Alex Sink, Allen West, Blue Angels pilot, David Jolly, Elise Stefanik, Florida, Joe Gilbert, Kathleen Peters, Mark Bircher, New York, NY-21, President Obama, Rep. Bill Owens, Rep. Bill Young, Tea Party, VA-8, Virginia
In House on January 15, 2014 at 12:46 pm
The first phase of the special election to replace the late Rep. Bill Young (R) was held last night in Pinellas County, Florida on the western Tampa Bay peninsula. Though the Democratic race was a non-event because former state Chief Financial Officer and 2010 gubernatorial nominee Alex Sink was unopposed, the Republican side featured a three-way race.
Lobbyist David Jolly, a former staff member to Congressman Young, won the nomination securing 45 percent of the vote. Jolly raised the most money (more than $400,000) on the Republican side and enjoyed support from the Young political organization, including the late congressman’s wife, Beverly Young, who voiced her support through a television ad.
Placing second was state Rep. Kathleen Peters who never seemed to get her campaign untracked. She garnered votes from 31 percent of the Republican electorate.
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Ann Kirkpatrick, Bob Dold, Bobby Schilling, Brad Schneider, Brian Nestande, Cheri Bustos, Domenic Recchia, Erin Bilbray, Gary Miller, Gwen Graham, Jackie Walorski, Jason Smith, Jim Matheson, Joe Garcia, Joe Heck, Keith Rothfus, Mark Critz, Mark Sanford, Michael Grimm, Mike Coffman, Mike McIntyre, Patrick Murphy, Raul Ruiz, Rep. Bill Owens, Rep. Cedric Richmond, Rep. Dan Maffei, Rep. Ed Markey, Rep. Jo Bonner, Rep. John Tierney, Rep. Kerry Bentivolio, Rep. Mel Watt, Rep. Scott DesJarlais, Robin Kelly, Rodney Davis, Ron Barber, Scott Peters, Steve Southerland
In House on July 12, 2013 at 5:45 pm
Completing our two-part series examining the congressional political picture (the July 8 Political Update covered the Senate outlook), today we look at the House.
Currently, 234 Republicans and 201 Democrats comprise the body’s membership. Three seats are slated to soon become vacant: Rep. Ed Markey (D-MA-5) will be sworn into the Senate upon official certification of his late June special election victory; Rep. Jo Bonner (R-AL-1) announced his resignation effective in mid-August to accept a position at the University of Alabama; and Rep. Mel Watt (D-NC-12), should he be confirmed, will become the Director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency thus leaving the House at an undetermined date.
In contrast to the 2012 cycle when 62 seats were open, at this point only 14 members have announced their retirements, accepted new positions, or are running for a different office. Three others: representatives Robin Kelly (D-IL-2), Mark Sanford (R-SC-1), and Jason Smith (R-MO-8), have won special elections since the current 113th Congress began making a grand total of 17 seats that have opened, or will open, since the 2012 general election. Of the fourteen currently projected open seats, eight are Republican held and six Democratic.
Toss-Ups
Attributable to a tight national redistricting model, only eight seats are now in this column. Six of those belong to Democrats (representatives Ron Barber (AZ-2), Scott Peters [CA-52), Patrick Murphy (FL-18), Joe Garcia (FL-26), Mike McIntyre (NC-7), and Jim Matheson (UT-4)], while only two are Republican-held [representatives Gary Miller (CA-31) and Mike Coffman (CO-6)]. Therefore, the GOP is in a slightly better position to gain a small number of seats.
The Leans
Both parties have just about an equal number of “lean” seats. Majority Republicans have 18 of their members or open seats rated as Lean Republican, while Continue reading >
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DCCC, Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, Rep. Ami Bera, Rep. Ann Kirkpatrick, Rep. Ann McLane Kuster, Rep. Bill Enyart, Rep. Bill Owens, Rep. Brad Schneider, Rep. Carol Shea-Porter, Rep. Cheri Bustos, Rep. Dan Maffei, Rep. Elizabeth Esty, Rep. Jim Matheson, Rep. Joe Garcia, Rep. John Barrow, Rep. John Tierney, Rep. Julia Brownley, Rep. Kyrsten Sinema, Rep. Lois Capps, Rep. Mike McIntyre, Rep. Patrick Murphy, Rep. Pete Gallego, Rep. Raul Ruiz, Rep. Ron Barber, Rep. Scott Peters, Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney, Rep. Suzan DelBene, Rep. Tim Bishop
In House on March 6, 2013 at 12:47 pm

The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee released the first of their “Frontline” incumbents, those that will get the most attention from the party as they build for re-election. All are either freshmen from competitive districts, won a tough open seat, or defeated a Republican incumbent in 2012.
Rep. Ron Barber (AZ-02) – Barber, who won a special election to replace resigned Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D), had a closer than expected general election against former Air Force pilot Martha McSally (R) winning just 50.4 to 49.6 percent. McSally is likely to return in 2014, and with a more favorable turnout model could conceivably score an upset. The fact that Mitt Romney won the seat 50-48 percent bodes well for the challenger, but it didn’t pull her through last November.
Rep. John Barrow (GA-12) – Rep. Barrow drew a second-tier opponent in what should have been a first-tier GOP conversion opportunity. With a projected lower African-American turnout for 2014, Continue reading >
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