Recently
noted was the main reason Landrieu lost, and convincingly so: societal and
technological changes made this kind of election evolve into one where ideology
became important, and with Landrieu being so out-of-touch with the state’s
majority no amount of fig leaves courtesy of a few deliveries of pork and lip
service about energy could cover the massive number of ideological warts her
voting behavior blemished into her.
And you didn’t need polling data to
understand the environmental dynamics that, at best, made her even money odds
to retain the post to begin with as soon as Cassidy entered the contest. She
faced a well-financed challenger (of course, understand that candidates that
can snare a lot of donations demonstrate they are quality to begin with) as the
state continued to turn more conservative in its political behavior (witness
increasing Republican registrations and rapidly declining numbers of registered
Democrats) in a year where no winning presidential candidate could juice
turnout for her or during a midterm election without a president of the other
party to give reason to vote for her as means of voting against him (typically in
midterm elections the party of the president loses seats in Congress, almost
always in the House but more often than not in the Senate, for this reason).
The situation for her was marginal already without including a disastrous
voting record.