The Joy Of Contesting Every Seat

A couple of weeks ago, I was talking over email with a famous election prognosticator (well, he is at least as famous as election prognosticators can hope to be). He told me that the netroots predicted that the OH-02 special election would be close, and had done so much earlier than had any professional forecasters. I responded that until the last week of the campaign, I didn't think it would be close, but that I was determined to get involved in that race anyway. At the time, I didn't care how conservative or Republican the district was, or how slim Paul Hackett's chances to win the district may or may not have been. As much of a forecaster as I try to be, that campaign had nothing to do with forecasting. After 2004, I wanted to fight everywhere, and in the summer of 2005, there were not many places to pick an electoral fight besides OH-02. I know that a lot of other people online felt the same way, especially after they were introduced to Paul Hackett. In a way, it was almost better that the district was an extreme longshot, because then we would have nothing to lose and everything to gain.

Looking back on that election now, it really was a good idea to get involved, even if most of us thought Hackett would get pasted. A couple of hours ago, Survey USA released the results of a new poll in OH-02, showing incumbent Jean Schmidt only narrowly ahead of Victoria Wulsin, 45-42. Not only is that a statistical dead heat, it is actually one point closer than the final margin in OH-02 last summer. I have to believe that one of the main reasons that OH-02 is honestly close in 2006 is because the netroots threw so much into it in 2005. We helped bring an anti-Bush message into OH-02, and it is sticking. We helped bring new activist excitement into OH-02, and it is sticking. We helped reveal to voters in OH-02 that Jean Schmidt is an empty suit, and that message is sticking. We helped voters grow used to voting against Jean Schmidt, and now she is the first choice of probably only around 25-30% of the voters in the district. Because we helped Paul Hackett and local Dems make a stand in OH-02, we are still competitive in a district where we should just flat out not be competitive.

Perhaps best of all, in a truly fitting bit of irony, one of the reasons we went into OH-02 was so that Republican resources would be stretched thin in the swing districts in 2006. However, as the results in OH-02 revealed last summer, Republican resources have been stretched thin in 2006 because so many seats are competitive. Now, instead of not having enough money for the swing, they actually won't have any money for districts like OH-02 which remain competitive. The NRCC came in with ad buys to help out Schmidt last summer, and partially because of that they won't have anything to help her with this fall. That isn't good for Schmidt, since Victoria Wulsin actually holds a slight cash edge on Schmidt, after Schmidt was forced to blow her wad in a tightly contested primary. Will the NRCC seriously pull money out of districts like PA-07, WA-08, or CT-05 in order to help out candidates in OH-02, WY-AL, or ID-01? Doesn't seem too bloody likely to me.

Making big pushes in longshot districts like OH-02, TX-22, WY-AL, and ID-01 is part of the fifty-state strategy. I love the dividends these longshot challenges are starting to pay. In TX-22 and OH-02, which were assisted by the netroots much earlier than they were assisted by the DCCC, we now have a nearly guaranteed pickup and a shockingly competitive race in districts Bush won by about 30%. Now, we are looking at WY-AL and ID-01, where once again I am convinced we are going to do a lot, lot better than we are supposed to do. The Republican candidates in both districts are pretty pathetic, and not even liked by many of the Republican voters in the area. Even if we don't win, we could help make these seats more competitive in the future. Even if we don't do very well, at the very least it was worth a shot. You never know how many apples will fall from the tree unless you give it a good shake.

There is something else about these longshot challenges that I miss in 2006 now that we are really getting down to brass tacks: the Hackett challenge in the summer of 2005 was really, really fun. I couldn't go to OH-02 because I had a big, movement starting rally in Philly the day after the election, but hot damn the 200 activists at that rally were excited when Patrick Murphy declared he was the "Paul Hackett of Pennsylvania." Everyone knew what it meant, and it really fired people up. Being able to make serious inroads in Republican territory can give us the hope and excitement we need to make inroads in other places. It lets us know that despite our losses, we can still fight Republicans on their turf. It reminds us that there are people ready to vote for our candidates everywhere. It gives us a glimpse of a much more progressive America, and a much more gutsy, feisty Democratic Party. Sometimes, it can even be jus the excitement we need to get us out of ruts during a dull, quiet campaign season.

Let' fight some more of these challenges. Gary Trauner (WY-AL) and Larry Grant (ID-01) are on the netroots page. You can help out Victoria Wulsin here. Don't back down anywhere, and savor the joy of contesting every seat.

Update: It occurrs to me that maybe I was bored thinking about the election in general, but excitied about these races, because there is no way we can beat expectations for the overall national picture. We are supposed to take the House. We are supposed to do well in the Senate. We are supposed to do well among Governors. We are not supposed to do well in these races, though. I guess it coems from being in the blogosphere, where we weren't ever supposed to be meaningful ourselves. If we are supposed to do something, is isn't as much fun, and there is no way we can amaze people anymore.

Tags: Activism, fifty-state strategy, Gary Trauner, House 2006, ID-01, Larry Grant, netroots, Nick Lampson, OH-02, Richard Morrison, TX-22, victoria wulsin, WY-AL (all tags)

Comments

20 Comments

Re: The Joy Of Contesting Every Seat

Look at Colorado this year - CO-05 has turned into a race that had the Repub at 2/1 odds and Jay Fawcett at 15/1 against the field. The oddsmakers are now 3/1 and 7/1 and the momentum is still building. If this hadn't been contested Joel Hefley would have no one to use as a lever against Doug Lamborn. Angie Paccione is giving MM a run for her money, Ed Perlmutter is 2/1 versus 4/1 for the incumbent O'Donnell. Bill Winter is giving Tom Tancredo more than he wanted. All these races are draining money and in some cases, there is no money to find. It's also tying up Trailhead so they can't go playing afield.

by tjlord 2006-09-20 06:31PM | 0 recs
Re: The Joy Of Contesting Every Seat

"Don't back down anywhere, and savor the joy of contesting every seat."

A little over a year ago a Republican friend assured me that the most contested races in 2006 would be Byrd vs. Caputo in WV (she backed down) and a mighty challanger to Nelson in FL (Katherine Harris has not backed down) and the music tonight at the Webb/Obama rally was Tom Petty's "I Won't Back Down."

The netroots ARE making a difference.  Don't be bored, don't back down.

by howardpark 2006-09-20 06:42PM | 0 recs
Re: The Joy Of Contesting Every Seat

In the church biz, we know that knocking on doors is an ineffective way of doing evangelism. You can knock on doors all day long, and not get a response.

But doing that, day in and day out, gives you the discipline and the practice to speak confidently and genuinely when somebody you meet in the grocery store or the dentist's office asks you about your church.

There's something of the same principle at work here. To compete, you have to practice, even if it doesn't pay dividends right away.

by pastordan 2006-09-20 06:48PM | 0 recs
Amen To That!

People forget how dramatically the politics of a state--much less a district--can change.

In 1976, arguably the most progressive Democratic presidential contender was Fred Harris, former US Senator from Oklahoma.  Idaho had Frank Church, and of course, South Dakota had George McGovern.

They all had to fight to win their races, because there is a certain rural conservatism in all those states.  But there's also a populist "don't mess with me" spirit as well.  And a good, solid candidate who can tap into and articulate that spirit can not just win elections, but build a sensibility that can last for generations.

That's why we should never abandon any battlefield.

by Paul Rosenberg 2006-09-20 06:51PM | 0 recs
Amen

Everytime we are competitive anywhere, we weaken the district.  Not challenging a district strengthens the incumbant.  Lets keep on the pressure and make big gains this year, and keep fighting everywhere, every year.

by John Nicosia 2006-09-20 06:51PM | 0 recs
Re: The Joy Of Contesting Every Seat

I agree that supporting longshot challenges is good politics. When reform Democrats apply that philosdophy to challenging more Democrats who need it in their primaries, meaningful reform of the Democratic Party will be just around the corner.

Unfortunately, I've read many viewpoints on this blog which think challenging entrenched Democrats is a waste of resources -- which only encourages them to conduct themselves as even worse Democrats.

They say you have to crawl before you can walk, and I hope that's what is going on with the netroots and reform.

by Sitkah 2006-09-20 07:26PM | 0 recs
Re: The Joy Of Contesting Every Seat

Look at North Carolina - my home state.  The last time we voted for the Democratic Presidential candidate was in 1976 - Jimmy Carter.  NC voters sent Jesse Helms to the Senate 5 times - and John East, Lauch Faircloth, Liddy Dole, and Richard Burr once each.  Good men like Jim Hunt, Terry Sanford, Harvey Gantt (twice), and Erskine Bowles (twice) were passed over by NC voters for reasons I may never understand.

Yet here we are 30 years down the line and we have 2 GOP House incumbents on the ropes - Taylor in NC-11 and Hayes in NC-08.  The national Repub party has little money to defend these seats and is relying on these 2 rich guys to spend their own money to try to defend their terrible records. Win these 2 seats and NC will have a 7-6 Democratic majority in the House!

The 50 State Strategy is like money in the bank for Democrats nationwide.

by Bear83 2006-09-20 07:46PM | 0 recs
Re: The Joy Of Contesting Every Seat NC05, NC06
I think the repub incumbents Fox in NC05 and Coble in NC06 are overrated as well.  Virginia Fox particularly, is less well liked and in more trouble than she is given credit for. Gosh, she sure is an ugly woman.  Her eyes don't look in the same direction at one time. North Carolina is usually a BIG swing state, especially this year.
Coble in the 6th gave-up a lot of his repubs to help Hayes in the 8th ...during redistricting. This was a solid dem seat until Coble won it in the Reagan landslide.  Now the independent and democratic voters outnumber repubs by almost 3:2.  Coble (at 75) has not had a challenge in quite a number of years.  
Those unaffiliated voters who voted for Bush in 2004 in both districts are now sorry they did.  They are madder at the repubs than the dems.
by bubbleboy 2006-09-24 03:42PM | 0 recs
Plus Schmidt really, really, really sucks

Let's not forget that Schmidt is an awful person and an awful candidate.  She is the kind of joker who has ridden the GOP coattails too long.

Now that the GOP has no coattails to ride, these jokers are going to fall by the wayside.

by jcjcjc 2006-09-20 07:46PM | 0 recs
Re: The Joy Of Contesting Every Seat

I about shit when I saw Wulsin's "cash advantage" of $7,000.00 almost 3 months ago.  You had me thinking 'wow' for a minute, Chris.  You don't think Schmidt has raised anything since her primary win?

by HoosierJosh 2006-09-20 07:53PM | 0 recs
Re: The Joy Of Contesting Every Seat

Lets hope some of that joy rolls down to Georgia - a Republican stronghold. We do have an exciting choice for Lt. Governor, Democrat Jim Martin - a lifelong public servant with plenty of experience, a record of pristine honesty, and a campaign staff that's working around the clock. On the down side, he's an Atlantan running as a Democrat statewide - a formidable uphill endeavor.

by jnardo 2006-09-20 08:41PM | 0 recs
take heart, Chris

You've just been in this game so long that maybe the honeymoon aspect is ending. That doesn't mean there won't be more good feeling in the future, just maybe not as sustained as it used to be.

Because I just started looking into MyDD, DailyKos, and other progressive blogs about 4 months ago (and only registered here about 4 weeks ago), I am still in my blog-reading honeymoon. In that time, Lamont shocked Lieberman, "macaca" swept the nation, so I know what you mean. And...

Last night I jumped out of my chair when I clicked through to the OH-02 (my district) poll. I certainly voted for Hackett in 05, and was impressed at his showing here in sigh Bush country. But I never, NEVER thought Dr. Wulsin would come close to what Hackett achieved, much less surpass him or even sniff win?

I have a Wulsin sign in my front yard and my wife chatted with her canvassers who visited my house about 3 weeks ago. I would display her sign and vote for her anyway (i.e. sans blogs), but my point is that reading your and others' bolgs has fired me up on a daily basis, and encouraged me to do more. (P.S. I had already volunteered for the Sherrod Brown OH-Sen campaign, but now am inspired to do more to help Wulsin too.)

by OH Mark 2006-09-21 03:54AM | 0 recs
Re: The Joy Of Contesting Every Seat

See http://www.mcall.com/news/local/all-hold en0919-cn,0,260974.story?coll=all-newslo cal-hed:
"Republicans who control the state Legislature redrew the 17th District to strengthen the re-election chances of former U.S. Rep. George Gekas of Harrisburg. Holden beat Gekas to get into Congress, and then defeated G. Scott Paterno, son of the Penn State University football coach, for a second term." And now the Republican candidate for PA 17 has announced he won't be actively campaigning. This is still a heavily Republican district, the Harrisburg area and northeast of it.

Just north of this district is Sherwood's PA 10, also a very Republican district, and the one Chris Carney is winning.

Just west of PA 17 is PA 19, also heavily Republican. In 2004, there was no Democratic challenger. Now "U.S. Rep. Todd Platts, R-York, is the heavy favorite to win re-election in the 19th District, but he spent much of last night on the defensive. Democratic challenger Phil Avillo and Green Party candidate Derf Maitland insisted throughout the candidates forum at Penn State York that the Bush administration has failed in its domestic policies and its war on terrorism. Platts' response was part defense of that administration and part highlighting the times he has gone against his party's leadership." See http://www.pennlive.com/news/patriotnews /index.ssf?/base/news/115864171439880.xm l&coll=1

I do love the 50-state plan.

by joyful alternative 2006-09-21 05:16AM | 0 recs
Re: The Joy Of Contesting Every Seat

More joy:  Charlie Cook now gives Democrats the edge in two Republican held seats (TX-22 and AZ-8).  He also added NE-1 where Lt. Gov. Maxine Moul is challenging weak GOP freshman Jeff Fortenberry.  Nebraska!

by David Kowalski 2006-09-21 06:05AM | 0 recs
Re: The Joy Of Contesting Every Seat

I was intrigued to see that you added the tags "Richard Morrison" and "TX-22" to this post, because I immediately saw the connection between OH-02 and TX-22.  Morrison was not victorious against Tom DeLay in 2004, but his scrappy fight and strong result did what no one else had done before: show that DeLay was vulnerable.  DeLay's power, after all, was built on the aura of invulnerability: you did not mess with The Hammer and live to tell about it.  

Morrison showed that DeLay could be beaten; not only did that draw Nick Lampson into this year's race, but it reduced DeLay's power in the GOP caucus and brought out the long knives.  I am absolutely convinced that DeLay would be here today if not for Richard Morrison's run, and Morrison's run wouldn't have had this effect if not for the tremendous support he received from MyDD and the blogosphere.

by kenfair 2006-09-21 06:30AM | 0 recs
Re: The Joy Of Contesting Every Seat

Thanks.  But what you say is the absolute truth.  Without the blogosphere, I could not have effectively battled "The Hammer."

Now that DeLay is gone.  We actually have a chance to elect democrats countywide in Fort Bend County.  Check out this article.

http://www.mydd.com/story/2006/9/20/1214 40/919#readmore

Fight on!

by Richard Morrison 2006-09-21 08:21AM | 0 recs
Re: The Joy Of Contesting Every Seat

I gotta say that working for Richard and accomplishing what we accomplished against DeLay is  something I'll be proud of until the day I die.

When Richard started his lonely fight against DeLay, he was frozen out of all the donor circles in Texas. Democrat, Republican, everyone said that DeLay was invincible and that it was a waste of time.

Richard didn't care. The first day I met him -- after all the political consultants in Houston had told him to get bent -- he said, I don't care if I win or lose, I can't take another day of being represented in Congress by Tom DeLay. And the day that DeLay "deigned" to come debate Richard at an elementary school in Clear Lake Texas -- and Richard whipped his ass by the way - was one of the greatest days this Texas Democrat had seen since Ann Richards was sworn in. We didn't win the election but we showed DeLay was weak. We moved the ball forward and Nick Lampson's going to get the touchdown in November.

As Gandolf told Frodo (Richard loves LOTR) -- it's not up to us to chose the times we live in, it's up to us to chose what we do with those times. I'm damn proud I worked for the only man in Texas who had the guts to call out Tom DeLay in 2003 and 2004.

It's all about landing blows against the empire. Nick Lampson was a great congressman for Beaumont and he'll be great in TX 22 as well.

And let's not forget -- the same Texas Democratic establishment that wouldn't help Richard in 2004 is currently not backing Chris Bell despite the fact that he's got the best chance to take the Texas Governor's mansion of any Democrat since Ann Richards (another ex-boss of mine - RIP Governor Richards).

I just left a rally for Jim Webb -- we're going to shock the world in 2006 and make this country a better place.

Keep on Fighting everyone!

by Texas Nate 2006-09-21 04:24PM | 0 recs
Re: The Joy Of Contesting Every Seat

I think we still need to scream and run onto the battlefield every two years; which means we must stay in shape (fundraising, partybuilding, etc) in the off periods.

Fight on!

by Richard Morrison 2006-09-21 08:57AM | 0 recs
Re: The Joy Of Contesting Every Seat

Even if we don't win, we could help make these seats more competitive in the future. Even if we don't do very well, at the very least it was worth a shot.

In Britain, pretty much every prospective MP gets sent to fight a losing campaign in order to prove to the party that he/she can make a difference even if the district is uncompetitive. It's called 'blooding': it hones the skills of candidates and party workers and provides a laboratory for different strategies and approaches.

While the funding of elections is very different in the US, that shouldn't mean you write off districts. Like Chris and Matt have said before, $10,000 and a bit of improvisation can do wonderful things.

by etagloh 2006-09-21 07:33PM | 0 recs
An amen from the ID-01

With forty days and change left until E-day, it's impossible to know what'll happen in the ID-01, except to say it's going to be far, far closer than any of the prognosticators believe.

(Well, we did hear a rumor that Charlie Cook, asked at a DC panel to name a possible big surprise for Nov 7, named our race. But he and the others still publicly list ID-01 as likely R.)

If Larry Grant wins, yes, it'll largely be because we have a weak GOP candidate. But credit will also go to a 50 state strategy-funded Idaho Democratic Party coordinated campaign that is absolutely unprecedented in our state in terms of doors knocked, volunteer hours logged, and sheer energy level. ("Democrats. Democrats everywhere!" one centrist blogger remarked last week after two hours in a room with nearly 300 people in Coeur d'Alene for the first Grant-Sali debate.)

Still, can this new grassroots power stand up to the Club for Growth, which poured hundreds of thousands into Sali's primary and sits poised to pounce next month? Hard to say ... but hopefully when the CFG's ads hit, Idahoans will already have had a chance to define Larry Grant for themselves, largely through personal conversations with Dem volunteers at tens (hundreds?) of thousands of Idaho doors.

by Julie Fanselow 2006-09-22 07:11AM | 0 recs

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