2004

OneMan and the Republican Party I Grew Up With

Most of the members of my family and my Mom’s side are pretty partisan Republicans, though socially moderate. One of the reasons I’m befuddled by the social conservatives trying to take over the Illinois Republican Party is that most of my values about inclusion come from Republicans. Oneman reminds me of those Republicans in the following statement:

The Trib talks about | The issue of gay marriage exposes hate and fear in the South: The article talks about the county that wanted to ‘Ban Gays’.

— Why do Christans freak out so much about this but do not freak out about other sins. No one ever talks about banning pre-marital sex or worshiping false idols. Heck no one even gets that upset about the rest of what is commanded in Leviticus .

Here is my free piece of Theology for today. God does not want you to hate anyone and God does not hate anyone. You are suposed to ‘Love thy neighbor’ and telling him he can’t live by you is not ‘Loving thy neighbor’.

I don’t know how Oneman feels about gay rights issues, but the world would be a far better place with that attitude and a better political place if we could get social conservatives in both parties to agree to it.

Houston, We Have a Poll

I thought I was going to burst if someone didn’t leak a poll, but never fear, Obama’s people released a poll to the Hotline–why the Hotline? The big donors get their info from the guys who get their info from the Hotline. As always, polls by candidate pollsters are always subject to favorable questions and interpretations, but this is very interesting despite those reservations:

A Harstad Strategic Research (D) poll obtained by Hotline; conducted 3/25-31 for state Sen. Barack Obama (D); surveyed 806 likely voters; margin of error +/- 3.5% (Hotline sources, 4/8). Tested: Obama and teacher/ex-investment banker Jack Ryan (R).

General Election Matchup

Obama Vote 52% Fav/Unfav 45/9% 73%ID

Ryan Vote 33% Fav/Unfav 31 /20% 84%ID

Undecided 14%

Pollster Paul Harstad: “Capitalizing on his sweeping 53% Democratic primary win over six other candidates,” Obama “starts off with a double-digit lead” over Ryan. The “pivotal” ind. voters favor Obama by a “significant 3-to-2 margin.” The Obama campaign “must raise many millions of dollars to communicate in Illinois’ expensive Chicago TV market as well as its nine other media markets, and to withstand the expected onslaught” from Ryan and the GOP. But “at this early stage” Obama seems “well-poised to continue on his historic rise” (Hotline sources, 4/8).

The 52% number is the important one to me–that means Obama is hitting about the same as Kerry. The 33% number for Ryan is interesting because it is below the Bush numbers and lower than one would expect from automatic Republican voters. The independent numbers are astounding, just astounding.

The one thing to keep in mind is that while I often preach about how Ryan’s name doesn’t matter, this early swing voters might have some confusion about who the guy is. That will clear up by election day.

Assuming the poll isn’t too far off (may or may not be a good assumption) Ryan’s problems only become worse. Supposedly the guy who could challenge in Illinois is fighting off a whispering campaign and bad poll numbers. Given he doesn’t want to fully self-fund, it becomes very difficult to fundraise other than through personal connections–and even those phone calls get returned less and less. He isn’t only going to get 33% in the general, but without some positive press attention, getting on message and clearing out the whispering campaign, he is at best going to reach Durkin numbers which were around 40%. That isn’t a prediction of what will happen because at this point I have little idea of what will happen. A candidate like Ryan should be able to get in the mid-40s. Being dynamic even though very conservative, usually gets you something. Right now, it isn’t.

Look for a poll leaked by Jack!’s campaign or Republican Senate Campaign Committee next week suggesting

A) the problem isn’t that bad
B) people don’t know who this Ryan is yet

Thanks to Ralph for the heads up that the Illinois Leader picked up on the story.

And check out Ralph’s great Illinois/Colorado blog with an even better title, Makes Me Ralph. He’s supposed to be on the front page–one of two mistakes in redoing the blog roll I’ve caught so far. Leader article is here.

The Ryan campaign said today that they weren’t surprised to see numbers like that so soon after the March 16th primary. They are betting that when middle-of-the-road independents become familiar with Obama’s stands on issues, they will re-think their support.

?We expected the first poll done after the primary to show us at a disadvantage, since Obama went through a primary campaign that never truly vetted his extremist liberal views,” Kelli Phiel, spokesperson for the Ryan campaign, said today.

“He is left of John Kerry on taxes, left of Hillary Clinton on live birth abortion and left of Governor Blagojevich on Second Amendment rights,” she said. “His beliefs are out of touch with even the most liberal members of his party and completely out of step with Illinois voters.?

Okay, who else sees the problem here. In a moderate pro-choice state you don’t try to define your opponent as too pro-choice–even if people are against late term abortions, it’s a losing issue. In a state with some of the more restrictive gun control laws on the books and fairly broad public support for those laws, don’t challenge your opponent for being for gun control. If most Illinoisans are reporting similar numbers for Kerry who is for similar tax policy to Obama, don’t attack him in that way. Just don’t, or you will lose and lose badly.

You attack by running to the middle yourself–which Ryan hasn’t done yet and painting your opponent as left in Illinois. So you point out his tax stands that are different than Kerry without mentioning Kerry. You dredge up votes he has that aren’t popular and might be defensible, but require a long explanation. You never play to his strengths and that is just what Phiel did. And for an early poll, you point out that independents are notoriously not paying attention so you play the Ryan card the one time you can get away with it.

The quote doesn’t define Ryan at all and that is leaving it up to Obama to define him for them–never a good thing to do.

Running as Bush or more conservative than Bush really, isn’t a way to win in a state where Bush is unpopular. To date, that is what Jack! has done. Even if you are more conservative than Bush you move the debate away from the where you and Bush are similar and towards local issues your opponent is weak. Phiel misses this. Even in you are serving up red meat to the Leader fans, you want to give them talking points that they can then repeat ad nauseum on talk radio call in shows or letters to the editors. These talking points suck.

Updates

Today was busy–as you can tell, but there is a reason. I’m heading out of town and will only be able to post a limited amount until Monday evening. I’m sure I’ll post some, but just not much.

On that note, I’ll also be out of town the next two weekends–I’ll be in Chicago the weekend after this one.

The blogroll has been updated and there is a second page of links with lots of Illinois bloggers and other fun stuff! And MyDD is back!

If I missed you, drop me a note and I’ll get you next week.

More DuPage Fighting

As I’ve often said, it is one thing to fight, it is another to pull the knives out and depress turnout because all you do is fight as a Party. Schillerstrom is getting attacked by the old line leaders in DuPage for a water deal the old line claims was payed off by supporting O’Hare expansion. The interesting note of the article may be good news though:

But state Sen. Kirk Dillard, DuPage GOP chairman, doubts the Water Commission dustup will hurt Mr. Schillerstrom: “By the time Chairman Schillerstrom runs for re-election or another office, most of this will be old history.”

Most likely Dillard and Schillerstrom will win in the long run–the question is what happens in the mean time.

(Crain’s article so getting in is funky, but possible)

Republican Outreach

In a pretty typical column for Kevin McCullough, he argues gay marriage is going to turn African-Americans against Kerry and Obama. Yeah. Right. Every season people argue that African-Americans are going to take Republicans more seriously and vote in fewer numbers for Democrats. And what has happened? The vote share of the African-American vote in national elections has been in the decline since Nixon. While African-Americans are quite socially conservative as a whole in public opinion polls, they vote along another axis-race issues and they vote in what they perceive as their interest.

That doesn’t mean that Republicans can’t make inroads, but it might help if the primary PAC to help minority GOP Candidates spent a about 8.9% of its funds to help them.

Obama’s Effort to Morph Jack! into W

Jack! is trying to paint Obama as too liberal, and Obama is trying to paint Jack! as W.

“Really, I think Mr. Ryan is taking a page out of the national Republican play book and asserting that if you do not subscribe to what I consider a ‘radical’ vision of George Bush’s … then you’re a liberal, and I fundamentally reject that.

“My views and the manner to which I’ve operated are closer to moderate Republicans in this state, like Jim Thompson and Jim Edgar, than Jack Ryan’s are.”

and

“If you like the direction George Bush is taking the country, Mr. Ryan is going to be a better choice for you.”

Of course, the Edgar line becomes a problem if there is a meltdown and Edgar is on the ticket.

Want A Job? Be From St. Clair County

It’s always nice to see the upstanding folks from St. Clair County being fast-tracked. Scott Flood, hired in May with no natural resource experience or training, has been named Department of Natural Resources regional land manager. He’ll earn $59,472.

Congratulations for all that hard work, Scott.

In other St. Clair County social register tidbits:

Flood is one of several family members of powerful St. Clair County Democrats to get hired by the state despite a general effort by former Gov. George Ryan and Blagojevich to make cuts to offset decreased revenues.

U.S. Rep. Jerry Costello’s son-in-law, Illinois National Guard pilot Brian Keen, was hired in October as a $69,060-per-year pilot for the Illinois Department of Transportation’s Division of Aeronautics. Keen’s duties include flying the governor.

Costello’s son, John P. Costello, was hired in 2001 as a $50,000-a-year auto dealership paperwork checker for the secretary of state.

After Blagojevich took office, Costello’s sister-in-law, Brenda Cockrum, was hired as a $42,000-a-year intern for the Illinois Department of Public Aid.

And Edie Koch, the aunt of Rep. Jay Hoffman, D-Collinsville, was hired in January as the $60,000-a-year director of the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity’s “Opportunity Returns” office in Collinsville.

It’s all about family.

More on Cook County Race

Carol Marin disects the Cook County Republican Chair race,

In the end, does any of this really matter?

Chicago Ald. Brian Doherty (41st) is the lone Republican on the City Council. What does the Cook County GOP do for him? “Not too much … it’s completely ineffective,” he claims. Still, he says, he’ll vote for Murphy over Peraica because he thinks she’s trying hard.

Which takes us back to Mike Feeley, who won’t be voting for Murphy. Like Doherty, Feeley is one of 80 Republican committeemen from Chicago and the suburbs who will pick the next chair of the Cook County GOP later this month.

Despite the indictment that hangs over his head, Feeley says he still takes his role as Republican committeeman seriously. He says in the last couple of days he has been pressured by unwanted calls from Murphy, her supporters and people he believes are close to Vrdolyak. He has told them to go away and leave him alone. He has decided to vote for Peraica. In doing so, he says what everybody seems to say about the Cook County Republican Party. “There’s nothing they can do for me.”

UPDATE: Mike reports in comments that Doherty can’t actually vote in the election since he is not Committeeman–Mike McCauliffe is. I’m guessing Dougherty said something to the effect that he was supporting Murphy and Marin mistook that as voting for him.