Mandate Watch - Bellwether Races/Initiatives To Watch Below the Presidential Contest

by: David Sirota

Mon Nov 03, 2008 at 13:36


Note: Use the comments section to tell us what your bellweather list is, and what races/initiatives you are watching. - D

So how will we know the shape, size and depth of whatever mandate comes out of this, the most ideologically polarized election since 1980? Top-line numbers from the presidential contest are only going to give us a snapshot of what really happened. We're going to have to look at specific bellweather races and ballot initiatives to really know what happened at a structural level. Here are the bellweathers I'll be watching, beyond the state-by-state results in the presidential race:

David Sirota :: Mandate Watch - Bellwether Races/Initiatives To Watch Below the Presidential Contest
CALIFORNIA

- Proposition 8: Relegated to seemingly permanent minority status, Golden State conservatives are resorting to a social/cultural message with this anti-gay-marriage initiative. Its success or failure will either embolden or crush these kind of wedge tactics both in California and in similar  blue states where conservatives are looking for a foothold.

COLORADO

- The Udall-Schaffer Senate race: This election will tell us if an aggressively pro-environment Democrat can win against a movement conservative in a state once considered off-limits for pro-environment Democrats.

- Amendment 46: Sponsored by the infamous Ward Connerly, this disgusting initiative aims to stoke the old Angry White Man backlash against minorities and women with a measure to essentially ban affirmative action and equal opportunity programs. The latest Denver Post poll suggests this is going to be a close one - if progressives defeat it, they will show that even here in the heart of the Mountain West, we can defeat race/gender-based wedge politics.

- Amendment 47: This is the anti-union right-to-work measure, aimed at destroying Colorado's labor movement. This state has a long history of anti-union politics - if right-to-work is defeated, it will signal that unions are starting to figure out how to fight off the worst anti-union measures in some of the most virulently anti-union states.

GEORGIA, NORTH CAROLINA & MISSISSIPPI

- African American Turnout: Will African American turnout be significantly higher in these southern states in 2008, and will that increased turnout be enough to swing both contested presidential and key down-ballot races blue? If yes, it will dent political scientist Tom Schaller's theory that progressive efforts to compete in the South are futile.

MASSACHUSETTS

- Question 1: Massachusetts voters face a Grover Norquist-type ballot initiative to repeal its income tax. Though the Northeast has been dominated by Democrats in recent years, this initiative represents an attempt by conservatives to start moving their right-wing economic populism into blue-state strongholds. How this fares will suggest how similar initiatives and legislative bills fare in this Democratic region.

NEW YORK

- State Senate: If Democrats take back the State Senate for the first time in almost 4 decades, they will have full control of the legislature that governs one of the largest and most financially powerful states in the nation. With that control comes the possibility of serious progressive policy reform.

- Working Families Party Turnout: As the New York Times recently reported, the Working Families Party has been building itself into a statewide force for the last decade, playing an integral role in trying to turn the New York legislature blue. If the state senate goes Democrat, and if the WFP receives an upswing of votes on its ballot line for Obama, it will boost this increasingly powerful party both in New York, and perhaps boost the fusion model for expansion into other states.

OREGON

- The Smith-Merkley Senate Race: As I wrote in a  newspaper column in October, the senate race between incumbent Sen. Gordon Smith (R) and challenger Jeff Merkley (D) provides arguably the starkest economic contrast on key issues like trade and globalization - and in a state where populist Democrats are supposedly unable to run on such issues. Should Merkley win with his anti-NAFTA, anti-Wall-Street-bailout campaign, it will prove that even in a state like Oregon with a significant export economy, Democrats can compete and win with a populist economic message.

WYOMING

- The Trauner-Lummis House Race: In 2006, Democrat Gary Trauner came within a few hundred votes of winning Dick Cheney's old House seat in not only the most Republican state in the nation, but a state acutely affected by many of the most pressing energy, environmental and infrastructural challenges. If he wins his 2008 race against State Treasurer Cynthia Lummis, it will indicate that progressives can compete on such previously difficult political and issue terrain.

* * *

We all have our own lists of races we'll be watching, and mine is by no means a comprehensive list - but it does focus in on campaigns that pivot less on individual candidates (like, say, the Coleman-Franken race in Minnesota or the Markey-Musgrave race in Colorado) and more on ideology, issue themes and archetypes.

The outcomes of these races, combined with the presidential resuts, will give us a lot more detail about what kind of mandate - if any - comes out of the 2008 election. With that detail we will have a better idea of what comprises both majority policy that the nation is ready to embrace, as well as what good, election-winning politics looks like in the 21st century.


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The only races I'll be watching breathlessly are the margins in IN at 6:00 (0.00 / 0)
and the VA numbers at 7:00.

Not all of IN closes at 6:00 (0.00 / 0)
Only the Evansville and Gary regions close then, and we probably won't hear any results until the entire state closes at 7.

[ Parent ]
VA-05 (0.00 / 0)
It's a tossup if you look at the poll in the quick hits and a real chance for a new kind of conviction based politics to prove itself.

Also MN-Sen, to see if someone like Al Franken can win.

John McCain: Beacuse lobbyists should have more power


It wasn't so very long ago that ... (0.00 / 0)
...pro-environment Democrats did perfectly well against anti-environment conservatives. Governor Dick Lamm (despite some idiocies) was pro-environment. So were Senators Gary Hart and Tim Wirth. Colorado is just getting back to where it was 25 years ago.

Question 1 in MA (0.00 / 0)
looks like it will be defeated handily, thank god.

Question 1 in Connecticut (0.00 / 0)
"Should there be a Constitutional Convention to amend or revise the Constitution of the State"

Sounds innocuous enough, but it's really about gay marriage.  


One relatively obscure ones (4.00 / 1)
Watch the Wisconsin State Assembly.  

Also, watch the Kagen-Gard race in WI-08 - this is a quirky district, and it would be nice to see it trend bluer, as it would give the national Dems a lock on WI for the foreseeable future, coupled with their other areas of strength.

There's a health care reform initiative on the ballot in WI as well that I will be watching closely; largely a referendum on their Healthy Wisconsin proposal.  Healthy Wisconsin makes Barack Obama's plan look really incrementalist.  Should be a gauge on how far, how fast people want to move on health care.


Shays race (0.00 / 0)
If Shays goes down, the Northeast is all blue and moderate Republicans will be all but dead.  Watch the few that remain go independent and caucus with Dems.

Personhood amendment in CO.  Can the right wing still successfully inject abortion issues in strong Christian states?

I agree on 47 too.  Can labor's new messaging and strategy defeat a normally pro-business state?  If so, maybe libertarian types out West are beginning to see the need for more worker friendly policies.

WA-08.  Can the uber progressive Burner knock off the faux-moderate Reichert?  She is a netsroots candidate that we can use to show that the blogosphere does effect elections.  She is one of us.

www.progressivemovement.net, talking about how progressives can improve their messaging.


Anyone know where WFP.. (0.00 / 0)
stands in MA? I hazily remember something about fusion voting getting pretty solidly whacked in a ballot initiative before I moved up here.

IN Governor's race (0.00 / 0)
Not much polling there, but Indy Star released a new one last week that showed Mitch Daniels pulling way ahead. If this one is even close it'll be on Obama's coattails. Could have an effect on the Senate if Obama appoints Lugar out of his seat.

Also NY state senate could (should) flip to Democratic control. I'm not so sure about bellwethers, but I'm looking to Darcy Burner's race as being one heavily backed by the progressive netroots and Michelle Bachman's defeat would be a sign of left-wing backlash anger.


and (0.00 / 0)
of course David mentioned NY State Senate already and I missed it on my first read. But that one should have vast impact due to the 2010 redistricting cycle, which can undo much of the gerrymandering that has kept that body R for so long. If we can hold it through that process, we should be able to hold it for a generation or two longer.

[ Parent ]
Scott Harper in Illinois. (0.00 / 0)
I have been working on the Dan Seals campaign because it is closest to where I live but I think that a "bell weather" race in Illinois is Scott Harper, who is running for congress in IL-13.  Scott is a smart, progressive candidate who is running an extremly well organized grassroots campaign against Judy Biggert, a moderate Republican incumbent in a collar county.

I think this is interesting on several fronts:

1. Will a progressive message resonate in an area that is considered "moderate"? If Scott wins or come close I think this is some evidence against the idea that only "centrist" Dems can win in areas like this.

2. Can a well-run, creative grassroots campaign by a first-time candidate produce results comparrable to other campaigns that have much more institutional backing? And I stress well-run because I already know how enthusiastic but poorly-run campaigns do.

In particular I think it will be interesting to compare the results to nearby IL-06 where first-time candidate Jill Morgenthaller takes on freshman Republican Peter Roskam.  Jill is the ultimate "moderate" Democrat with a military background to boot -- something that we know gets the Rahm types excited.  My impression is that she is also running a much more "typical" campaign, focusing on fundraising and mail and not so much on grassroots involvement.  

I think either one is a possibility to win with the Obama wave but if Scott wins or comes closer that Morganthaller I will take this as evidence that a strong progressive message and grassroots organization can be a winning formula.  If the reverse happens I will ignore it so as to not upset my prefered theory!  ;-)


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