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IA Senate Pickup Opportunities In 2008

February 6th, 2007 at 09:59pm Geraldine

If Chris Cillizza at the Washington Post can already start looking at 2008 US Senate races, we feel like it’s not too soon to start looking at 2008 Iowa Senate races. Today, we’re going to take a look at the top Democratic pickup opportunities. Although the Democrats picked up seats in 2004 to reach a 25-25 tie in the Senate, the Republicans will still be defending 15 seats in 2008, 5 more than the Democrats. Not only will the GOP go into 2008 with more seats to defend, they will be a party that is deeply divided. Nearly half of the Republicans in the State Senate walked out of the leadership election in November. They haven’t become much more unified since. Here are a list of the three most vulnerable seats that the divided Republican caucus will have to defend in 2008:

1. Larry McKibben (Marshall and Hardin Counties). McKibben represents a district that Chet Culver won by nearly 1500 votes in 2006. It consists of Marshall County, a traditionally strong Democratic county and Hardin, a mildly Republican leaning county. In 2004, McKibben edged out the Democratic candidate, Wayne Sawtelle, a labor activist, by less than 800 votes. McKibben owed his victory to piling up a huge lead in Hardin County, despite running significantly behind George Bush in Marshall County. The large labor community in Marshalltown will still be gunning for McKibben in 2008 and McKibben won’t be running on anywhere near as strong a ticket in 2008. With Tom Harkin up for Senate and Selden Spencer making a more serious attempt to run against Tom Latham, McKibben won’t have the advantages he had in 2004. He’s hanging on by a slim thread and this race will probably be decided again by less than 1000 votes.

2. James Hahn (Cedar, most of Muscatine and a little of Johnson counties). Hahn, one of the 8 anti-Lundby Republicans in the State Senate, defeated incumbent Democrat Thomas Fiegen after redistricting in 2004. Fiegen previously only represented the Cedar County part of the district and lost his bid for re-election in the new district by less than 2000 votes. This will be another place where the Democrats will benefit from having a much stronger ticket. The 2004 Democratic candidate for U.S. House, long-shot Dave Franker will be replaced on the ticket by incumbent Representative Dave Loebsack. This means there will be a whole lot more resources available in Muscatine County, a county which isn’t that important in a statewide race but is a crucial swing county in the 2nd Congressional District. John Kerry won Muscatine County in 2004 by 500 votes despite a weak showing statewide. Chet Culver won it by 2000 votes. If the Democratic Presidential nominee has a Chet Culver-like performance in the Presidential and gets 55% of the vote, this seat should go. If Iowa continues to be a tightly contested swing state, it probably won’t.

3. Mary Lundby (Linn) Although Lundby is the Republican leader in the State Senate, she is one of the most moderate members of the Republican Caucus who replaced former leader Stew Iverson in a coup in April 2006. She was also one of two Republican State Senators to oppose an amendment to the Iowa Constitution to ban gay marriage during the last legislative session. Her socially moderate views make her a good fit for a State Senate district that has about 12,000 Democrats, 12,000 Republicans and 17,000 Independents in the suburbs of Cedar Rapids that she won with nearly 60% of the vote in 2004. However, it does not make her a good fit in the Republican Party of Iowa which is dominated by social conservatives. Her only ally in the Republican caucus on the gay marriage issue, Maggie Tinsman, was defeated in the 2006 primary by an extreme right wing organization called Iowans for Tax Relief. She was beaten by a fellow who can best be described as the Steve King of East Iowa, David Hartsuch. Considering that half the Republicans in the State Senate don’t support Lundby, it won’t be a surprise if Iowans for Tax Relief tried to beat Lundby in the primary. If they do, an ultra conservative will be very vulnerable in this moderate seat. The other possibility is that Lundby, a cancer survivor may call it quits. After all, why would anyone in their right mind really want to manage a Senate caucus with a proclivity for sectarian violence that would make an Iraqi province blush? If the seat becomes open, it will become an extremely competitive race and with compartively high costs to run a campaign in the Cedar Rapids media market, it will easily become the most expensive State Senate race in the state. However, if Lundby stays on the nature of the district makes it Republican favored but still competitive. However, the mix of all three possibilities, a Republican primary, retirement and re-election keeps this seat highly competitive.

Other vulnerable Republicans are (in alphabetical order): Jeff Angelo (South-Central Iowa), Jerry Behn (Boone and Dallas Counties), John Putney (Benton, Grundy, Tama and part of Iowa County), Brad Zaun (suburban Polk County) and Mark Ziemann (Allamakee, Chickasaw, Howard and Winneshiek Counties)

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6 Comments Add your own

  • 1. Chris Woods  |  February 6th, 2007 at 11:05 pm

    Excellent post, definitely worthy of some cross-posting over at Bleeding Heartland if you ask me.

  • 2. Nathan A  |  February 8th, 2007 at 3:01 am

    I will note, as many can probably understand after the tough Dallas County special election, we need to get an EARLY JUMP on these races. It has been far too often that districts that are competitive every cycle, but have tough GOP incumbents holding them, again and again only get attention right at the end as numbers predictably narrow. The coordinated will not reliably jump in to help since many of these counties (Allamackee, Tama, Muscatine, Dallas, Cedar, and less so Boone) have virtually no reliable Democratic organizations and candidates will need to assemble their own volunteer forces and precinct leaders.

    In the case of the 4th District, Jerry Behn and Larry McKibben and Tom Latham will all fire up their machines early as they rely as usual on reliably large campaign reserves and backers, and so we must fire up Dem campaigns even earlier. I remember witnessing the disastrous 4th District Central Committee giving Spencer $2,000 THREE WEEKS before the election instead of what should have been something like three MONTHS ahead. Latham was already unbeatable by that point, as were Behn and the rest of the crazy 4th candidates.

    Rich Olive’s campaign was the perfect example of campaigning EARLY, before the Republicans had even gotten out of the primary–he was therefore able to campaign like an equal instead of a challenger and was treated in the media with even more credibility than his opponent.

  • 3. mirage1  |  February 13th, 2007 at 10:27 pm

    I have to say, where in the world did you get your analysis on that last paragraph?

    The Zaun seat is safe for as long as he wants to run in that district.

    Zaun is talented, runs a terrific campaign with a strong experienced staff, works harder in campaigns than nearly any candidate in the state, and has strong support from republicans and democrats alike in his district.

    Don’t be surprised to soon see Zaun at the top of the list of leadership of his peers. Zaun knows how to win elections (remember, he knocked off Urbandale Mayor Giovanetti after 20 years in office) and republicans statewide would do well to adopt his strategies.

    Frankly, Zaun may be the least vunerable seat on either side of the aisle for the forseeable future.

  • 4. Geraldine  |  February 13th, 2007 at 10:43 pm

    Brad Zaun is a Republican in a district that has 1,000 more Democrats than Republicans. He achieved his success against Laura Sands in a year in which Democrats underperformed in Polk County. That is not a safe seat. But, as the piece reflects, it’s not the most vulnerable one either.

  • 5. Adam  |  January 27th, 2008 at 9:21 pm

    Great post. William Meyers seems to be roaring ahead to the democratic nomination in the fourth district, and looks to present a tough fight to Latham. King (5th district) is even receiving some criticism for looking ahead, looks like we just might make Iowa Blue again!

  • 6. Iowa Progress » Dem&hellip  |  February 14th, 2008 at 11:36 pm

    […] Senator in Marshall and Hardin Counties will not be running for re-election. When Iowa Progress ranked the top opportunities for Democrats to pick up seats in the State Senate last year, McKibben was […]

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