Tag Archives: Sen. Jacky Rosen

Three Enter GOP Presidential Race;
Ex-Iceland Ambassador Prepares Run in Nevada; Will an Upset in New York Hold?; Only 17 Now in RI-1 Race

By Jim Ellis — Thursday, June 8, 2023

President

Announcements: Three Enter GOP Presidential Race — Former Vice President Mike Pence (R), ex-New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, and North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum all declared their presidential campaigns yesterday or are in the process of doing so. None of the three are regarded as top-tier contenders, but things can change in the next months as we head toward the first vote in the Iowa Caucuses on Feb. 5, 2024.

The field now grows to nine candidates, featuring former President Donald Trump, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, Sen. Tim Scott (R-SC), ex-UN Ambassador Nikki Haley, businessman Vivek Ramaswamy, former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson, and Pence, Christie, and Burgum.

Senate

Dr. Jeffrey Ross Gunter (R)

Nevada: Ex-Iceland Ambassador Prepares Run — The Nevada Senate race featuring incumbent Jacky Rosen (D) running for a second term should be a top-tier competitive race, but the Republican field has been slow to assemble. Businessman, disabled Afghan War veteran and 2022 Senate candidate Sam Brown is expected to run but has not yet officially entered the race. A new candidate coming on the horizon, Dr. Jeffrey Ross Gunter (R), the former US Ambassador to Iceland in the Trump Administration, is apparently now testing the political waters to enter the race.

Republicans will need a strong candidate to make this race viable. In 2022, Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto (D) barely slipped past former state Attorney General Adam Laxalt (R) with a 48.8 – 48.0 percent victory. There is no indication that Laxalt will return for another run next year.

House

NY-17: Rep. Lawler Ahead in Test Polling — One of the biggest 2022 congressional upsets came in upstate New York where then-state Assemblyman Mike Lawler (R-Pearl River) defeated Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee chairman Sean Patrick Maloney (D). Now, a new EMC Research poll, surveying for the End Citizens United and Let America Vote organizations (May 4-7; 300 likely NY-17 voters; live interview & online) finds Rep. Lawler clinging to a slight 50-48 percent lead over former Congressman Mondaire Jones, in what is expected to be the 2024 candidate lineup.

Jones was elected to the former 17th District in 2018 but moved to New York City to run for re-election from his Westchester County base when Rep. Maloney decided to run in the court-drawn 17th CD has not yet announced he will run but is expected to enter the race. The district leans Democratic. The FiveThirtyEight organization rates the seat D+7 with a Dave’s Redistricting App partisan lean topping 56 percent Democratic. Also in the Democratic contest is local school board trustee Liz Gereghty, the sister of Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer (D).

RI-1: Field Drops to 17 — State Rep. Nathan Biah (D-Providence), one of 18 Democratic candidates vying for the congressional seat from which Rhode Island Rep. David Cicilline (D-Providence) resigned, is leaving the race. Instead, he will enter the special election to replace the late state Sen. Maryellen Goodwin (D).

Candidate filing continues to progress and will end June 30 for the determinative Sept. 5 Democratic primary. The FiveThirtyEight organization rates RI-1 as D+32 with a Democratic partisan lean score of almost 65 percent Democratic according to the Dave’s Redistricting App data organization.

Arizona Sheriff May Announce for Senate; Senate Candidates Poised in Nevada; CA-27 Candidates Emerging

By Jim Ellis — Tuesday, April 11, 2023

Senate

Arizona’s Pinal County Sheriff Mark Lamb (R)

Arizona: Republicans May Soon Have a Candidate — Political reports in Arizona suggest that Pinal County Sheriff Mark Lamb (R) may announce his US Senate candidacy as early as this week. Most of the attention so far has been upon whether 2022 gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake would enter the race. She has yet to say whether another campaign is in her immediate plans.

Democratic Rep. Ruben Gallego (D-Phoenix) is an announced candidate, and has been leading in the most recent polling. Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (I) appears to be preparing to seek a second term, but has not yet said whether she will run on the No Labels Party ticket after leaving the Democrats. Count upon the Arizona Senate race again becoming one of the top races in the country next year.

Nevada: Rosen Raising; Republicans Deciding — Nevada political sources indicate that both former GOP US Senate candidate Sam Brown and defeated 2022 congressional nominee April Becker may both soon announce 2024 US Senate campaigns.

Brown became more of a factor in the 2022 Senate primary than originally expected due to impressive fundraising, but still lost to former state Attorney General Adam Laxalt who would then lose a close general election contest to Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto (D). Becker lost a 52-48 percent decision to Rep. Susie Lee (D-Las Vegas) in the 3rd Congressional District battle.

Meanwhile, incumbent Sen. Jacky Rosen (D) has been hard at work on the fundraising trail. Her campaign indicates the senator will report $2.4 million raised for the quarter ending March 31, with more than $6 million cash-on-hand. Expect another close race here, but Sen. Rosen must be considered the favorite to win a second term.

House

CA-27: Two Democrats Making Moves — Southern California US Rep. Mike Garcia (R-Santa Clarita) won his most impressive victory in 2022, a 53-47 percent victory over former state Assemblywoman Christy Smith (D) in a district that the FiveThirtyEight data organization rates as D+8, and Dave’s Redistricting App calculates the district partisan lean at 53.7D – 44.3R. With Smith now losing three times, Democrats are looking toward other options. We can again expect this to become a national congressional campaign.

Former Virgin Galactic CEO and ex-NASA chief of staff George Whitesides (D), who was the first to announce his candidacy earlier this year, is reportedly going to disclose more than $500,000 raised for the 2024 race in the March 31 Federal Election Commission quarterly disclosure report and another $500,000 self-contributed.

Franky Carrillo (D), who was wrongly imprisoned for 22 years for a murder later proved that he did not commit, and was then awarded a $19 million settlement from the state of California, is expected to formally launch his campaign later this month.

Reflecting on the 2018 Numbers

By Jim Ellis

Jan. 24, 2019 — Now that all but one of the 470 House and Senate races from the election cycle just ended are final and recorded, it is time to better understand what the results portend.

As we know, the Democrats had a good election overall, and most particularly in the US House where they converted a net 40 seats — possibly 41 if NC-9 turns their way when the new election is finally scheduled — but Republicans did expand their majority in the Senate, thus largely disqualifying 2018 as an official wave election. Overall, there are 93 freshman House members and nine new senators when counting appointed Sen. Martha McSally (R-AZ).

Democrats came very near wave proportions, however – the Ballotpedia organization studied past wave elections and found that a swing of 48 House seats is necessary to constitute such a designation. While the effects from the 2018 election will certainly have long term reverberations, much more time is required to determine if the results are providing the foundation for transformational policy changes or are merely a blip that could just as quickly swing back to the Republicans.

What we do know is that women made significant gains in federal representation. In the Senate, the body now features a net three more female members (gaining Kyrsten Sinema and appointed Sen. McSally, both from Arizona, along with new Sens. Jacky Rosen (NV), and Marsha Blackburn (TN), but losing North Dakota’s Heidi Heitkamp), meaning that 25 women are now incumbent senators.

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