Posts Tagged ‘Texas’
Ben Carson, George H. W. Bush, George W. Bush, Gov. Jeb Bush, Jim Ellis, Rick Perry, Sen. Ted Cruz, Texas, Texas Tribune, University of Texas, YouGov
In Presidential campaign on February 25, 2015 at 10:47 am
The University of Texas and the Texas Tribune news publication teamed to release a poll of potential Republican 2016 primary voters (YouGov; Feb. 6-15; 1,200 Texas adults; 547 sampled-matched Republican primary voters) and found home state Sen. Ted Cruz and Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker leading the pack by a relatively substantial margin.
Falling back into single digits were former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush and Texas’ longest-serving governor, Rick Perry. Thus, we see one more political survey attesting to Gov. Walker’s strength and ex-Gov. Bush’s early weakness.
The UT/Tribune polls have previously not been particularly reliable, but in this instance they teamed up with the international survey research company, YouGov, which has generally produced credible results around the world. This poll, however, appears to have its flaws.
The 10-day information-gathering period is long, the questionnaire was administered through the Internet — a common YouGov practice — and, the sampling universe was not screened for registered voters, but instead the individuals were sample-matched from previous voter and demographic data to cast the Republican sample cell. The pollsters themselves suggest the polling margin of error is greater than 4.1 points, but it realistically could be even higher.
Though the poll’s conclusions can be contested, Continue reading >
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"SEC" Primary, Alabama, Antonio Villaraigosa, Arkansas, California, Eric Garcetti, Florida, Gavin Newsom, Georgia, Gov. Scott Walker, Iowa Caucus, Jackie Speier, Jeb Bush, Kamala Harris, Kevin Johnson, Los Angeles, Mike Huckabee, Mississippi, Mitt Romney, Nevada, New Hampshire, Rep. Adam Schiff, Rep. John Garamendi, Rep. Loretta Sanchez, Rep. Raul Ruiz, Rep. Xavier Becerra, Sen. Barbara Boxer, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Wisconsin
In Primary, Senate on January 9, 2015 at 10:57 am
At the end of 2014, California Sen. Barbara Boxer (D) provided strong hints that she would not seek a fifth term in 2016. Yesterday, she made that decision official. In a video hosted by her grandson, Sen. Boxer announced that she will not be a candidate for the Senate next year, thus ending what will be a 34-year-career in Congress.
The succeeding election now marks the first time since Boxer originally won in 1992 that California will host an open US Senate campaign. A plethora of Democrats are expected to enter the statewide fray. The most interesting dynamic will be the interplay between political allies Gavin Newsom, the state’s lieutenant governor, and California Attorney General Kamala Harris. It would be surprising to see the two close colleagues challenge each other, but stranger things have happened in politics. It is also possible that neither will run. Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti is apparently not giving serious consideration to the Senate race. One potential major contender who is seriously looking at becoming a candidate is former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa. Another mayor drawing attention is Sacramento’s Kevin Johnson, a former NBA professional basketball player.
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Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, New York, North Carolina, NY-11, Politico, Rep. Michael Grimm, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas
In House, Primary on December 24, 2014 at 10:25 am
Happiness to all as we enter the year-end holiday period. In honor of the season, we will take a brief publication hiatus for the next few days but be back at the beginning of the new year. Thank you for a great 2014 and enjoy the time with your loved ones.
NY-11
Two days ago it was predicted that New York Rep. Michael Grimm (R-Staten Island) would plead guilty to one count of tax evasion, and then soon resign his House seat possibly as a way to avoid incarceration. The prediction proved half true.
Grimm did, in fact, plead guilty in federal court to one count of tax evasion from an enterprise occurring prior to his entering Congress. His sentencing is now scheduled for June 8, but the representative stated he does not intend to resign from office.
It is likely just a matter of time before he is forced to do so, however, either by having to report to prison or, simply because his status as a convicted felon may disqualify him from congressional service because he will no longer be an elector. Voting privileges are suspended until the completion of a sentence even if the penalty consists only of probation and paying a fine.
In any event, it appears Grimm will take the oath of office for a new term and continue to execute his duties at least until early June. This means that any special election to be Continue reading >
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Arizona, California, Florida, Illinois, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, Texas, Virginia, Washington, White House
In Immigration on December 22, 2014 at 8:58 pm
Fox News ran a story over the weekend quoting “Republican strategists” as saying that the new White House Task Force on New Americans is targeting specific numbers of legal non-citizen immigrants in 10 states with the underlying purpose of increasing Democratic voter registration. They complain the Task Force is fast-tracking people in this category for citizenship to make them eligible to participate in the 2016 presidential election in order to increase the Democratic Party advantage.
The Task Force’s stated goal is to help “welcome” the new immigrants and more seamlessly assimilate them into American society. The administration is emphasizing national economic benefits as the reason for making it easier to qualify the legal immigrants for citizenship. They argue that the immigrant population represents 13 percent of the national population, slightly larger than the African American share, but comprises 16 percent of the workforce, and is responsible for creating 28 percent of all new businesses. About half of those in the legal immigrant category are Hispanic, with Asians being the second largest group.
Though voting privileges will be part of attaining citizenship, the 10 states chosen – because 75 percent of the legal immigrants reside in these places – are almost exclusively not swing political states. It is clear that seven of the 10, and maybe as many as nine, are established Electoral Vote havens for one party or the other.
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Bruce Poliquin, California, Colorado, Iowa, Joni Ernst, Martha McSally, Montana, New York, Rep. Bruce Braley, Rep. Gene Green, Rep. Jared Polis, Rep. Ron Barber, Sen. Emily Cain, Texas, West Virginia
In House, Senate on December 10, 2014 at 11:15 am
As more and more election data makes its way into the public domain, the less sense some key voting patterns seem to be making.
Last week we reported on the turnout patterns for all 50 states and made the observation that voter participation dropped in 35 states when comparing the 2014 mid-term election to the 2010 mid-term. At the time, 2010 was considered to have yielded a low voter model, even in a mid-term election context.
The main conclusion being drawn from the aggregate data is that we may be returning to a similar electoral pattern that we saw in the pre-Reagan era, where Republicans did well in low turnout elections and Democrats excelled when voter participation was higher. This pattern has clearly taken hold since 2006. But, we find more to the 2014 turnout model when looking beyond a cursory overview.
Senate
As we know, the Senate races dominated the political landscape in this past election and saw Republicans gain nine seats to create a new 54R-46D majority (counting the two Independents who caucus with the Democrats). One would figure that, when overlaying the aforementioned observation, the GOP victories came because turnout dropped lower than even four years ago. In fact, the exact opposite is true.
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Arizona, AZ-1, FL-18, FL-2, Florida, GA-12, Georgia, IA-1, IL-10, Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota, MN-2, MN-3, MN-7, NC-7, NE-2, Nebraska, Nevada, New York, North Carolina, NV-3, NV-4, NY-24, President Obama, Texas, TX-23, UT-4, Utah, West Virginia, WV-3
In Election Analysis, House on November 26, 2014 at 10:10 am
Happy Thanksgiving to you and your families. The PRIsm Political Update will return on Monday, Dec. 1. Don’t eat too much!!
Cross Districts
The 2014 election increased the universe of federal “cross-districts”.
In the 2012 presidential election, voters in 411 congressional districts uniformly chose a US House member of the same party as they supported for president. This means only 24 CDs elected a representative belonging to the opposite party of the candidate they backed for the nation’s top office. In 2012, 16 districts elected a Republican representative while simultaneously supporting President Obama; conversely, eight CDs chose a Democratic congressman while voting for GOP presidential nominee Mitt Romney.
In 2014, we see a slightly different pattern. The total number of cross-districts rose to 31, but 404 still elected a House member consistent with the party of their previously chosen presidential candidate. Twenty-six of those CDs elected a Republican House member earlier this month, even though those casting ballots supported President Obama two years earlier. Voters in only five incoming House districts backed Romney in 2012, but elected a Democratic Representative in the current election; two Continue reading >
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Chief Deputy Majority Whip Peter Roskam, House Budget Committee, House Conference Chair Cathy McMorris Rodgers, House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, Majority Whip Kevin McCarthy, Rep. Jeb Hensarling, Rep. Pete Sessions, Rep. Steve Scalise, Rep. Tom Price, Republican Conference, Speaker John Boehner, Texas, VA-7
In Election Analysis, House on June 12, 2014 at 2:39 pm
With House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-VA-7) resigning his position after losing the primary election on Tuesday – he’ll leave the leadership on July 31st – Republican Conference replacement elections have been quickly scheduled for June 19. This leaves little time for a campaign to develop, but within a closed voting universe where everyone knows all participants an elongated campaign time segment is unnecessary.
Currently, Majority Whip Kevin McCarthy (R-CA-23) has announced his intention to run for Cantor’s position with the outgoing Leader’s backing. Meanwhile, House Conference Chair Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R-WA-5) stated that she will remain in her current post. The same is true for House Budget Committee chairman and former vice presidential nominee Paul Ryan (R-WI-1).
The Texas delegation is deciding who, if anyone, to back from their delegation against McCarthy – either Rules Committee and former National Republican Congressional Committee chairman Pete Sessions (R-TX-32) or Financial Services Continue reading >
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Ben Streusand, Brian Babin, Dan Patrick, David Dewhurst, John Ratcliffe, lieutenant governor, Michael Cole, Rep. Pete Gallego, Rep. Quico Canseco, Rep. Ralph Hall, Rep. Steve Stockman, Sen. John Cornyn, Sen. Ted Cruz, Texas, TX-23, TX-36, TX-4, Will Hurd
In House, Lieutenant Governor on May 28, 2014 at 10:56 am
Venerable Rep. Ralph Hall (TX-4-R), who at 91 years of age is the oldest member in the history of the House of Representatives, lost his bid for a 19th term last night in the Texas Republican run-off. Hall becomes the first federal incumbent to lose a bid for renomination during this election cycle. Fifty-two other senators and representatives of both parties have been renominated in the early primaries against competition of varying strength.
Former US Attorney John Ratcliffe (R) scored a 53-47 percent victory last night after holding Hall to 46 percent in the primary election. True to form, when an incumbent is forced to a run-off, he or she invariably loses. In this case, because Hall had received endorsements from the losing candidates in the March 4 Texas primary and was drawing renewed respect for his longevity of service, and that he is the last remaining World War II veteran in Congress, many believed he had the opportunity and ability to reverse the normal post-primary electoral trend. But, such was not to be.
As is typical in Texas nominating elections, turnout was extremely low, only 42,139 Continue reading >
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Ben Streusand, Better Georgia, Brian Babin, David Perdue, Georgia, Horace Sheffield, John Ratcliffe, Matthew Leitman, Michelle Nunn, Michigan, Public Policy Polling, Quico Canseco, Rasmussen Reports, Rep. Jack Kingston, Rep. John Conyers, Rep. Pete Gallego, Rep. Ralph Hall, Rep. Steve Stockman, run-off vote, Tea Party, Texas, William Hurd
In House, Polling, Senate on May 27, 2014 at 11:43 am
Resuming our reporting after the long three-day Memorial Day weekend, today marks the Texas run-off vote – nominating day for the races that did not return majorities on March 3.
The most notable run-off features venerable Rep. Ralph Hall (R-TX-4) who, at 91 is the oldest House member, is fighting to save his political career. Hall has already pledged that the next term, if he’s re-elected for an 18th time, will be his last. In March, the congressman placed first with 45 percent of the vote but failed to achieve majority status. Against him in the run-off election is former US Attorney John Ratcliffe, who recorded 29 percent back in March.
Normally when an incumbent is forced to a run-off, the challenger prevails because already a majority of voters have chosen another candidate. Such may not be the case here, however. The remaining two primary candidates have both endorsed the congressman, and the fact that Hall is the last remaining World War II veteran serving in Washington is weighing upon many voters. The latest poll gave the incumbent a Continue reading >
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