Marc Ambinder (11:56 p.m.)
Assuming that Bill Owens's victory holds through the counting of absentees, voters in the 23rd did not embrace Doug Hoffman like conservatives embraced him. Enough voters saw Hoffman as a carpetbagger -- he didn't even live in the district -- who was trying to hijack their district for his own ideological ends. This is a Republican district, but it's not a terribly conservative district. It's genteel more than activist. The final straw: Hoffman didn't even try to pretend that the election was about the issues of the district. It was all about him -- and what he represented. In a way, NY 23ers took to Hoffman like Iowans took to Democratic presidential candidate Howard Dean in 2003. They wanted a representative, not a movement candidate. They didn't take kindly to all these outsiders telling them how to work.
Marc Ambinder (11:43 p.m.)
A tough night for gays: despite a huge, expensive and sophisticated effort in a moderate, fairly libertarian state, it looks like same-sex marriage will not be approved by voters in Maine. A domestic partnership initiative in Washington State is TBD.
Matthew Cooper (10:30 p.m.)
If the Dems pick up the NY-23 House seat, what does it mean? A rejection
of outsiders coming into a rural area and telling locals who their
nominee should be? A victory for Democrats in general? A blow to the
Republicans who endorsed Hoffman and offed the GOP nominee? However you
spin it, not the best story going into Sarah Palin's book launch.
Marc Ambinder (10:20 p.m.)
The Republican wins in New Jersey and Virginia and the close race in New York City tells us...
...self-financers, people affiliated with Big Wall Street, the Old Money Crowd, the establishment, the party leadership... are being put on notice. Not a Democratic or Republican thing...but a gun, fired by the political regulars -- not the newer Obama turnout cohort but the regular off-year cohort -- at the heart of those who protect those in power, at bailouts, at spending.
Also: very easy alternate explanation: the economy sucks. States are really hurting. Governors are very unpopular. Their support is going to crater.
Matthew Cooper (10:09 pm)
Marc Ambinder 10:00 pm
Ponderables:
...Why did Democrats strengthen their majorities in New Hampshire?
...How come Democrats are holding their own in Virginia State Legislative races?
...How come the New York City mayor's race is so close...even though the race has already been called...it's not going to be a Bloomberg blowout over Bill Thompson...
...What's happening in New York's 23rd CD? Why are GOPers suddenly nervous?
Marc Ambinder (9:24 p.m.)
Republicans are excited about Michigan's 20th State Senate district, where candidate Mike Nofs looks like he'll cruise comfortably to victory. This district was abandoned by a Democrat who left to run for Congress. Nofs and Griffin are both moderates.
Marc Ambinder 9:15 p.m.)
Democrats at very senior levels are worried about New Jersey. Jon Corzine isn't getting the spread he needs out of Camden County, Chris Christie has a good lead in Bergen County, (which Real Clear Politics's Mike Memoli points out is a county that Republicans need to win), and is leading in Union County. That said, a healthy chunk of Corzine's vote isn't in yet.
Marc Ambinder (9:06 p.m.)
Yes, independents are moving to the GOP. That's a big headline. Bad news for Dems, etc, etc. But. And this is important: these are conservative independents. Many disassociated with the GOP -- at least in terms of what they tell pollsters -- because of the GOP brand problems and because it's cool to be independent in parts of the country and in parts of states. Don't confuse "moderates" with "independents." Still, it seems clear that for people who call themselves independent, Republican messages wear better than Democrats.
Marc Ambinder (8:41 p.m.)
By
reporting and estimates, the Republican gubernatorial ticket outspent
the Democratic ticket in Virginia by about $8 million. This includes a
large downstate Chamber of Commerce ad buy.Marc Ambinder (8:09 p.m.)
If Jon Corzine wins re-election, he can thank women, who gave him a narrow advantage and who voted at higher proportions than men did. Note the split among moderates and independents; independents, self-described, clearly were more conservative than moderates, which says something about the electorate, rather than, I think, the environment.
Marc Ambinder (7:51 p.m.)
Member Obama's Nobel Prize? Conservatives chortled. But Bob McDonnell issued a sincere statement of congrats. The guy ran a good campaign.
Marc Ambinder (7:30 p.m.)
Marc Ambinder (6:10 p.m.)
The big issues: the economy, to 46% of voters in Virginia. In New Jersey, it was the economy -- 31% , followed by property taxes (25%). 25% of voters in Virginia said health care was their top issue compared to 18% who said the same in New Jersey.
PLUS
A huge money gap between Democrats and Republicans (including a massive Chamber of Commerce ad buy downstate, NRA ads, RGA ads (later in the game)
Economic anxiety among older men and independents 45 years and older...







Sometimes these elections are about the individual candidates running and have nothing to do with "referendums" or anything else.
The line appears to be that voters are responding to BHO's economic efforts and worries about the economy. Maybe those voters would care to explain why - at least in the case of NY and probably in the case of NJ - they're voting for Republicans who support MassiveImmigration, something that will make their situation worse. At least in NY, the Republican is quite in the "ClubForGrowthAtAnyCost" school; voters are running from one group that's willing to screw them to another group that's also willing to screw them.
Here's something you won't hear from almost anyone else: since the stimulus started, hundreds of thousands more foreign citizens got work permits than the number of jobs supposedly saved or created. The newly ascendent tea party loons and the like would actually make that worse; for instance, Hoffman was supporting MassiveImmigration even as millions of Americans don't have jobs.
If that concerns you, hold accountable those who provide you with information, whether cable TV, the MSM, bloggers, or sub-MSM hacks like those here at the Atlantic.
The Republican wins in New Jersey and Virginia and the close race in New York City tells us...
...self-financers, people affiliated with Big Wall Street, the Old Money Crowd, the establishment, the party leadership... are being put on notice. Not a Democratic or Republican thing...but a gun, fired by the political regulars -- not the newer Obama turnout cohort but the regular off-year cohort -- at the heart of those who protect those in power, at bailouts, at spending."
Let me say something about that.
I voted for Reagan. Bought into the whole "market-centered" view of the world, along with the idea of American dominance. As I learned over time, that was a gigantic mistake, leading directly to the recent economic near-collapse, involvement it two disastrous wars and the increased isolation of the US.
Sorry, Ron, government has a viable function and putting Wall Street in charge has resulted in the America of the Moneychangers. Hollowed out at its core, an increasingly impoverished middle class with a super-rich set of parasites at the top.
You know, an economic and social philosophy like any third world banana republic.
I voted for Obama believing he would change things.
Sadly, he's starting to look like an amateurish leader whose expertise ends at the level of local politics.
His financial "industry" reforms are a bad joke. The same people who created the mess are in charge, protecting their assets.
Ooops! we can't close Guantanamo, after all. Maybe later.
Healthcare reform was basically authored by the insurance industry, and their recent "attack" on the bill was a superb pr effort to get it passed by making themselves the ogres. Ha ha.
Obama's mideast foreign policy has turned his Cairo speech into a bad joke, causing explosive disillusionment in the Islamic world. That's 1.5 billion people, folks.
First he issues a demand that Israel stop the settlements, which the world, and US policy, regard as illegal. Not some, all. Then, in the year's most memorable "never mind" moment -- he buckles to domestic political pressure and Clinton congratulates a client state that depends on us for its minute-by-minute survival for giving us the rude gesture in front of an ever-amazed world.
I will never vote Republican, because I'd just be getting -- the same thing, more or less. Oh, without a pretend healthcare reform, open arrogance and wider wars and more enthused rubber-stamping of anything Israel does.
But I will stay home and send an apology to Noam Chomsky for ever ridiculing his notion that the US is an oligarchy, disguised as a democratic republic.
Bananas, anyone?
Living in VA I don't feel this election had much to do with Obama either way. Let's face it, Deeds is not that exciting or interesting and had a lot less money. As for McDonnell taking the national stage that depends on what happens over the next several years although he isn't really that exciting or interesting either (plus he has to stay off the Appalachian Trail).
Brian