Posts Tagged ‘Ken Buck’
Bob Beauprez, Chris McDaniel, Colorado, Curt Clawson, Doug Lamborn, Elise Stefanik, FL-19, Gov. John Hickenlooper, Gov. Martin O'Malley, Kathleen Rice, Ken Buck, Lee Zeldin, Lt. Gov. Anthony Brown, Maryland, Matt Doheny, Mississippi, New York, Oklahoma, Patrice Douglas, Rep. Charlie Rangel, Rep. James Lankford, Rep. Richard Hanna, Rep. Scott Tipton, Rep. Trey Radel, Sen. Thad Cochran, Steve Russell
In Governor, House, Senate on June 25, 2014 at 10:22 am
Mississippi
Defying all pollsters’ projections, veteran Sen. Thad Cochran rebounded from his under-performance in the June 3 primary election to win the Mississippi run-off campaign. State Sen. Chris McDaniel came within one-half percent of claiming the Republican nomination in the primary vote, but failed to capitalize on his early momentum.
Virtually all published polling projected the 42-year congressional veteran to be falling significantly behind his Tea Party-backed Republican challenger. Yet, the actual results gave the incumbent a 51-49 percent victory, a margin of 6,373 votes out of the 372,000-plus ballots cast, some 60,000 more than were recorded in the primary. Therefore, the secondary election campaign defied not only the pollsters who almost unanimously predicted a McDaniel win going away, but also voter history that virtually always sees an incumbent lose a run-off election when forced into one. Additionally, this run-off produced more Continue reading >
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Andrew Romanoff, Barbara Kirkmeyer, Bentley Rayburn, Bob Beauprez, Colorado, Cynthia Coffman, David Cox, Don Quick, George Leing, Gov. John Hickenlooper, Ken Buck, Martin Walsh, Mike Kopp, Rep. Cory Gardner, Rep. Douglas Lamborn, Rep. Jared Polis, Rep. Mike Coffman, Rep. Scott Tipton, Scott Gessler, Scott Renfroe, Sen. Mark Udall, Steve Laffey, Tom Tancredo
In Governor, House, Senate on April 15, 2014 at 10:21 am
Senate
Colorado’s US Senate general election battle is already underway as Rep. Cory Gardner (R-CO-4) won the Republican nomination outright at the party’s official state Assembly meeting this past weekend. By capturing 74 percent of the convention delegate votes, and with no candidates petitioning for access to the ballot, the two-term congressman officially assumes the role of Republican senatorial nominee against incumbent Sen. Mark Udall (D). Democrats also met in convention, and all party incumbents were nominated for another term.
House
The Republicans, however, provided more drama in addition to Gardner’s victory. Two federal GOP primaries have now formulated, in the 3rd and 5th Congressional Districts. Farmer David Cox secured 34 percent of the vote, four points more than the minimum requirement, to advance to a primary contest against sophomore Rep. Scott Tipton (R-CO-3).
To the south and east, former Air Force Major General Bentley Rayburn, who ran for the House in both 2006 and ’08, secured 37 percent of the delegate vote in the 5th Congressional District, and will again challenge Rep. Douglas Lamborn in the Continue reading >
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Amy Stephens, Arkansas, Ben Sasse, Colorado, Harper Polling, Ken Buck, Nebraska, Owen Hill, Quinnipiac University, Randy Baumgardner, Rasmussen Reports, Sen. Mark Pryor, Sen. Mark Udall, Shane Osborn, Sid Dinsdale, Tom Cotton
In Polling, Senate on February 7, 2014 at 11:43 am
Colorado
We now have confirming data that Sen. Mark Udall (D) must traverse a rocky political road to secure re-election.
Last December, Public Policy Polling (Dec. 3-4; 928 registered Colorado voters) released a surprising survey that showed the senator leading a potential general election Republican opponent by a mere four points, 46-42 percent. The result occurred when pairing Udall with 2010 Republican nominee and Weld County District Attorney Ken Buck. As you will remember, Buck lost to Sen. Michael Bennet (D) 46-48 percent even though they faced each other during the Republican landslide of 2010.
Yesterday, Quinnipiac University made public their latest Colorado poll (Jan. 29-Feb. 2; 1,139 registered Colorado voters) and the result verified PPP’s pre-Christmas finding. In fact, the current Q-Poll’s 45-42 Continue reading >
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Arkansas, Colorado, Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, Gov. Steve Bullock, Jeanne Shaheen, Ken Buck, Lt. Gov. John Walsh, Michigan, Montana, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Rep. Gary Peters, Rep. Steve Daines, Rep. Tom Cotton, Scott Brown, Sen. Carl Levin, Sen. Kay Hagan, Sen. Mark Pryor, Sen. Mark Udall, Sen. Max Baucus, South Dakota, Terri Lynn Land, West Virginia
In Senate on January 20, 2014 at 11:48 am
With the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee now distributing fundraising materials quoting MSNBC as saying that the Republicans “now have the advantage” in capturing the Senate majority this year, it’s a good time to examine the total national picture.
Recent polling does suggest that the Republicans have greatly improved their chances of converting the six Democratic seats they need to claim majority status. In fact, GOP candidates are now either leading or within the margin of error in nine states, while maintaining a slight advantage in their own two competitive seats (Kentucky and Georgia).
Isolating the various states, we begin with the three open Democratic seats from places that have generally yielded a Republican voting pattern since 2000. Currently, the Montana, South Dakota and West Virginia Continue reading >
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Amy Stephens, Chris McDaniel, Colorado, Gov. John Hickenlooper, Greg Brophy, Ken Buck, Mark Udall, Mississippi, Owen Hill, Public Policy Polling, Quinnipiac University, Randy Baumgardner, Scott Gessler, Sen. Thad Cochran, Tea Party, Tom Tancredo, Travis Childers
In Governor, Polling, Senate on December 9, 2013 at 11:35 am
Six years ago, quiet veteran Mississippi Sen. Thad Cochran (R) didn’t commit to running for re-election until soon before the candidate filing deadline, thus leading to false speculation that he would retire. Cochran followed a similar silent pattern in this election cycle until announcing on Friday that he will run for a seventh term.
Conjecture was becoming brisk that the 76-year-old senator would end his long political career because he is already facing a Republican primary challenge from a Tea Party-backed state senator, and his fundraising has been almost non-existent among individuals. Cochran’s total receipts in 2013 are $402,284 (through Sept. 30), but his contributions from individuals totaled only $31,500, just eight percent of the amount raised. He officially begins this race with more than $800,000 cash-on-hand, however.
In the June 3 primary, Sen. Cochran faces state Sen. Chris McDaniel (R-Ellisville/Laurel). As mentioned, the Continue reading >
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Affordable Care Act, Amy Stephens, Colorado, Gov. Chris Christie, Gov. John Hickenlooper, gun control, Hillary Clinton, Jamie McMillan, Ken Buck, ObamaCare, Owen Hill, President Obama, Quinnipiac University, Randy Baumgardner, Rep. Paul Ryan, Sen. Mark Udall, Sen. Rand Paul, Sen. Ted Cruz, tax increase, Terry McAuliffe, Vice President Biden, Virginia
In Election Analysis on November 21, 2013 at 10:46 am
Quinnipiac University, fresh from being the closest major pollster in the closing days of the Virginia governor’s race (they projected Terry McAuliffe to be leading 45-41 percent; the final result was 48-45 percent), released a new Colorado survey (Nov. 15-18; 1,206 registered Colorado voters) that produces surprising results.
Up until now, first-term Sen. Mark Udall (D) had been viewed as a prohibitive favorite for re-election. This Q-Poll, however, suggests that competition could be coming his way. According to the data, Udall leads former GOP nominee and Weld County District Attorney Ken Buck (R) 45-42 percent. He’s ahead of virtually unknown businessman Jamie McMillan (R) only 43-40 percent. The incumbent expands his edge to five, six, and seven points over state senators Randy Baumgardner and Owen Hill, and state Rep. Amy Stephens, respectively. Clearly, all of these match-ups indicate that Sen. Udall is not yet an electoral cinch.
But, the real eye-opening data relates to opinions of federal leaders and issues, in Continue reading >
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