The Republican scenario to knock off Sen. Mary Landrieu in 2014 had a dream week, closing with affirmation of a strong candidate with the promise of undivided attention in the quest with her receiving more bad polling news.
Yesterday, Rep. Bill Cassidy
formally announced his intentions to contest the seat, perhaps coordinated with
Rep. John Fleming who, after
letting the Cassidy announcement get covered for a day, then offered his
declination. Fleming would have been a competitive candidate but faced a significant
disadvantage compared to Cassidy: many fewer dollars currently in the bank with
the need to raise a ton of them.
While Fleming is the wealthiest member of the state’s congressional
delegation – even including Landrieu – past elections show she will move
mountains to spend to stay in office. For the two-year election cycle ending in
her reelection 2008, she outspent her main opponent $10.144 million to $4.795
million and in the cycle ending in 2002 she outspent her main opponent $7.540
million to $3.721 million. Having the ability to bludgeon the opposition, which
reflects both her fundraising prowess and the relative weakness of the other
candidates, has been key to her narrow wins.
Fleming is not inept at raising funds – he raised $1.6 million in the
last cycle to win easily reelection – but having only around $500,000 on hand
meant a lot more of that would be needed, for even he can’t whip out his
checkbook and lend himself $5 million to keep up with Landrieu. But Cassidy
sits on (he says; the report won’t be in for another couple of weeks) around
$2.5 million, the same amount Landrieu reported on hand at the end of the last
cycle. And he did raise $1.8 million in the last cycle. It’s a sign he can
match her dollar-for-dollar precisely because he is seen as such a quality
candidate that can she cannot outspend, much less at the previous 2:1 ratio.
Nor could Fleming use a strategy of differentiation to separate himself
from Cassidy to attract dollars to catch up. Fleming is the most conservative
member of the House from the delegation, sporting a lifetime score of 99.00
according to the American Conservative Union’s voting
index. But Cassidy isn’t exactly a raving liberal at 86.75, so he will
contrast as easily with Landrieu’s 20.53. Cassidy also has been as outspoken
about the many defects of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (“Obamacare”),
for which Louisiana
majorities still vilify Landrieu’s decisive
vote to pass it into law. The risk of having to give up a seat with that
much to catch up against a guy largely like him made this a good call for
Fleming.
And one in which state Republicans looking at the bigger picture will
rejoice. Of the House districts currently possessed by the GOP, Flemings was
the state’s most vulnerable demographically – it still favors a generic
Republican, but it would not take a lot of wackiness for it to flip. With him
running for reelection in it, it becomes a “live
boy/dead girl” slam dunk for a guy who’s about a big a partier as Gov. Bobby
Jindal.
While former Rep. Jeff Landry and current Board of Elementary and
Secondary Education Chairman Chas Roemer have expressed interest in the
contest, neither will get much support in the effort nor could mount much of a
campaign against Cassidy or Landrieu. Landry’s slash-and-burn
campaign for reelection but in a substantially new district would hurt his
fundraising efforts among big donors drawn otherwise to Cassidy where he starts
with close to no money, and Roemer is relatively untested and now might have more
interest in pursuing Cassidy’s open seat. And with Fleming not in the field to
divide it and give them hope of making it into the general election runoff,
they have even less incentive to jump in now.
This came on the heels of polling data showing that only 36 percent of
the public would vote to reelect Landrieu (unbelievably, actually about five
points higher than not long after her Obamacare vote) and just slightly fewer
saying they would vote against her under any circumstance. With her strongest
opponent ever and apparently no real division among Republicans to backing that
contender, probably the only way the week could have gone better for Republican
partisans would have been if Landrieu had gotten caught with a live girl or a
dead boy sometime during this span.
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