Jeffrey D. Sadow is an associate professor of political science at Louisiana State University Shreveport. If you're an elected official, political operative or anyone else upset at his views, don't go bothering LSUS or LSU System officials about that because these are his own views solely. This publishes five days weekly with the exception of 7 holidays. Also check out his Louisiana Legislature Log especially during legislative sessions (in "Louisiana Politics Blog Roll" below).
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25.10.16
LA Senate race reverts to form: advantage Kennedy
Maybe back to the future explains how the state of
Louisiana’s U.S. Senate race seemingly has reverted
to its position of over a month ago, as campaigns have adjusted to
burgeoning interest in the contest to produce the same top two then as now.
Until
the middle of September, polling had shown Republican state Treasurer John Kennedy leading the field with
around a quarter of the vote, and then several points behind Democrat Public
Service Commissioner Foster
Campbell. Then a couple of polls emerged that saw Kennedy falling back
close to other main rivals Republican Reps. Charles Boustany and John Fleming, and Campbell
retreat back to his main rival Democrat, former lieutenant governor candidate Caroline Fayard.
The theory went that Kennedy for Republicans and
Campbell for Democrats served as placeholders for an electorate minimally engaged,
with their familiarity translating to default answers in surveys for people in reality
undecided. With the proportion of the undecided still remaining high, it could
have been that as some respondents began paying attention they detached from
the pair and declared themselves undecided, while others of the undecided broke
disproportionately for the other candidates. At the time, Kennedy hardly had
any advertisements out and Campbell found Fayard picking
up key endorsements from the Landrieu clan. Thus, it could be that Kennedy
could win back supporters once he made his campaign more visible and if
Campbell could rally his more state-centered campaign to overcome the national
party emphasis on Fayard he would regain his edge over her.
That process seems to have played out, with both
campaigns executing successful game plans. According to the latest independent
poll, Kennedy has gone back to almost a quarter of the electorate’s support
while Campbell at just under a fifth of it has put distance between himself and
Fayard, keeping himself ahead of Boustany and Fleming.
Kennedy’s reassertion does not bring much
surprise. A longtime and popular fixture in state politics, better than both
Boustany and Fleming he can capture conservative populists – and much better
than the state’s original populist on the right, former state Rep. and Klan
leader David Duke. With that base,
Kennedy, a Democrat until 2007, needs just a smattering of principled conservative
support and some conservative Democrat defectors not only to lead into the
runoff, but to serve as the basis of a winning coalition in the runoff.
Campbell’s climb back appears more unexpected. While
also long around state politics, his had more regional than statewide name
recognition and appeal, and the imprimatur of the Landrieus for Fayard should have
galvanized traditional Democrat apparatuses, particularly pertaining to black voters,
for her. That she remains stuck around an eighth of voters’ choices poll after
poll – especially if ending up in that territory on election day – shows one or
both of a measurable decline in the influence of the Landrieus and/or in the
power of groups and elites in state politics allied with national Democrat
interests.
Certainly that exception applies to labor unions,
both inside
and outside
of government, as well as the extremist
wing of environmentalism (speaking to the latter, Fayard more sensibly expresses
caution concerning the faith of anthropogenic climate change), who have not
followed the national Democrats and have gone in Campbell’s direction. With the
populist left resurging that enabled Campbell ally Democrat Gov. John Bel Edwards to
take advantage of Republican infighting allowing Edwards to win the
governorship last year, that should provide the numbers to hold off Fayard. Campbell
has done well to utilize dwindling liberal populism, neutered elsewhere in the
country, in Louisiana, demonstrating as did Edwards that its demise here has
yet to come.
These developments leave Boustany and Fleming in
increasingly desperate straits. With only a portion of the undecided vote of
roughly an eighth of the electorate part of their possible constituencies and each
of them sitting on about a tenth of that voting population, one essentially would
have to sweep that category to muscle past Campbell. In practical terms, the present
trend would keep both of the more principled conservative candidates out of the
runoff.
These dynamics continue unabated, so something
unexpected must happen within the next two weeks in order to prevent a
Kennedy-Campbell runoff that will lead, on his third try, to Kennedy’s finally
joining the country’s most august assembly.
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