Trend in New Hampshire Looks Bad for Republicans

Once a firmly stalwart Republican state, New Hampshire has taken a turn in a decidedly different direction in recent years, most notably last fall reelecting their Democratic Governor with about three-quarters of the vote, electing the state's first Democratic legislature in more than 130 years and sending their two Republican Congressmen packing in favor of their underfunded Democratic challengers. Yet for as bad as the 2006 cycle was for New Hampshire Republicans, early signs seem to indicate that they might be on their way to losing another key position in the state -- one of their Senate seats -- a situation that could make it significantly more difficult for Republicans nationally to reclaim the US Senate.

The Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee has already begun to run ads targeting Republican John Sununu, the state's junior Senator, and several Democratic candidates are lining up for the chance to take a stab at Sununu's seat, which has not been held by a Democrat for close to 30 years. What's more, a new Granite State Poll (.pdf) conducted by the University of New Hampshire at the beginning of the month finds that the favorability ratings of both of the state's Republican Senators are trending significantly downward.

John Sununu, New Hampshire's junior Senator is up for re-election in 2008.  He is being targeted by national and state Democrats, who see him as vulnerable because of his ties to the Bush administration and because of the big gains Democrats made in New Hampshire in 2006.  Sununu's favorability ratings have dropped somewhat in recent months and he is now viewed favorably by only 45 percent of New Hampshire adults, 25 percent having an unfavorable opinion of him, 20 percent are neutral and 11 percent don't know enough to say.  Sununu's net favorability rating is +20 percent, slightly down from +24% in September and at the lowest it has been since June 2003.  "A ten percentage point drop in favorability ratings in the past year should be a wake-up call for Sununu ," said Andrew Smith, Director of the UNH Survey Center.  "The 2006 election showed that Republican candidates must work harder to get their base to the polls in order to be successful.  At the same time, perceived vulnerability from lower favorability ratings could attract stronger Democratic opponents."

Since April, both Sununu and the state's senior Senator, Republican Judd Gregg, have seen their favorable ratings fall 13 points while their unfavorable ratings have climbed to 25 percent. While these numbers are not terrible in and of themselves -- to have a net 20 percent positive favorability rating is not necessarily the worst position from which to run a reelection campaign -- they do indicate a trend that could and indeed should be quite worrisome for both Republican Senators, as well as Republicans in the state trying to end the hemorrhaging of their support.

Tags: New Hampshire, NH-Sen, Senate 2008 (all tags)

Comments

14 Comments

Re: Trend in New Hampshire Looks Bad for Republica

Any favorability number below 50 is a big warning sign for incumbents. 45 is pretty low, and its not as soft as a 45 in TX or OK where its still very difficult to pick off unpopular GOP senators like Conryn or Inhofe. NH is definitely in play.

by AC4508 2007-02-25 12:43PM | 0 recs
Re: Trend in New Hampshire Looks Bad for Republica

Oh yeah, lets not forget that while many GOP senators up for re-election in '08 have caved to political pressure on Iraq (Smith, Coleman, Warner etc.), Sununu has steadfastly stood by Bush and the surge. Make that A BIG OLD TARGET on his back.

by AC4508 2007-02-25 12:44PM | 0 recs
NH GOP

was left pretty much in shambles by the election in Nov.  Having to pay the NH Dems $135k for phone jamming during the race that Sununu won in 2002 didn't help.  He beat up poor old Bob Smith in the primary in 1996.  He's a real daddy's boy, as is Gregg, that is really their only claim to fame, their fathers who were governors.

They are really floundering, and Sununu doesn't, in my opinion, have what it takes to run a really competitive race.  By the way, I live in NH and am involved in Democratic politics, including that amazing race my Congresswoman Carol Shea Porter won.  That was a trip!

by bloomingpol 2007-02-25 01:01PM | 0 recs
Re: Trend in New Hampshire

I read that Jeanne Shaheen (former governor, no?) had the best shot at Sunnu's seat, but passed. Anybody know why?

by BlueinColorado 2007-02-25 01:05PM | 0 recs
Re: Trend in New Hampshire

I have no idea why she passed, but the CW on her race in 2002 is that she ran a shitty campaign.  Jeanne Shaheen is yesterday's news and is not a terribly good candidate.  I think we have a better shot at grabbing that seat if she's not the nominee.

by jgarcia 2007-02-25 01:33PM | 0 recs
Sununu's in deep doo-doo

We have been tracking Sprintin' Sununu on Blue Hampshire since our inception in mid-November 2006.  I encourage readers who want to know why our junior senator Johnny is poised for defeat to check out our ever growing open source oppo-research Sununu tag, which will corroborate what I will state below and much much more.

Here's why we have an outstanding chance at picking up this seat in 2008:

He has been given many chances in the 110th to swing to the center to protect himself against losing in our newly blue state, and he has failed them all.  To wit:

* Soon after the '06 elections, he told a crowd of small business leaders "stop complaining about health care." and that there is "no solution anytime soon" for business struggling with health care costs.  That will play very nicely when we contrast that with the cozy relationship he has with the insurance industry.

* Sununu, quite unbelievably in a state where environmental concerns cross party lines, refuses to admit that human activity is behind climate change.  This insanity, which he shares with Dick Cheney, is enough all by itself to hand him a defeat.

* Iraq: Sununu pretends to be against troop escalation, but time and again he voted otherwise.  He voted against the Biden resolution on the Foreign Relation Committee, and he twice voted against cloture on the Warner one.  Polls in NH clearly state that we want out of Iraq.  to make matters worse, Johnny was caught running away from reporters so he wouldn't have to make another slimy half-statement before voting to kill debate.

* McCain: A story that almost no one has picked up on is Sununu's close relationship to McCain.  I believe that Sununu is sticking his neck out on Iraq because of McCain, who has perhaps offered him the possibility of a Veep slot if nominated.  McCain, on the other hand, desperately needs a friend for the NH primary (notice how Pander Bear has a similar relationship with SC senator Lindsay Graham.

And then there's the current state climate.  Dems in control of both congressional seats, the State House, Senate , Executive Council, and Governor's office.

Add to that the fact that the NHGOP is flat broke, and part of the money they bring in goes straight to the NHDP because of the phone jamming settlement.

Oh yeah, did I mention phonejamming?  For sure that will be brought up to remind voters that Johnny's first go around was only semi-legitimate.

Now, onto the candidates. Two are declared, Steve Marchand, mayor of Portsmouth. He's young, he's popular, and he's from working class roots.

He can beat Sununu.

Katrina Swett has also filed.  Not so sure about her at the moment, considering her earlier loss to Bass despite out-funding him.

Lynch is not interested, Shaheen likewise.

Stonyfield Farm "CE-Yo" Gary Hirshberg will make a decision by March 5th.  Sununu can say that he's pro-business.  Hirshberg is business, and he became enormously sucessful without sacrificing the environment.  There is no bigger player in organic foods, period.  He is a creative personality who understands blogs (he was one of the first to have a company blog for his yogurt), and he can self-fund.

And he's passionate.  Check out this press release after Sununu voted against cloture:

"Pure and pathetic political posturing" is how New Hampshire businessman Gary Hirshberg describes New Hampshire Senators Sununu's and Gregg's blockage of yesterday's attempted nonbinding Iraq resolution.

"New Hampshire citizens should be outraged that our two senators cannot do the one job that they have been elected to perform, namely to take a position," says Hirshberg, President and CEO of Stonyfield Farm, Inc.

..."Every time I start to get comfortable with the idea that I should not run, Senator Sununu does something else that makes my blood boil," says Hirshberg.

"From his cowardly declaration that there is zero chance of enacting health care reform -- and surely there is no chance as long as we have that type of surrender mentality in our Senate -- to his continued lack of leadership on climate change and renewable energy reform -- even after an overwhelming consensus of  the world's scientists have, for the nth time declared this to be a certainty --  to ducking his responsibility to the voters of NH and our country to tell us where he stands on the war, surely it is time for Senator Sununu to return to the real world and make way for capable and effective leadership."

This is going to be one exciting race.

by Dean Barker 2007-02-25 01:17PM | 0 recs
Bad for Republicans?

Not really....

2006 was supposed to where the Republicans were run out of the Northeast and it didn't quite materialize. Until you chance the tax structure in NH, (I'm deadly serious)...you will always have a good base for the GOP because it sits right outside Boston's economic engine yet is a much cheaper place to live and do business.

Nevada's relationship to California is sort of the same. Ditto Indiana to Illinois.

by risenmessiah 2007-02-25 01:50PM | 0 recs
You're silly.

      Liberals from Massachusetts are moving to New Hampshire to avoid paying the higher taxes.  

by cilerder86 2007-02-25 01:58PM | 0 recs
Huh?

What Republican wasn't run out of New Hampshire in the 2006 elections?  The two happiest people in NH on Nov. 9 2006 were Judd Gregg and John Sununu having been spared defeat by the luck of the Senate electoral draw.

We even had a very well-known Repub executive councilor lose to a guy with zero name rec who was vacationing in Belgium on the day of the election.

Bush destroyed New England Republicanism when he destroyed traditional conservative values such as privacy, fiscal restraint, and conservation.

The tax business does tend to flush Repubs out of MA and into our state, but it is not enough to stop the fundamental re-alignment happening here, which over time will allow us to bring out tax structure into the 19th 20th 21th century from the 18th.

by Dean Barker 2007-02-25 01:58PM | 0 recs
Re: Bad for Republicans?

Chris Shays is now the only remaining Republican in Congress from New England.  His days, as well, are numbered.

by jallen 2007-02-25 02:05PM | 0 recs
Re: Bad for Republicans?

Whoa... what happened to Maine?

by risenmessiah 2007-02-25 10:03PM | 0 recs
Re: Bad for Republicans?

I believe jallen means Shays is the only Repub House member from New England.  There are still 4 Senators - 2 in Maine, 2 in NH.  

by John Mills 2007-02-26 06:58AM | 0 recs
Craig Benson didn't help

I can't add much to Dean Barker's comment, but based on the several recent years I spent in NH, a couple more observations:

Craig Benson, the previous Republican governor, was not only a lousy governor, but a real tool on a personal level.  He didn't do his party's brand any favors.

Re: Risenmessiah's (?!) comment above, there is some truth there, in that there is a steady flow of financially successful Massholes moving over the border to escape taxes.  But this would only be relevant at the statehouse level, and even with a house full of democrats, I don't see an income tax OR sales tax coming to NH any time soon; and the property taxes were already high enough when Lynch came in for there to be some pressure on for "relief."  And those Massholes are both educated, and still liberal by national standards.

Bitch if you will about the NH primary, but there IS a culture of political participation there, and as a population, NH voters tend to pay more attention. And over the last 6 years, paying attention is the critical ingredient for red-to-blue switches.  (I would know)

Finally, I don't think NH was ever super-Republican in the particular flavor of the contemporary Republican party; rather, it was an especially entrenched example of the old, yankee-style liberal republicanism.  There's not much left of that anymore, so there's not much left for New Hampshirites but the Dems.

Judd Gregg's probably pretty secure, but I agree that Sununu is vulnerable.  He always comes across rather obviously as a Bush puppet, and NH voters are not in the mood.

by cerebrocrat 2007-02-25 05:34PM | 0 recs
Re: Trend in New Hampshire Looks Bad for Republica

New Hampshire is perhaps the most libertarian state in the USA (certainly in the top 5), so it's not surprising that it has drifted away from the Republican Party as the Republican Party has drifted away from any semblance of respect for libertarian ideas like peace, smaller government, fiscal discipline, constitutional government, due process, habeus corpus, etc.

by Lex 2007-02-25 07:08PM | 0 recs

Diaries

Advertise Blogads


----------- myDD - skin -----------