It’s now Rep. Bill Cassidy’s 2014 Senate race to lose, Sen. David Vitter’s governor’s race to begin to consolidate upon, and Gov. Bobby Jindal’s restoration of political capital to achieve, according to a semi-annual poll put out there by one of Louisiana’s major Republican activists.
Lane Grigsby’s exercise of every
six months or so this time brought in a new firm and even more
in-depth information (from a well-constructed sample although a bit on the
small side) that should hearten but worry Cassidy. The Republican challenging incumbent
Democrat Sen. Mary Landrieu should
gain morale because, in a question about the Senate vote this fall, a generic
GOP candidate topped 40 percent, over 6 points better than a generic Democrat. It
got better when a question asking about Landrieu reelection over 56 percent
said they definitely would pass on her, and her job approval was disapproved by
53 percent. Further, in a parsing of all four announced candidates, he drew 26
percent while Landrieu got only 39.
Providing context, while almost
all respondents could rate Landrieu, less than half could do so for Cassidy,
and of those who did two-thirds, or about a quarter of all, rated him
favorably. This means he has tremendous room to grow in support and capture a
good bit of the nearly 30 percent of the undecided segment out there. By
contrast, Landrieu has little room to improve.
This should cause the worry for
Cassidy. Simply, when you’re an incumbent senator who 56 percent say the office
needs a newcomer, when 53 percent disapprove of your job, and only 39 percent
say they would reelect seven months out, you’re a goner unless something amazing
happens. You either can hope that amazing thing comes as a result of a
blundering campaign by your opponents or by great fortune, but neither are in
your control. As there is not much you can do to turn around people’s thinking
of you, the only thing you can do is to try to eviscerate your (in this
instance main) opponent and pray somehow those voters stay home as few will
come to you.
So Cassidy needs to gird himself
for an intense period of having his character assassinated over the next couple
of months, because if Landrieu’s campaign hasn’t moved the needle significantly
by summer, she’s history as far as what she can do on her own to turn things
around. Worse, she has to get above the 50-percent-plus-one mark in the general
election against all candidates, because, as favorable as the electorate will
be for Republican candidates in this off-election year, for the general election
runoff it will be even more so in terms of demographics. And the problem is
that her best strategy of tearing down Cassidy because she can’t do much to
build herself up enough to win would end up diverting the votes to other
Republicans, most of whose voters then would rally to Cassidy in the runoff (as
a second choice ballot question confirmed: only 3.6 percent would support
Landrieu in that instance). As a result, Landrieu’s attacks on Cassidy soon to
arrive will be vicious, petty, and omnipresent, because they are her only,
longshot chance now to snatch victory from the jaws of defeat.
By contrast, opinions are far
from set in stone about the 2015 governor’s contest, but Republican Vitter has
the early clubhouse lead and seems well-positioned at this point to keep it. He’s
above 55 percent in approval, topping both of his main presumed challengers Republicans
Lt. Gov. Jay Dardenne and Treasurer John Kennedy,
although his ratio of like to dislike at a bit under 2:1 is not nearly as good
as the 4:1 and 7:1, respectively, of the pair but almost half of respondents
did not have an opinion of them. Further, he leads in the race, besting both of
them combined, with his closest rival being the hypothetical at this point challenger
Democrat New Orleans Mayor Mitch
Landrieu around 27-26.
Unlike with Mary Landrieu, who’s
underwater and has little opportunity to attract votes, with Vitter having
solid approval numbers, having his opponents Dardenne and Kennedy convert those
not knowing them into approving of them doesn’t not mean undecided voters will break
decisively their way, because of Vitter’s perception of approval. His task at
this early juncture is to keep it that way. The second-choice data show that
Vitter at 15 percent and then likely to pick up a portion of Dardenne and
Kennedy’s combined 40 percent as second choices would put him over the top in a
runoff. (Keep in mind this election is in 19 months, however.)
And then there’s Jindal, who
finds he’s now about treading water in approval, checking in with both an
approval and (slightly more) disapproval around 45 percent. This represents an
improvement over polling of the last year that had him under 40 percent
approval. But it’s no mystery to understand why this recovery has occurred: his
agenda of the past couple of years that broke from a cautious,
incremental reform of state policy and institutions to an all-out
attempt to transform the state’s political culture has subsided into a defensively-oriented
strategy. With the big-ticket items, such as privatization of management of
almost all state hospitals, proceeding with little controversy or being dialed
back for an operational pause, such as with education reforms, the introduction
of principled conservatism to many areas of state policy and governance that
challenges the populist persuasion within the culture has become less obvious
and/or the changes, reviled by revanchist elements, have not manifested as the
traumas oversold by opponents and have solidified support among advocates of
right-sized government. This is confirmed by that fact that, wherever in the
poll there was a significant difference in issue preferences among the public,
majorities preferred those that have been supported by the Jindal
Administration.
If Jindal does seek higher
national office, these are the kind of numbers (and, additionally, showing he
would best former Sec. of State Hillary Clinton in a hypothetical presidential
matchup in the state by 5 points) that allows him to keep thinking that’s a
realistic possibility. They also show that, particularly if he concentrates on
defense with select, incremental moves on offense, he remains a policy-making
force at the state level.
Jindal is a panderer of the worst kind - not a reformer, as you whine on about.
ReplyDeleteGive it up!!!
ReplyDeleteYep!
There you go with the populist crap again,yet you've never once addressed that your Master Governor told a national audience that the GOP should be the party of populism.
ReplyDeleteJeff, Mary Landrieu is going to be reelected to the Senate. You're overlooking all the dead voters in Orleans Parish that she will get to the polls.
ReplyDelete