Just 26% of PA GOP Wants Specter Reeelected

The bad news keeps coming for Pennsylvania's senior Republican Senator Arlen Specter. Yesterday it emerged that far right activist and former Congressman Pat Toomey, who nearly knocked off Specter five years ago, is considering another primary challenge this cycle. Now new polling released today indicates that Specter might not only not have a great shot at being renominated in the event of a challenge by Toomey -- he might not have any shot at all.

A new statewide poll shows 53 percent of Pennsylvanians -- and 66 percent of Republicans -- want someone to replace Sen. Arlen Specter.

Asked whether they think Specter, a Philadelphia Republican, has done his job well enough to win re-election or whether they'd prefer a "new person" in that job, registered voters by a 53-38 percent margin said it's time to give someone else a chance, according to the poll by Susquehanna Polling and Research. Eight percent were undecided.

[...]

Among registered Republicans, 66 percent favored a new senator and 26 percent backed Specter. The margin of error on that question was plus or minus 5.9 percentage points.

Even considering the rather large margin of error for the subsample of Republicans, this has got to have Specter worried -- and thinking. Remember, the universe of Republican primary voters tends to be significantly more conservative than the universe of all Republicans.

So what can Specter do at this point? It seems unlikely to me that he would opt against running for a sixth term in the Senate -- that just doesn't seem like the Arlen Specter we have all come to know over the years. But he has to realize that he wouldn't have much of a shot in a Republican primary against Toomey, even as he would would have a shot at reelection running as an independent (nearly twice as many Democrats as Republicans want to see him reelected).

I don't know enough about Pennsylvania election law to determine whether Specter could pull a Joe Lieberman -- running in his party's primary, but holding out the possibility of running on his own ticket in the event he lost the primary -- but I'd imagine that Specter's team already knows the answer. It may be that Specter would even forgo the attempt to run in a Republican primary against Toomey or a similarly strong conservative. Then again, Specter isn't one who has tended to give up on fights in his career, so maybe he would opt to enter what appears to be a nearly unwinnable primary just to prove his political courage. Either way, this is shaping up to be one of the most interesting races of the cycle.

Tags: PA-Sen, Pennsylvania, Senate 2010 (all tags)

Comments

6 Comments

most states have sore loser laws

I don't know about PA specifically, but I remember reading in 2006 that in most places a Lieberman scenario would not be possible.

If Specter wants to go that route he may have to declare himself an independent early and make sure he gets ballot access.

by desmoinesdem 2009-03-03 09:02AM | 0 recs
Re: most states have sore loser laws

There's actually a reasonable question as to whether sore loser laws are unconstitutional.  I believe Pennsylvania's was actually struck down at one point, although I don't know if it was a different context or maybe a different version of the statute.

by Steve M 2009-03-03 09:27AM | 0 recs
PA Election Law

would not allow for the Lieberman move. Specter would either have to run as an independent or, if he had the cojones, flip parties outright.

by JDF 2009-03-03 09:12AM | 0 recs
Re: PA Election Law

He has no choice, really.  He has to go independent.  He can still caucus with the republicans, but he has to be independent...

The only way he can win is in a 3-way race with the anti-incumbent sentiment split up between the republican and the democrat...

He can't even switch parties... the only way is to go independent...

by LordMike 2009-03-03 10:41AM | 0 recs
Specter has been Re-elected

lots of times. He's really good at it.

by QTG 2009-03-03 10:49AM | 0 recs
Re: Just 26% of PA GOP Wants Specter Reeelected

I don't at all discount the possibility of a Specter comeback - he's been at this (and very good at this) for a long time.

However, if time starts becoming of the essence, and polling, especially among Republicans, still looks even remotely like these numbers, he'd better declare independent if he wants any chance of continuing as Senator.

Without Specter, given the current political climate, I don't see how a Republican replaces him, unless one additional (that would be 4th-party) candidate really throws a wrench into things.

Because, not only do regular Republican primary voters tend more conservative than Republicans as a whole... follow that with the fact that the Republic (sic) Party as a whole has trended right as the more moderate elements slowly get shaved off... and I'm not a native, but I don't see a Rick-Santorum-clone getting elected by my neighbors to the north any time soon.

by RecoveringRepublican 2009-03-03 11:41AM | 0 recs

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