Townhall.com, Where Your Opinion Counts
Talk Radio:   Bill Bennett   Mike Gallagher   Dennis Prager   Michael Medved   Hugh Hewitt   
BREAKING NEWS  LeftArrow - Townhall.com : Conservative, Political, Republican   RightArrow - Townhall.com : Conservative, Political, Republican  
Columns, funnies & more in your inbox!
  • Check the boxes and send us your email address to receveive your free newsletter
  • Your daily must-read of conservative columns, cartoons and news. Coulter, Sowell, Krauthammer and more.
  • Townhall.com’s weekly inside scoop on what’s happening behind the scenes in the world of politics. When news breaks, we report.
  • Signup to receive the latest daily Townhall cartoons

Townhall.com The Blogspot for Political, Conservative and Republican Blogs and Bloggers


Tuesday, October 24, 2006
Mixed Messages: Are We Dead or Not?
Posted by: Mary Katharine Ham at 6:27 PM

Yo, and I'm mixin' 'em. I got two turntables and a microphone.

We're rebounding. There's a tide a-turning! Leon Wolf cites the Tom Reynolds race, in which Reynolds has regained the lead. Senate?

The most recent Rasmussen poll ($) shows that Burns has closed the gap on Tester to 48-46...Also, the Maryland Senate race has really tightened up, and the Democrats are going to have to spend probably more than they would like in the last two weeks to keep this seat. Also, the most recent poll in Missouri (Rasmussen) shows Talent with a lead, and things were a toss-up in TN before Harold Ford's weekend meltdown. I think we hold at least TN, MO and MT at the end of the day. Even Lincoln Chafee is showing signs of life, coming in less than five points behind in two recent polls (Fleming and R.I. College).

Jay Cost casts a skeptic's eye on the prediction of a Republican "meltdown" in the second- and third-tier House races:

Think of it this way. The top-tier races feature loads of money being spent. This money serves as an anchor that keeps voter opinions from drifting with the media tide. So, they were the least likely to change. In races where the candidates have not been as active, voters are still more inclined to go with the media flow. Hence, the decline. Insofar as Republican incumbents start spending money to anchor these voters -- those numbers will change, especially in light of the fact that Democratic challengers in those races tend to be under-funded and therefore unable to fully counteract incumbent campaign communications.

Jay Cost, having been no less than THE MAN in 2004, holds some sway with me.

John Hawkins spots the most competitive races, and sees the Burns momentum, too. He's nervous about Ford/Corker, but I'm less so after this stunt. Of course, I can't see this admission hurting him much. If it does, it'll be for the cover-up. No red-blooded Tennessee man would hide the fact that he hung out at a Playboy party!

(Fyi, Ford has been attacked for attending a Playboy party, and Clinton-ed his way out of the issue by saying he's "never been to a party at the mansion," which was technically true, but not exactly honest.)

A narrowing Democratic advantage. But will it narrow enough?

Allah has a depressing round-up, as is his wont, but takes heart in the Netroots being forced to declare moral victory once again. Pretty soon, they'll have enough "moral" victories to be the party of family values!

Majority Watch says the Dems are poised to take the House, with as much as a 20-seat margin if everything breaks their way. That certainly fits wth WaPo’s “wave” projection. As for the Senate, Taegan Goddard boils it down to three races: Missouri, Tennessee, and Virginia. I’d add Montana in there, since Conrad Burns has pulled to within three points or so of Jon Tester.

The latest polls at RCP have the GOP winning two of those. Which would make it 50-50.

Speaking of the Tester camp, RedState notes that they're bringin' in the demigod himself to raise money. They're getting nervous, methinks. When the Nutroots are so sure to fail you, turn to the charismatic moderate.

Scott Elliott, who was also THE MAN in 2004, sees no surge going on here, per se. But he ain't letting it get him down:

I believe now that the effort by the media to portray the GOP faithful as depressed and unenergized has failed to produce GOP faithful who are depressed and unenergized. That is the main reason I'm feeling good this week. 

The DCCC airs an ad in Connecticut portraying Republicans as the captains of the Titanic. Yeah, because no Northeastern Democrat has ever been known to sink anything.

Dick Morris says Republicans are coming home!

The latest polls show something very strange and quite encouraging is happening: The Republican base seems to be coming back home. This trend, only vaguely and dimly emerging from a variety of polls, suggests that a trend may be afoot that would deny the Democrats control of the House and the Senate.

With two weeks to go, anything can happen, but it is beginning to look poss- ible that the Democratic surge in the midterm elections may fall short of control in either House.

All right, this was meant to be a lot more mixed-messagy than this, but everyone's gone and been optimistic. Or, at least, not totally in the gutter.

I'll leave you with this:

Democrats Suffer Bouts of Optimism; Prozac Sales Plunge

And, this: Polls bad!





Your Blog Postings:
Last updated 11 Minutes 34 Seconds Ago
Last updated 18 Minutes 32 Seconds Ago
Last updated 24 Minutes 4 Seconds Ago
Last updated 29 Minutes 22 Seconds Ago
Last updated 31 Minutes 1 Seconds Ago
 

Archives of our Conservative, Republican, Political Blogs

Blog Search



Townhall Conservative, Republican, Political Blogs Townhall Blogs
Townhall Conservative, Republican, Political Columns Columns
Your Townhall Conservative, Republican, Political Blogs Your Blogs
By Month
 July 2009
 June 2009
 May 2009
 April 2009
 March 2009
 February 2009
 January 2009
 December 2008
 November 2008
 October 2008
 September 2008
 August 2008
 July 2008
 June 2008
 May 2008
 April 2008
 March 2008
 February 2008
By Issue
 A Culture of Life
 Budget & Government
 Campaigns & Elections
 Education
 Energy & Environment
 Faith & Family
 Foreign Affairs
 Health Care
 Immigration
 Jobs & Economy
 Judges & Courts
 Media & Culture
 Property Rights
 Safety & Security
 Science & Technology
 Second Amendment
 Social Security
 Tax Relief
Advertisement

Comments Comments

The moral party? NOT!
 Re: Politicians Who Support Government-Run Health Care Should Lead By Example
  By Shirley
Diane
 Re: Politicians Who Support Government-Run Health Care Should Lead By Example
  By RASHUM
liberals & backsliding black "Christians
 Re: Politico: What Obama’s Poll Numbers Mean
  By OncealwaysaMarine
Andrea
 Re: Politico: What Obama’s Poll Numbers Mean
  By Cicero
BK
 Re: Politico: What Obama’s Poll Numbers Mean
  By Diane
And yep, the downward tend in support. .
 Re: Politico: What Obama’s Poll Numbers Mean
  By Cicero
And you can do the same!
 Re: Politicians Who Support Government-Run Health Care Should Lead By Example
  By Shirley
DOWN BABY DOWN!!!!
 Re: Politico: What Obama’s Poll Numbers Mean
  By Allen Caeden
Dottie
 Re: President Obama Goes to Russia
  By vladimir estragon
80s german rock groupy
 Re: Politico: What Obama’s Poll Numbers Mean
  By David WI
cottoneyed
 Re: Politico: What Obama’s Poll Numbers Mean
  By vladimir estragon
Andrea
 Re: Politico: What Obama’s Poll Numbers Mean
  By Diane
Diane:
 Re: Politico: What Obama’s Poll Numbers Mean
  By BK
Pat Lib
 Re: Politico: What Obama’s Poll Numbers Mean
  By Not of this World
Cicero
 Re: Politico: What Obama’s Poll Numbers Mean
  By Andrea
Bk
 Re: Politico: What Obama’s Poll Numbers Mean
  By Diane
Iowa GOP wants Sarah Palin big time!
 Re: Palin Debate Goes On
  By Allen Caeden
technokrat
 Re: Health Care Bill Funds Community Transformation Projects
  By Diane
Allen Caeden: Bill O'Reilly has a poll
 Re: Palin Debate Goes On
  By Marty
Palin's next event is at...
 Re: Palin Debate Goes On
  By Allen Caeden

The Latest on Town HallThe Latest on Town Hall


Blog Roll Blog Roll