Wednesday, August 18, 2010

The 2010 Senate Crop

I think you can make a pretty strong argument that 2010 presents one of the weakest sets of Senate candidates across the country that we've seen in a very long time. Looking at favorability numbers in 15 key races we've polled in the last couple months:

-Only one candidate has a net favorability number of better than +5. That's Mike Castle in Delaware at +19 (51/32).

-20 of the 31 major candidates in those 15 races have negative favorability numbers.

-Obscurity may be a plus. 4 of the 9 candidates with positive numbers are still unknown to 40% or more of the voters in their states. For the most part this year the better known a candidate has become the less well liked they've been.

-In 6 of those 15 races both candidates are viewed negatively by most of the voters who have an opinion about them (Illinois, Colorado, Nevada, New Hampshire, Missouri, California)

-The races where voters like their candidates the least are Colorado (average fav of -18), Nevada (-12.5), Illinois (-12), and California (-7). The ones where they like their candidates the most (or perhaps dislike the least is a more appropriate way of describing it) are Delaware (+9.5) and Wisconsin (+1).

Here's the full data. What other interesting observations are there?

Candidate (State-Party)

Favorability (Spread) (No Opinion)

Mike Castle (DE-R)

51/32 (+19) (17)

Elaine Marshall (NC-D)

23/19 (+4) (58)

Pat Toomey (PA-R)

36/33 (+3) (31)

Charlie Crist (FL-I)

44/41 (+3) (15)

David Vitter (LA-R)

45/43 (+2) (12)

Ron Johnson (WI-R)

20/18 (+2) (62)

Jack Conway (KY-D)

31/29 (+2) (40)

Patty Murray (WA-D)

46/45 (+1) (9)

Lee Fisher (OH-D)

28/27 (+1) (45)

Russ Feingold (WI-D)

42/42 (E) (16)

Chris Coons (DE-D)

31/31 (E) (38)

Roy Blunt (MO-R)

41/42 (-1) (17)

Barbara Boxer (CA-D)

44/46 (-2) (10)

Kelly Ayotte (NH-R)

36/39 (-3) (25)

Rob Portman (OH-R)

22/25 (-3) (53)

Charlie Melancon (LA-D)

29/34 (-5) (37)

Paul Hodes (NH-D)

35/40 (-5) (25)

Dino Rossi (WA-R)

43/48 (-5) (9)

Rand Paul (KY-R)

34/42 (-8) (24)

Mark Kirk (IL-R)

26/34 (-8) (40)

Kendrick Meek (FL-D)

18/27 (-9) (55)

Robin Carnahan (MO-D)

41/50 (-9) (9)

Harry Reid (NV-D)

44/53 (-9) (3)

Joe Sestak (PA-D)

28/38 (-10) (34)

Carly Fiorina (CA-R)

28/40 (-12) (32)

Richard Burr (NC-R)

32/44 (-12) (24)

Marco Rubio (FL-R)

31/46 (-15) (23)

Sharron Angle (NV-R)

36/52 (-16) (12)

Alexi Giannoulias (IL-D)

26/42 (-16) (32)

Michael Bennet (CO-D)

32/48 (-16) (20)

Ken Buck (CO-R)

26/46 (-20) (28)


7 comments:

  1. I'm not so sure I agree with this thesis...

    Are the current candidates really that weak, or is it just that politicians in general (with few exceptions) are very unpopular at this point?

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  2. RON JOHNSON IS A MULTI-MILLIONAIRE IN WISCONSIN AND HAS A 18-20% RATING?

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  3. Jim DeMint is missing from this list.

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  4. Such good data. Extremely interesting to see these numbers. Thank you and great work.

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  5. Tom,
    Most any other year, voter approval versus not, might be a fairly good gage of whats to follow in the upcoming elections. But, this time around I don't consider approval numbers, for a given candidate, to be as much a factor as it's been in the past. Republican voters, in particular, are so engaged and as well enraged against anything Democratic (as in party), that liking or not liking a particlar Republican candidate is not, nor will be (in general) the deciding factor in voting for that candidate in the general elections. This year's Republican vote will be a vote more against Obama, his policies, leftist agenda and the Democratic Party that has and does support him - far more so than anything else.

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  6. What might be more telling are the breakdowns by party ID. Is it across the board or just by party? I'd guess most have a huge negative score with the other party, although Toomey beats Sestak by 10 with the other party, 7 in his own, and 16 with independents.

    On the other hand, Buck/Bennett is 8 vs. 9 with the other party and 24% vs. 22% with indies. Buck loses by 15% with his own party. Yet, he's only behind 4% with his own party in the voting. I think a bit of the negative is that the candidates aren't beloved by their own party.

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  7. NV LV are more likely* to believe Harry Reid is extreme than to believe that Sharron Angle is.

    http://video.foxnews.com/v/4328106/polls-show-promise-for-republicans/

    Even these PPP #s show Angle to have fewer unfavorables* than Reid.

    *(within MOE)

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