Ex-Obama Aide Laments How Trump Has Taken Over the Obama Coalition
Artificial Intelligence Just Did Something Terrifying in a Test — We Might Be...
House Republicans Move to Cut Funding to 'Transgender Animal Research'
Pete Hegseth Places Restrictions on Reporters Covering the Pentagon to Stop Leaks
Inside the Left’s Weird New Push to Paint Trump As Mentally Unfit
Did Feds Just Open the Door for Machine Guns?
New England State Becomes First in the Area to Ban Sanctuary City Policies
Hochul Worried She'll Have to Cut Services for Illegal Aliens Amid GOP-Backed Spending...
Pelosi Brutally Mocked After Claiming This Is the Reason She Entered Politics
Hegseth Hammers Down Press Inside Pentagon Amid National Security Concerns
David Hogg Has Lost His Mind After Suggesting This Is Who Should Run...
Trump to West Point Grads: 'You Are Winners' in Return to America First...
James Comer Urges Pam Bondi to Prosecute Biden Family
Newsom Furious, Vows Legal Fight After Senate Repeals EV Mandate Waiver
WaPo Columnist Accuses Jill Biden of 'Elder Abuse' Over Biden's 2024 Campaign Push
Tipsheet

Time for Some More Reckless 2012 Speculation

We've been ruminating about Rick Santorum and Michele Bachmann's rumored Oval Office designs recently, so why not link to a totally preposterous roundup of DC insiders' predictions on the 2012 GOP field, as collected by
Advertisement
National Journal?



Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney continues to hold the pole position for the 2012 Republican presidential nomination in the latest National Journal Political Insiders Poll. But the surprise runner-up to Romney was the two-term Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels, who moved up from fifth place when the last ranking of the potential GOP White House contenders was conducted a year ago.

Rounding out the top five in order were former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty, Sen. John Thune of South Dakota and former 2008 GOP vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin.

While we're at it, Larry Sabato has issued his wildly premature, yet irresistible, ratings for all 33 of next year's Senate races:

There are seven toss-ups at the moment, six of them Democratic: Joe Lieberman (D-CT), Claire McCaskill (D-MO), Jon Tester (D-MT), Ben Nelson (D-NE), John Ensign (R-NV), Sherrod Brown (D-OH), and Jim Webb (D-VA). All seven are either in the “very vulnerable” or “vulnerable” categories.

There are eight seats currently leaning to one or the other party. Six are Democratic and two are Republican. Of the eight, the seat of Scott Brown (R-MA) may be the most endangered, initially—although we believe some are underestimating his ability to win a full term despite the state’s heavily Democratic tilt.

The remaining 18 seats are “likely” or “solid” for the eleven Democrats and seven Republicans who occupy them.

Advertisement

This reflects what we've been saying for months:  Republicans, if they play their cards right, have a golden opportunity to take back the Senate -- even if modest Obama coattails exist. 

One of the races Sabato labels "potentially vulnerable" is for Bob Menedez's seat in New Jersey.   In 2006, a spectacular year for Democrats, Menendez won with only 53 percent of the vote.  His opponent that year was Tom Kean, Jr., the son of the popular ex-Governor.  The Washington Post's Aaron Blake astutely noticed that Kean's political website is currently getting a facelift, signaling that a rematch may be in the works.  As we've discussed previously, Menendez might have cause for concern:

Outgoing DSCC Chair Bob Menendez (D-NJ) needs to turn his attention to his '12 re-election bid ASAP. A Quinnipiac Poll released 11/9 found that only 38% of voters approve of his job performance while 41% of voters disapprove. More troubling for Menendez: nearly half -- 48% -- of independents disapprove of his job performance.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement