Today is Friday, 20th September 2024

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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NM: Democrat Secretary of State Denies doing wrong

From news9west.com:

A lawyer for current and former employees of Secretary of State Mary Herrera says his clients have talked to the FBI about allegations of wrongdoing in the office.

Rudy Martin of Espanola is an attorney for former elections bureau director A.J. Salazar and for two employees who have been placed on administrative leave by Herrera. Those are James Flores, who has served as press spokesman for Herrera, and office administrator Manny Vildasol.

Martin said Thursday his clients told the FBI about wrongdoing involving contracts as well as office employees campaigning for Herrera on state time.

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NY: Prominent Democrat Endorses Republican for Attorney General

From silive.com:

Crossing party lines, former Democratic North Shore City Councilman Jerome O’Donovan yesterday endorsed GOP District Attorney Daniel Donovan’s run for attorney general.

“Dan Donovan has been a tremendous prosecutor who has aggressively targeted crime on Staten Island,” said O’Donovan, who campaigned against Donovan in the 2003 district attorney race. “While I will support Democrats for other federal, state and local offices in November, this is different.”

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The Plight of Kansas Democrats

From the Marysville Advocate:

The future of the Kansas Democratic Party may be riding with the fortunes of Attorney General Stephen Six, Secretary of State Chris Biggs and State Treasurer Dennis McKinney.

Each are unelected incumbents who were appointed by Democratic governors to fill out the unexpired terms of their predecessors who resigned. The three have fulfilled their duties admirably since taking office, but toil in relative obscurity because these offices do not generally command front-page coverage. Moreover, each is trying to win despite stiff political crosswinds that will make victory difficult.

Much of these Kansas Democrats’ campaign hopes rest on factors largely outside of their control. With the economic recovery stalled and the presidency and Congress controlled by Democrats, Democratic incumbents all over the country are in serious jeopardy.

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Still no clear winner is Arizona AG Race

From PhoenixBusinessJournal.com:

It may not be the New York Yankees, Tampa Bay Rays and Boston Red Sox pennant chase, but the Republican attorney general’s race between Tom Horne and Andrew Thomas remains tight as election officials continue to count votes.

As of this morning, Horne had a 456-vote lead on Thomas — up slightly from yesterday. The vote count could take a few more days as Maricopa County elections officials count early ballots dropped off at polling places, and other late entries.

Thomas, an ally of Sheriff Joe Arpaio, did better than Horne in Maricopa County.

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RSLC Chairman Ed Gillespie on the Politics of the United States Show


Click on the Play button above to hear the entire interview.

RSLC: Poll Shows Majority of New Yorkers Oppose Democrat Gains in State Senate

ALEXANDRIA, VA – Leading up to an election in which control of the New York Senate hangs in the balance, voters are sending clear signals that they are fed up with Democrat control and overblown budgets and will be looking elsewhere this November.

In a Siena College poll of registered New York voters released this morning, an alarming 61 percent indicated they do not want Democrats to increase their slim 32-30 state senate majority.  Fifty-one percent of voters said they prefer someone besides their incumbent state senator.

“Senate Democrats in Albany have proven themselves to be reckless and out-of-control spenders, tax-raisers and job killers and have tagged the voters of New York with the tab,” said RSLC Vice Chair Tom Reynolds who also served as NY State Assembly Minority Leader and as a U.S. Congressman from New York.  “This poll demonstrates that the New York electorate is unhappy and is demanding results on creating new jobs, lowering taxes and stopping spending.”

“By a nearly three-to-one margin, voters believe the recently enacted state budget will worsen, not improve, the state’s long term fiscal condition,” according to the poll.  Forty-one percent believe the state’s condition will worsen as a result of the Democrat budget that includes billions of dollars in tax increases, while only 15 percent think it will do anything to improve it.  “Voters continue to be pessimistic about the fiscal condition of New York, which is reflected in the fact that two-thirds of voters believe the state is headed in the wrong direction and only 21 percent believe the state is on the right track,” said Siena College pollster Steven Greenberg.

“This is a situation we see playing out across the country.  In state after state, voters are sick and tired of liberal, big government policies and are going to speak with their vote in just over two months,” Reynolds concluded.

The most recent REDistricting MAjority Project (REDMAP) Political Report included the New York Senate as one Democrat controlled chamber from key states that is solidly “in play.”  REDMAP is a program of the RSLC dedicated to winning Republican control of state legislatures that will have the most impact on Congressional redistricting in 2011.

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.

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VT: GOP Picks Secretary of State Candidate

From BurlingtonFreePress.com:

A former Douglas administration spokesman will face a former state senator in this fall’s race to fill the office of secretary of state. Jason Gibbs, 33, of Duxbury edged out Chris Roy, 45, of Williston in the Republican secretary of state primary.

Jim Condos, 59, of Montpelier was the victor over Charles Merriman, 51, of Middlesex in the Democratic contest.

In both races, voters went with the candidates who entered the race comparatively late. Roy and Merriman launched their candidacies more than a year ago, while Gibbs and Condos didn’t jumped into the ring until spring.

“I’m very proud of the positive, issue-based race we were in,” Gibbs said. “I’m looking to bring that same energy and enthusiasm to the general election.”

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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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Florida: Pam Bondi Wins Republican Nomination for Attorney General

From SunSentinel.com:

Republican Pam Bondi, dubbed the political newbie of the race, and Democrat Dan Gelber, a veteran statesman of Florida politics, will vie to become Florida’s next attorney general after triumphing in Tuesday’s party primaries.

Gelber, a state senator from Miami Beach, easily won the Democratic Party’s nomination. His record as a leader in the state legislature and as a former government prosecutor appeared to have served him well with voters and put him far ahead of his opponent, Dave Aronberg, of Greenacres, a former state assistant attorney general.

Bondi, 44, a former Hillsborough County prosecutor and frequent guest on Fox News, beat out what some had thought would be Lt. Gov. Jeff Kottkamp’s superior name recognition, causing him to concede the race around 10 p.m. Holly Benson trailed both of them.

If Bondi wins in November, the Tampa resident would become the state’s first female attorney general. An endorsement last week from former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, whose celebrity power guarantees headlines and online clicks, may have helped put her ahead.

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