Posts Tagged ‘Rep. Buck McKeon’
American Crossroads, Brad Zaun, California, Chris McDaniel, Club for Growth, Elan Carr, Eloise Gomez Reyes, Gene Taylor, Iowa, Karl Rove, Lesli Gooch, Mississippi, National Republican Senatorial Committee, Paul Chabot, Pete Aguilar, Rep. Buck McKeon, Rep. Mike Honda, Rep. Steven Palazzo, Ro Khanna, Sen. Thad Cochran, Staci Appel, Steve Knight, Ted Lieu, Tom Carey, Tony Strickland
In House, Primary, Senate on June 5, 2014 at 10:12 am
Mississippi
Now with 100% of the precincts finally reporting, US senatorial challenger Chris McDaniel and Sen. Thad Cochran (R-MS) are advancing to a Republican run-off election on June 24. The primary ended in a razor-thin result, as we now all know, with McDaniel finishing first and coming within 1,702 votes of clinching the nomination. Because McDaniel and Cochran virtually split the votes evenly – McDaniel 49.4 percent; Cochran 49.0 percent – realtor Tom Carey’s 1.6 percent finish forced the two major candidates into a secondary election.
Though the spread between the two leaders is only 1,386 votes, McDaniel is already establishing early momentum for the run-off. With analysts conceding that McDaniel has the more committed following, and therefore a base of support more likely to vote in a summer run-off election, the signs are pointing to an upset. While the Club for Growth is committed to spending on McDaniel’s behalf in the run-off, Karl Rove’s American Crossroads Continue reading >
Like this:
Like Loading...
Alabama, California, Chris McDaniel, Gov. Robert Bentley, Iowa, Joni Ernst, Mississippi, Montana, New Jersey, New Mexico, Rep. Buck McKeon, Rep. Henry Waxman, Rep. Julia Brownley, Rep. Steve Palazzo, Rep. Tom Latham, Sen. Cory Booker, Sen. Thad Cochran, Sen. Tim Johnson, South Dakota, Travis Childers
In Governor, House, Senate on June 4, 2014 at 12:17 pm
Mississippi
It was clear that Sen. Thad Cochran was in trouble against state Sen. Chris McDaniel in their Republican primary battle. Last night, McDaniel outpaced the senator by just under 2,500 votes, but the race may not be over. With McDaniel hovering under the 50 percent cut line (49.4 percent with 99 percent of precincts reporting), it appears a secondary election between the two men will occur on June 24. A third candidate, realtor Tom Carey, received two percent, which might be enough to deny McDaniel winning outright, although it is unclear just how many outstanding votes remain to be counted. The post-election period here should be of great interest. The bottom line: this pivotal Senate primary challenge race may not yet be over.
Rep. Steve Palazzo (R-MS-4) got a scare last night, in what proved to be the biggest surprise of the evening. Former veteran Democratic Rep. Gene Taylor (D-MS-4) came close to forcing the two-term incumbent into a run-off, but it appears the congressman will barely win re-nomination with a 50.5-43 percent margin over Taylor Continue reading >
Like this:
Like Loading...
Aimee Belgard, Alabama, California, Chris McDaniel, Don Norcross, Gary King, Gov. Dennis Daugaard, Gov. Robert Bentley, Gov. Susana Martinez, Iowa, Joe Baca, John Driscoll, John Lewis, Joni Ernst, Mark Jacobs, Matt Schultz, Mike Rounds, Mississippi, Montana, New Jersey, New Mexico, Pat Murphy, Rep. Bruce Braley, Rep. Buck McKeon, Rep. Gary Miller, Rep. Gene Taylor, Rep. Henry Waxman, Rep. Spencer Bachus, Rep. Steve Palazzo, Rep. Tom Latham, Rep. Travis Childers, Rick Weiland, Sen. Jeff Sessions, Sen. Thad Cochran, South Dakota, Staci Appel, Steve Lonegan, Swati Dandekar, Ted Lieu, Tom MacArthur
In Election Analysis on June 2, 2014 at 11:38 am
Voters in eight states go to the polls tomorrow, making June 3rd the largest single voting day on the primary election calendar.
Mississippi
We begin our analysis in the south, with the premier race of the day. Mississippi Republican Sen. Thad Cochran fights to win renomination against state Sen. Chris McDaniel in order to continue his long political career. Cochran was originally elected to the Senate in 1978 and became the first modern-day Republican to represent a Deep South state. He won his House seat six years earlier, in fact on the same day that Richard Nixon was re-elected president.
The latest public opinion polls actually showed McDaniel leading the senator, perhaps as a result of a unified front of national conservative organizations falling in line behind the challenger and spending Continue reading >
Like this:
Like Loading...
Bill Bloomfield, Brent Roske, California, Marianne Williamson, Mitt Romney, President Obama, Rep. Brad Sherman, Rep. Buck McKeon, Rep. George Miller, Rep. Henry Waxman, Rep. Howard Berman, Rep. Julia Brownley, Sandra Fluke, Waxman-Berman political machine
In House on January 31, 2014 at 12:57 pm
With yesterday’s retirement announcement from veteran Rep. Henry Waxman (D-CA-33), added to the recent decisions of representatives George Miller (D-CA-11) and Buck McKeon (R-CA-25) not to seek re-election this year, California will lose a combined 102 years of congressional seniority in the next Congress. Both Waxman and Miller will have served for 40 years when their current terms expire, and Rep. McKeon’s tenure will have been 22 years. Though seniority is not as important in the more modern congressional era, particularly on the Republican side, a state simultaneously losing so much service time in its federal delegation is still significant.
Rep. Waxman was the unofficial senior partner of the famed Waxman-Berman political machine in Los Angeles County, which was a dominant force throughout California Democratic Party circles at its apex. His departure represents the end of an era in southern California politics. In 2012 Continue reading >
Like this:
Like Loading...
California, House Armed Services Committee, Lee Rogers, Oklahoma, Rep. Buck McKeon, Rep. James Lankford, Rep. Jim Bridenstine, Rep. Tom Cole, Scott Pruitt, Sen. Tom Coburn, Steve Knight, Tony Strickland
In House, Senate on January 17, 2014 at 11:18 am
California Rep. Buck McKeon (R-CA-25) becomes the eleventh House member since Dec. 15 to announce retirement, and Oklahoma Sen. Tom Coburn (R) announced last night that he will resign from Congress at the end of 2014. Coburn’s move means that 36 Senate races will be contested this year.
At least Rep. Mckeon’s retirement is not a surprise. The House Armed Services Committee chairman yesterday confirmed and made formal the conventional wisdom that he would retire at the end of this current congressional term. The 75-year-old, 11-term congressman also indicated that his reaching the end of his term-limited period as the Armed Services Committee chair definitely played a role in his decision not to seek re-election.
McKeon’s move sets off what will be a very interesting June qualifying election. Already committing to run as Republicans are former state senator and 26th Congressional Continue reading >
Like this:
Like Loading...
California, Jeff Gorell, Julia Brownley, Rep. Buck McKeon, Tony Strickland
In House on December 3, 2013 at 10:33 am
For the better part of a year, retirement rumors have been swirling around House Armed Services Committee chairman Buck McKeon (R-CA-25), and a new political move yesterday suggests that such speculation may soon become reality.
Unusual political occurrences have been happening in and around Ventura and west Los Angeles counties during the past two weeks. Tony Strickland is a former Republican state senator, statewide candidate, and 2012 congressional nominee in Ventura County’s new District 26. Last November, Strickland lost to then-Assemblywoman Julia Brownley (D) 47-53 percent. He originally had been planning to seek a re-match with Rep. Brownley in the upcoming mid-term election, but suddenly reversed course and recently said he would not run in the 26th District next year. He made it plain, however, that his personal plans included running for a different office.
The local Republican leadership then recruited Assemblyman Jeff Gorell to replace Strickland as their favored 26th District candidate. Gorell’s official announcement last week included an endorsement from Tony Strickland.
Continue reading >
Like this:
Like Loading...