The Christian Science Monitor sees some surprises in the works for the Congressional elections, even in Texas.
On the House side, the conventional wisdom is that a turnover is out of reach for Democrats.Still, the past couple of weeks have seen some surprises. One is the political resilience of Democrats in Texas, who had been expected to lose five seats due to redistricting by the Republican-controlled legislature. Instead, well-funded campaigns have brought Democratic Reps. Chet Edwards, Max Sandlin, and Nick Lampson within range.
Even Reps. Martin Frost and Charles Stenholm, senior Democrats viewed as hopelessly out of sync with the political landscape of their new districts, are running strong campaigns. "It will be very hard for Frost and Stenholm to win, but don't count them out," says James Thurber, a political scientist at American University in Washington.
The late-breaking ethical woes of House majority leader Tom DeLay, who engineered the Texas redistricting from Washington, is adding to the intensity of these races, and could help voter turnout for Democrats. The 10-term lawmaker was cautioned by the House ethics committee three times this month, and last week was subpoenaed to appear before a grand jury looking into illegal corporate contributions in Texas.
In addition, National Democrats are trying to use DeLay's ethical troubles to bash moderate Republicans, such as Connecticut Reps. Robert Simmons and Christopher Shays, who is counting on strong ties to constituents to pull him through an unexpectedly tight race.
[...]
"Turnout is the wild card in this election. I expect it's going to be up substantially, which could be helpful to Democrats like Chet Edwards and Martin Frost in Texas," says Eric Uslaner, a political scientist at the University of Maryland in College Park.
"Still, if I were a Democrat in Texas, I'd run for cover," he adds. "Aside from a few places, I can't see increased registration enough to overturn Tom DeLay's artful handiwork."
The Washington Times (believe it or not) echoes a similar theme:
In District 1, four-term incumbent Mr. Sandlin is leading in several polls against Republican Louie Gohmert of Tyler.Mr. Sandlin is running as an independent and not as a Kerry-Edwards Democrat.
Mr. Gohmert, a former district and state appeals judge, is expected to carry Smith County (Tyler) handily, but Mr. Sandlin's support in the rural areas is formidable.
In the District 11 race, Waco Democrat Mr. Edwards, appears to be leading his Republican opponent, Arlene Wohlgemuth despite her attempts to portray him as an archliberal.
Mrs. Wohlgemuth, a state representative who worked with Mr. Bush when he was governor to pass the state's largest tax cut, has aligned herself with the president on all issues.
In Beaumont, four-term Democrat Lampson, faces a high-profile opponent in former district judge Ted Poe from Houston in the reconstructed District 2.
Mr. Lampson's strong point is Jefferson County, which includes the city of Beaumont, where voters know him from previous campaigns. But a large chunk of conservative voters in north Houston and suburban towns to the city's north and northeast are strong Poe supporters.
Mr. Poe, a prosecutor before becoming a judge in Houston, chose to enter the congressional fray despite some influential Republicans urging that he seek a higher court post.
"I think a lot here depends on whether or not Mr. Poe is swept in by a huge Bush turnout. I don't think he can win it on his own," Mr. Jillson said.
Many political observers say Mr. Doggett can't win because he is too liberal for the new district and because the constituency is 68 percent Hispanic.
Via Lasso comes this rundown from CD17.
On paper, the largely rural district looks like a Republican paradise. In the 2002 elections, GOP candidates statewide trounced Democrats in the district by an average of nearly 2-1. And some observers predict that President Bush, whose ranch near Crawford and his father's presidential library at Texas A&M are in the district, could carry up to 70 percent of the district in his own re-election bid on Tuesday.But Edwards, who spent nine years in the Texas Senate before going to Congress after the 1990 elections, is considered the Democrat most likely to survive last year's congressional redistricting effort designed to bring as many as seven new Texas Republicans to Washington.
Even though almost two-thirds of the district contains areas that were not part of Edwards' old domain, the Democrat did manage to hold on to his power base in McLennan County.
Wohlgemuth, meanwhile, is hoping to undermine that strength in the new district's northern reaches. She hopes to capitalize on her close ties to the Republican president, sporting yard signs carrying the message "Bush-Cheney-Wohlgemuth." She's an outspoken opponent of abortion and an unapologetic critic of government spending who carried last year's legislation that pared back the social service rolls by hundreds of thousands of Texans.
[...]
Thomas Myers, a political science professor at Baylor University, said most voters in the Waco area, which is the largest population center in the district, have grown accustomed to siding with Edwards even though they'll pick the Republican in races for governor, U.S. senator and president.
"Maybe it's civic pride, but they want their congressman to have Waco after his name, Republican or Democrat," Myers said.
Edwards drew about 56 percent of the McLennan County vote in 2002 against Temple businessman Ramsey Farley, but many observers say he'll need a larger margin to prevail in the new district. But Wohlgemuth may have helped him last year when she sided with area dairy farmers over a drinking-water quality issue involving Lake Waco.
Wolhgemuth and the farmers opposed tougher pollution standards, angering many McLennan County residents.
"On that issue, I guess you could say that water is thicker than blood," Myers said.
With Wohlgemuth running strong on her home turf and Edwards secure in his base, the race may come down to the Aggie vote, said Harvey Tucker, a Texas A&M political science professor.
"Chet Edwards has to get the message through that 'I am an Aggie, I am an Aggie,"' Tucker said. "Arlene just has to see how many times she can say George Bush's name in the same sentence."
Via The Stakeholder, the AusChron looks at the huge early turnout in Travis County and sees good news for Democrats, bad news for Tom DeLay. They're even a bit optimistic about the CD10, CD21, and CD31 races, which I'm sad to say is some irrational exuberance. I'd read these numbers as a much better omen for the HD48 and HD50 races, but we'll see. They also handicap the major Congressional battles, including the one in CD22.
In case you've been wondering, this is what Chris Bell will be doing in the near future. I'm more than a little giddy to see that "Powered by Movable Type" disclaimer near the bottom. Here's an AP story on his new PAC.
Mike Fjetland gets himself a little press.
Fjetland said that 40 percent of the Republicans who voted in the District 22 primary voted for Bush but not DeLay, who was unchallenged. The Daily News could not confirm that figure Monday night.“They filled in the circle for Bush, but they didn’t fill in the circle for DeLay,” said Fjetland who challenged DeLay in the 2002 Republican primary.
President/Vice-President
George W. Bush REP 12,311 92.30%
U. S. Representative District 22
Tom DeLay REP 8,352 100.00%
“A lot of people feel embarrassed by DeLay,” Fjetland said, pointing to last year’s turmoil over redistricting and the majority leader’s ongoing ethics imbroglio as reasons why. “They were just unhappy about the extremism by DeLay.”Fjetland argues, however, that many of those same Republicans could never bring themselves to vote for a Democrat. That’s where he comes in.
“The key to this district is the moderate Republicans,” he said.
[...]
Even though he is running against one of the most powerful men in the county — as well as a Democratic challenger who is making a serious bid of his own — Fjetland insists he has a chance.
“I think it’s possible for me to pull out a plurality,” he said.
One more thing, from Fjetland's email:
And don't forget to see "Candidates Straight Talk" featuring the top three contenders for District 22 - DeLay, R. Morrison and Fjetland, Sunday, October 31 at 4 p.m. on KPRC, Channel 2.
DeLay himself continues to be active. The article is mostly on the spate of negative ads DeLay has run, but we'll look at what Rice University political scientist Bob Stein has to say.
"Tom DeLay will get re-elected. I don't think there is too much of a doubt about that. The only question is how much does he win by."Stein said the 22nd District has been Republican for years but noted that growth trends and redistricting indicate it may begin to swing back to the Democratic camp.
Stein said if DeLay's ballot total falls below 60 percent the result could encourage Democrats in 2006.
He said a candidate who has held elected office before and is adept at raising money might enter the 2006 race if DeLay's election numbers fall off.
DeLay won with 63 percent of the vote two years ago and 60 percent in 2000.
Campaign finance reports show that as of Sept. 30, DeLay had spent $1.4 million compared to $417,000 for Morrison.
[Fort Bend County GOP Chair Eric] Thode said DeLay is running a bigger campaign this year because 30 percent of the district's residents have never been represented by him before.
"So they don't know him. So there is always a fear the other side is going to try and define you in a negative way," he said.
Finally, Chris notes that Bev Carter, who thoroughly excoriated Tom DeLay in her last column, has endorsed Richard Morrison in this week's column (which Chris reprinted in full as it is oddly not available online yet). Bev's a GOP precinct chair, and I'm certainly sympathetic to the idea that a party's precinct chairs should support that party's candidates - Lord knows I'd be pissed at any Fort Bend Democratic precinct chairs who endorsed Tom DeLay. I know nothing about her, so I don't know if she's more of a Betsy Lake-style Republican, someone who's worried that DeLay's unbridled sleaze will eventually bring ruin to her party, or just an attention-seeker. Maybe she's taken the old saying that "sometimes party loyalty asks too much" to heart, I don't know. I do know you should read what Bev has to say, and then go read Juanita, who (I think we can all agree) is nobody's idea of a Republican of any stripe.
Posted by Charles Kuffner on October 29, 2004 to Election 2004 | TrackBackCharles, you are probably unaware of the link, but Juanita Jean (aka Susan DuQuesnay-Bankston), used to write weekly columns for Bev Carter's Fort Bend/Southwest Star for many years, before she started her website.
Pop and I don't usually read the Star, so we don't recall (or care) why she left.
Posted by: Chris Elam on October 29, 2004 10:43 AMChris, I actually did know about the Fort Bend Star connection thru this blurb in the Texas Observer. I don't know why she left; the article doesn't say. Thanks!
Posted by: Charles Kuffner on October 29, 2004 11:35 AM