms. Coakley was running unopposed.

Read the Rest…


 

Share this website with your friends

Facebook

 

 

About the Republican State Leadership Committee



twitter

 

Get Daily SNS Updates

Email Address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

RSLC Elected Officials on Twitter

Contact Us

tips@statenewsshot.com

Support the RSLC & America’s Future Leaders:

Support America's Future Leaders; Donate Today

Brought to you by: Republican State Leadership Committee (RSLC)

Archives

Main Menu

Top