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What To Look For Tonight

by: David Dayen

Tue Jun 03, 2008 at 08:10:32 AM PDT


(I'll be posting some pictures at this flickr set. I also started a Flickr group if you want to add any photos. - promoted by Brian Leubitz)

Well, primary day is here.  If you're reading this and have an interest in California politics, GO VOTE if you haven't already.  Then, here's a handy list of what to expect tonight and what signs to look for that would portend positive results for Democrats in November:

What will turnout be like?: In the key districts where we have the opportunity to flip seats, I'm going to be looking at how energized the Democratic electorate is.  Most of the Republican incumbents are running unopposed or with token competition, so it's not an apples-to-apples comparison.  But if Congressional challengers like Bill Durston or Russ Warner or Charlie Brown or Debbie Cook can run up a big percentage of registered voters today, it'll show their strength among their base of supporters.  In addition, check the turnout in AD-80, AD-78, AD-10, AD-15, and SD-19.  Those races have no incumbent running on either side, and all are currently in Republican hands.  If more Democrats turn out, it's a pretty good sign.

The write-in and the recall: I don't think anyone expects the recall of Jeff Denham to succeed, but given that there's been virtually no spending on the "Yes" side since Don Perata short-circuited the process and "Yacht Dog" Democrats Cathleen Gagliani and Nicole Parra rushed to Denham's side, it'll be interesting to see just how much support the recall gets in this plurality-Democratic district.  As for SD-15, Dennis Morris has made a furious rush to gather enough support to get the roughly 3,600 write-in votes needed to reach the November ballot.  And we know that Abel Maldonado cross-filed with his own write-in campaign, so his dear Democratic mother had a chance to vote for him.  Riiiight.  If you're in SD-15, PLEASE VOTE FOR DENNIS MORRIS.

PDA's strength: There are a lot of PDA (Progressive Democrats of America)-endorsed candidates throughout the state, but there's little success expected from them.  This needs to be a moment where the activist fervor needs to be channeled into electoral victory.  I think the test case is CA-24, where Mary Pallant, a founding member of the LA chapter of PDA, is running for Congress against 2 rivals in the primary.  Jill Martinez was the 2006 nominee and has some name recognition, but people in the Ventura County-area district I talked to cannot recall one mailer or robocall or piece of material sent by Martinez all year.  Pallant has been doing a lot of voter contact, and in a low-turnout primary, she should be able to win the nomination if PDA really has any electoral muscle whatsoever.  We'll see.

The primary is the general: There are plenty of seats in the legislature where this is the case.  Obviously, Calitics has been focused on SD-03 in San Francisco, SD-23 in Santa Monica and points north, AD-40 in the San Fernando Valley, and AD-27 in the Santa Cruz region.  But there are actually a dozen or so more as well, and many have gotten fairly nasty, some to general-election levels of nastiness.  The Senate race between Rod Wright and Mervyn Dymally is one big example.  Look at this ad:

The kahuna primaries: For Congress, there's the race in CA-04 between Tom McClintock and Doug Ose, which actually made The New York Times.  What I'm hearing is that, despite Ose's efforts to buy the seat, McClintock's going to take this.  There is also the AD-80 race with Greg Pettis, Manuel Perez, Rick Gonzales and Richard Gutierrez, which will be competitive between Perez and Pettis.  And the LA County Board of Supervisors race between Bernard Parks and Mark Ridley-Thomas (I saw several Parks commercials last night).  For many of these primaries, there isn't any polling and it's hard to know just where things will go.

We'll have all of this for you tonight, so come on back.

David Dayen :: What To Look For Tonight

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What To Look For Tonight | 12 comments
Volume (0.00 / 0)
There are so many races going on, even if they're all "minor" by some standards, it's gonna be a great night for geeks.

"We need men who can dream of things that never were." -JFK

It's fitting (0.00 / 0)
It's fitting that as I read your comment, there was an ad on the right asking me if I was a wireless geek.

I voted in Ventura County today (CA-24) -- turnout was very low, I only saw two other voters there. Bad sign.


[ Parent ]
I just came back from my polling place (0.00 / 0)
  at the Squirming Oaks Elementary School where I turned in my completed absentee ballot. 16 people had voted already and 24 at the other precinct there. The pollworkers had plenty of time to chat; in the 5 minutes I was there nobody else came in  until I walked out the door. This is in a district with a very competitive Senate race (SD-23, Levine vs Pavley). Gaaah!!
  As far as the big GOP primary up north, isn't that like choosing between regular feces and diarrhea? I think that diarrhea will win it narrowly, oops I mean "Conservative Icon Tom McClarpetbag"...)

Squirming Oaks? (0.00 / 0)
That's great. What's the mascot of that school?

Shouldn't 3 strikes apply to Arnold? Strike 1, Strike 2, Strike 3. Life Sentence!

[ Parent ]
Squirming Oaks School (0.00 / 0)
   I can't even remember if there is one. I graduated in 1970 from there and went on to Very Nice Junior High.
  Most people call the neighborhood "Sherman Oaks", in the city of L.A. After the 1994 quake we had lots of damage along the L.A. River which flows through S.O. so I made it Squirming Oaks in honor of the earthquake's effects. I used to call it "Poison Oaks" to deflate its yuppie balloon, but Squirming Oaks sounds better. Some other nearby communities: Very Nice (Van Nuys), Resedue (Reseda), Stewed City (Studio City), No Hills (there are no hills in North Hills, really) and Tarzana, which is its real name but funny enough (former ranch of Edgar Rice Burroughs, creator of Tarzan). All are L.A. neighborhoods and mine is not to be confused with Thousand Jokes, a city in Ventura County (I didn't make that one up but heard it elsewhere).

[ Parent ]
Squirming Oaks school (0.00 / 0)
Is North Hills North Hollywood in your nomenclature? I left the west Valley 30 years ago for rural Amador County.

Judy Cohen Hotchkiss
"It does not take a majority to prevail. Just an irate, tireless minority,setting brushfires in peoples minds." Samuel Adams


[ Parent ]
North Hills used to be Sepulveda (0.00 / 0)
   and the "nice" part of Sepulveda (west of the 405 fwy) wanted to separate itself from the "bad" part along Sepulveda Blvd because of its reputation for having drug dealers, prostituites etc. Then the rest of Sepulveda also wanted to be North Hills which defeated the purpose of making a distinction between the two areas. This was sometime in the 1990s I think when there was a frenzy of renaming neighborhoods. The nicer part of Canoga Park is now called West Hills. Van Nuys has had  its east side become Valley Glen and part of its west side become Lake Balboa (even though the actual Lake Balboa is in Encino, in the Sepulveda Dam basin). The south side  of Van Nuys is now the north side of Sherman Oaks. North Hollywood still exists, but also has Valley Village, Sherman Village and West Toluca Lake along with the longer standing areas of Studio City and Toluca Lake.
   It is all part of the city of L.A. but people will do anything to try to raise their property values and disassociate themselves from "undesirables". This is part of why I am a bit sarcastic about the names of our fine San Fernando Valley communities...

[ Parent ]
that ad is like, way old (0.00 / 0)
people have been doing variants on the "Jeopardy" ad for years....the political biz sure does take "recycling" to a whole new level!

--
www.gregdewar.com


Words of appreciation for TBRC from the foothills (0.00 / 0)
Thanks all you blue county folks who supported Charlie Brown,Bill Durston and Jerry McNerny at the TBRC fundraiser.This year is the best chance we've ever had at these districts. Here in Bill Durstons district we feel the energy. We're creeping up in registration even in bright red Amador County. Can't wait to see the numbers on CD # and $ tonight.

Judy Cohen Hotchkiss
"It does not take a majority to prevail. Just an irate, tireless minority,setting brushfires in peoples minds." Samuel Adams


noone at the polling precinct at noon (0.00 / 0)
but about 50 people had already voted. no idea what this means for turnout, davis tends to vote at a much higher % than the state or yolo county #s.

surf putah, your friendly neighborhood central valley samizdat

Words of appreciation for TBRC from the foothills (0.00 / 0)
Ooops. CDs 3 and 4. Also,more congratulations to the counties that went blue in the recent past.

Judy Cohen Hotchkiss
"It does not take a majority to prevail. Just an irate, tireless minority,setting brushfires in peoples minds." Samuel Adams


What To Look For Tonight | 12 comments
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