OR: Wyden very popular, but Merkley/Kitzhaber could be vulnerable (user search)
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  OR: Wyden very popular, but Merkley/Kitzhaber could be vulnerable (search mode)
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Author Topic: OR: Wyden very popular, but Merkley/Kitzhaber could be vulnerable  (Read 769 times)
greenforest32
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« on: June 27, 2012, 07:46:07 PM »
« edited: June 27, 2012, 07:55:07 PM by greenforest32 »

Surprisingly strong numbers for Walden. I didn't think he'd hit the 40s or even the high 30s considering his lack of name recognition statewide. Between the two races, the Governor's race is probably a better environment for him as his voting record in the house is anything but moderate. Don't see him winning either race though considering his opponents.

Kitzhaber hasn't said he'll run for reelection yet though many suspect he will and he would probably be the most favored candidate from Democrats to win in 2014. I think he'd have an easier time than in 2010 and Merkley I guess has kept a relatively low profile. I think people see him as more partisan than Wyden so I doubt he'll reach Wyden margin of victories due to the lack of crossover support.

If this is their bench, they're going to have a tough time. There's no recent GOP ex-Governors sitting around, Gordon Smith left to become a D.C. lobbyist, and Chris Dudley from 2010 recently left the state for Southern California. They don't hold any statewide office and for the 2012 elections, they fielded a weak, no-name recognition opponent against the Secretary of State while not even fielding candidates for Attorney General and State Treasurer (they're running write-in campaigns for these two now I believe), and the 2011 legislative session passed a bill that abolished the statewide elected office of 'Superintendent of Public Instruction' and folded its duties into the Governor's cabinet.

The only race it looks like they have a shot at this year and potentially another challenger from the above listed is the Labor Commissioner race. The incumbent Democrat is running for reelection and a relatively moderatish Republican state senator from suburban Washington county is running. Recent polling showed the race about 2x/2x/55%+ undecided. If they do win that, we'll probably pick up his senate seat as Washington county has trended towards Democrats in the last 20 years and his district is about D+5. Not sure how strong of a candidate he'd be in 2014.

That said, those are some big gender gaps in the cross-tabs. Women backing Kitzhaber/Merkley by almost 20+ points against most the challengers with men backing the Republican challengers by 5-12 average. There was a recent poll on the gender distribution of parties here showing that 58% of Oregon Democrats are female compared to 50% of Oregon Republicans and 48% of Independents/other parties: http://news.opb.org/article/how-health-oregons-gop/
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