Tag Archives: Corey Lewandowski

New Chairman for Trump Campaign; Surprising Arizona Senate Poll; Menedez’s Replacement; OH-13 Race Within Margin of Error; The Late Jackson Lee’s Daughter May Step In

By Jim Ellis — Monday, August 19, 2024

President

Corey Lewandowski

Donald Trump: Lewandowski Returns — Amid rumors of a campaign staff shake up swirling around the Trump campaign, it now is confirmed that 2016 campaign manager Corey Lewandowski has returned to former President Donald Trump’s fold. On Friday, Lewandowski was appointed to be chairman of the campaign.

It is clear the Trump effort has been jolted off course with the emergence of Vice President Kamala Harris as the new party nominee, and it is becoming clear that the Republican campaign must return to a more cohesive issue based message in order to rally the GOP base and attract the narrow band of swing voters. It will be interesting to see if reinstalling Lewandowski will provide the needed answer.

Senate

Arizona: Surprising New Poll — Peak Insights, polling for the National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC), released the results of their new survey of the Grand Canyon State electorate (July 31-Aug. 5; 800 likely Arizona general election voters) that surprisingly finds GOP former gubernatorial nominee and ex-news anchor Kari Lake now in a dead heat, at 46-46 percent, with US Rep. Ruben Gallego (D-Phoenix).

The last three polls, from The Cook Political Report, Redfield & Wilton Research, and the High Ground group all showed Rep. Gallego posting substantial leads of 11, 6, and 9 percentage points, respectively. It remains to be seen if the NRSC poll is an anomaly or the beginning of a new trend.

New Jersey: Replacement Senator — Sen. Bob Menendez (D) is scheduled to resign his seat on Tuesday, and Gov. Phil Murphy (D) announced that he will appoint his former gubernatorial chief of staff, George Helmy (D), to serve the balance of the current term. Rep. Andy Kim (D-Moorestown) is the heavy favorite to win the general election and begin his six-year term in January. Sen. Menendez was convicted of multiple bribery counts and awaits sentencing. He vows to appeal the conviction.

House

OH-13: Within the Margin of Error — In a race that has drawn little in the way of national political attention, a recently released late July poll finds freshman Ohio US Rep. Emilia Sykes (D-Akron) already locked in a tight race with GOP former state Sen. Kevin Coughlin (R). Coughlin spent 14 years in the state House and Senate and is returning to elective politics this year after a 14-year respite.

The Cygnal research organization poll for the National Republican Congressional Committee (July 28-30; 400 likely OH-13 voters; live interview & text) finds Rep. Sykes leading Coughlin, 44-40 percent, with the congressional generic question breaking as a dead even tie, 46-46 percent.

The OH-13 contest is an under-the-radar campaign that will be attracting more attention as we move closer to the election. The FiveThirtyEight data organization rates the district as R+2, but Dave’s Redistricting App calculates a 50.7D – 47.0R partisan lean. The Daily Kos Elections statisticians rank the seat as the 13th-most vulnerable district in the House Democratic Conference.

TX-18: Turner Won’t Run in Special — Former Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner, who the Harris County Democratic Party members installed as the general election replacement for the late Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee (D-Houston), said yesterday that he will not enter the special election to fill the final two months of the current term. Erica Lee Carter (D), Jackson Lee’s daughter, has expressed interest in running for the interim position and it appears she will not have serious opposition.

This means Lee Carter will serve the final two months of her mother’s term when she wins the concurrent Nov. 5 special election. The late congresswoman’s daughter was not a candidate to replace her mother in the regular election. Turner is a sure bet to win the regular election and take the seat in the new Congress beginning Jan. 3, 2025.

Poll: Sununu Pulls Ahead of Hassan

By Jim Ellis

New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu (R)

March 1, 2021 — Republican leaders have been consistently promoting the idea that by New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu (R) challenging first-term Sen. Maggie Hassan (D) it would give the GOP its strongest chance of converting the seat. A new poll supports their assertion.

The University of New Hampshire’s pollsters released the results of their regular Granite State Poll, and though this organization was previously one of the least reliable survey research entities, their record has improved in recent elections. Before, they conducted polls over excessively long sampling periods, which led to a large error factor and was a key reason they badly missed some previous polling.

Such methodological flaws have been corrected in the past few election cycles, thus making their data a better gauge of the New Hampshire electorate. Their latest survey conducted over the Feb. 18-22 period and involving 1,676 likely general election voters from their pool of 1,868 Granite State Poll panel members was conducted online. Its results were then weighted to make their sample better resemble the New Hampshire voting universe.

The previous explanation is not to exempt the Granite State pollsters from producing some eyebrow-raising numbers, however. While its tight ballot test numbers are believable for a state’s electorate whose voting patterns have seemingly swung wildly since the turn of the century, seeing an incumbent trailing badly among Independents so early in an election cycle appears questionable.

The ballot test pairing Sen. Hassan with Gov. Sununu finds the Republican state chief executive taking a two-point lead over the incumbent, 48-46 percent. This is a believable outcome when seeing Sununu carrying a 55:19 percent favorability ratio as compared to Sen. Hassan’s 42:38 percent.

What appears bizarre is finding Sen. Hassan trailing the governor 56-18 percent among Independents. That such a widespread gap actually exists within this group seems unlikely, and even the depiction of voters identifying with a party compared with their reported voter registration appears inconsistent. While only 17 percent of the study respondents ID themselves as Independents, 42 percent say they are undeclared voters with regard to party registration.

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Why the Panic?

By Jim Ellis

June 23, 2016 — It is clear that most Republican insiders, and many elected delegates preparing for the national convention in Cleveland, appear terror stricken over the Trump campaign’s current status. Now, a long-shot move is underway to attempt to change the GOP convention rules so all delegates would be free to vote as they choose, thus dissing state laws and binding planks in a last-ditch attempt to deny Donald Trump the nomination.

Trump, himself, is being portrayed as showing signs of panic with his abrupt firing of campaign manager Corey Lewandowski, but this act is likely a response to the poor fundraising operation that came directly under the departed top staff man’s purview. The Trump campaign reports an embarrassingly low $1,289,507 million cash on hand.

But is there reason for such panic? As often seems the case, the people directly involved in the political process appear to pay more attention to media stories than to numbers and maps because the empirical data is telling quite a different story.

Quinnipiac University just released polls in three key states, all taken between June 8-19. Their new Florida poll (975 registered Florida voters) finds Hillary Clinton leading Trump 47-39 percent, a significant gain in this most important of swing states, but the relatively modest eight point spread is her best showing, by far.

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