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GOP Aiming To Scoop Up Governorships Nationwide In November, Control 30 States

Haley Barbour

LIZ SIDOTI   05/31/10 06:59 AM ET   AP

WASHINGTON — A political tail wind boosting their prospects, Republicans have significant opportunities to gain governorships across the Great Lakes and Midwest this fall. But, in a wrinkle to their coast-to-coast victory plan, the GOP is struggling with internal fights in a handful of primaries, giving Democrats hope of snatching a few big states.

The outcome of a whopping 37 races will determine control of several heavily populated states ahead of the every-decade redrawing of congressional and legislative boundaries. The census decides who will have the advantage in the quest for control of statehouses and Congress over the next 10 years.

And many governors elected in November will preside over states certain to loom large in President Barack Obama's likely 2012 re-election bid. They include swing states with huge numbers of electoral votes needed to win the White House, such as Pennsylvania, Ohio and Florida.

Five months before the election, primary contests that will set the November stage are well under way.

Alabama and New Mexico are up Tuesday. California and Nevada are among the states that vote June 8 in races that pit Republican incumbents or establishment-backed candidates against hopefuls who are more conservative or enjoy tea party support. South Carolina also chooses its GOP nominee next month. And the victor likely will be the next governor given the slim chances of a Democratic victory in the Republican-leaning state.

Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour, a potential 2012 presidential challenger to Obama, leads the committee working to elect GOP governors. He predicts major victories: "This cycle is so much more important than usual because of the way the Obama administration and the Democratic Congress have made this huge lurch to the left. The American people are scared of all the spending."

With a fundraising advantage, a favorable political landscape and victories in New Jersey and Virginia last fall, Republicans are aiming for the GOP to emerge from November controlling at least 30 states. They argue that it would make it hard for Obama to win re-election.

Delaware Gov. Jack Markell, the chairman of the Democratic Governors Association, suggests the GOP's take has some merit, saying in a recent fundraising solicitation: "We must stop the GOP from winning 30 governors' seats, and in turn, stop them from defeating President Obama and taking away our Democratic majorities."

Controlling 26 states to the GOP's 24, Democrats are on defense.

They're operating in a difficult environment – an economic recession that's forced governors to cut services or raise taxes or both – to make up budget shortfalls. And traditionally the party that controls both the White House and Congress loses seats. Issues like immigration also could affect the outcome.

Democrats privately say they likely will lose states; Republicans are virtually assured of winning Democratic-held open seats in Kansas, Tennessee, Oklahoma and Wyoming. And polls show Iowa Gov. Chet Culver in such serious trouble that he's widely expected to lose to former Gov. Terry Branstad, favored in the GOP primary.

Republicans have mounted similarly strong challenges to other Democrats across the Midwest and the Great Lakes – and Democrats acknowledge that states in that region will be among the toughest to win given that they have suffered the brunt of the recession.

Many Democrats doubt they'll hold onto auto-dependant Michigan, which has the nation's highest unemployment rate at 14 percent in April.

And they have their work cut out for them in: Ohio, where Democratic Gov. Ted Strickland faces former GOP Rep. John Kasich; Pennsylvania, where Democrat Dan Onorato, the Allegheny County chief executive, faces GOP Attorney General Tom Corbett to succeed the outgoing Democratic Gov. Ed Rendell; and Wisconsin, where Democratic Gov. Jim Doyle is retiring. Milwaukee's Democratic mayor, Tom Barrett, will run against whoever emerges from a crowded GOP primary in September.

Republicans also are making a play for the scandal-scarred but Democratic-leaning Illinois but they say it will be hard for Republican state Sen. Bill Brady to win even though Democratic Gov. Pat Quinn was the deputy of disgraced former Gov. Rod Blagojevich. And the GOP is trying to beat back Democratic efforts to win in Minnesota, where Republican Gov. Tim Pawlenty is leaving office presumably to run for president.

For all the dreariness, there are bright spots for Democrats.

Chief among them are GOP primaries in a handful of states that could result in Republicans nominating a tea party-backed conservative or a moderate battered and broke from the primary.

In California, former eBay CEO Meg Whitman, backed by Republicans like Newt Gingrich, is being dragged to the right by Steve Poizner, particularly on taxes and immigration, in a race that's grown increasingly nasty. And in Florida, Attorney General Bill McCollum is tangling daily with conservative businessman Rick Scott, a health care industry executive who made national headlines by opposing Obama's health care law.

Nevada's conservative Republican Gov. Jim Gibbons, whose job approval ratings are low following a messy, public divorce, may not make it through his primary – and that'd be just fine for GOP leaders who think he'd lose in the fall. Republican judge Brian Sandoval is favored to beat Gibbons; the victor will face Democrat Rory Reid, the son of embattled Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid.

And in Colorado political novice Dan Maes fared better at the state's convention than establishment choice Scott McInnis, a former congressman. The GOP nominee will face Denver Mayor John Hickenlooper in the fall.

Elsewhere, Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick's standing has improved markedly, and Democrats are virtually assured of holding New York after successfully recruiting Andrew Cuomo.

Democrats also hope to pick up Rhode Island and Vermont, and they're making serious plays for GOP-held seats in Arizona, Connecticut, Georgia, Hawaii and Texas. Republicans, in turn, are aggressively going after Democratic-controlled states of Maine, Maryland, New Hampshire, New Mexico and Oregon.

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WASHINGTON — A political tail wind boosting their prospects, Republicans have significant opportunities to gain governorships across the Great Lakes and Midwest this fall. But, in a wrinkle to t...
WASHINGTON — A political tail wind boosting their prospects, Republicans have significant opportunities to gain governorships across the Great Lakes and Midwest this fall. But, in a wrinkle to t...
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COMMUNITY PUNDITS
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rich misty 04:44 PM on 05/31/2010
JackNasty: Look at that, another inarticulate, do-nothing Democrat on the defensive.
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Why Jack you carry your hatred and anger at Democrats.... Just like a Republican. I believe in a big tent... But I don't believe in anger, hatred, personal attacks, and destructive criticism inside it or as part of a political process or discussion. If you feel such hatred (and  Read More...
07:36 PM on 06/03/2010
Republicans Jump Out To Historic Lead In Gallup Generic Ballot:
http://realclearpolitics.blogs.time.com/2010/06/01/republicans-jump-out-to-historic-lead-in-gallup-generic-ballot/
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
thepoliticalcat
Eradicate your microbioflora
04:14 PM on 06/01/2010
Liz Sidoti! AP's biggest GOP shill! And what a misleading header. Remember to vote peeps!
11:43 AM on 06/01/2010
That photo of Governor Foghorn Leghorn makes him look so life like.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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OlHippie
Career smart arse.
11:19 AM on 06/01/2010
Under the heading, "Most Brazen Political Hack" allow me to submit Rick Scott, Republican candidate for Governor of Florida. In his most recent ad, he states indignantly, "Bill McCollum's crowd says that the healthcare corporation I founded was fined $1.7 billion for Medicare fraud. Well, that's true, but what he doesn't tell you is that I learned from that experience, and our hospitals are among the highest rated in Florida." Apparently what he believes is that Medicare fraud is only a crime for lousy hospitals; hear that Mayo Clinic? You are the best hospital in the world, so feel free to steal as much Medicare money as you want.

Amazing gall!
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Cheryl2
real Americans celebrate diversity
10:53 AM on 06/01/2010
When the republicans are done savaging each other the only ones left standing will be democrats.
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Liberalforsure
Love this country? Vote out all republicans!
10:36 AM on 06/01/2010
Sorry I have a conscience thus will not be voting republican, not that I ever would anyway. They are immoral, lie, only care for the rich, care naught for this country and oppose any and everything just to oppose the President.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kitvancleave
10:27 AM on 06/01/2010
Why should anyone vote Republican this year? No leaders, no leadership, can't stop fighting among themselves, no ideas, no policies, no programs. "Just say no" is not a program -- it's a Nancy Reagan buzzword. Their only route is to tie their sagging white flag to the T(hreat) Party, which is an insult to democracy, Best of luck this year, guys -- you'll need it. The rest of us will vote for the only party we can go to -- the Democrats.
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Liberalforsure
Love this country? Vote out all republicans!
10:37 AM on 06/01/2010
Absolutely!
11:24 AM on 06/01/2010
But....! We could have a circus clown as Secretary of State!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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VOTER
Freedom from fear - the philosophy of human rights
10:05 AM on 06/01/2010
IL could have been a tough road for the Dems but then the Republicans
voted for Brady and Plummer in the Primary.

Brady and Plummer are losers and will lose in November.
Even a former IL Republican Governor refuses to campaign for them.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
09:58 AM on 06/01/2010
President Obama will be elected for s second term and Republican efforts will fail at every turn by their own words.. Tea party and Republican voters are the grand children of "Jim Crow," they can huff & puff all they want till the cows come home about " I want MUH country back". The American People have rejected that way of thinking before. Governorships are more akin to the small mindsets of their thinking. Its like them having their own little fiefdoms! Go for it!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ThomasPaineWeNeedYou
Know history or repeat it.
09:37 AM on 06/01/2010
This article is BS any thinking republican and independent has got to be scared to death of this nutty non-conservative but radical right nationalistic, anti-christian but calls themselves christian, people who deny their bigotry and dislike of all other people of color, and anti-intellectual but they think they are smart movement. I cannot imagine that people will reward this behavior. I think they are done, toast, and history. I wish the Media would stop pushing them in our faces and start calling them for what they represent and focus on what is really happening in the country. The MSM is just as clueless as Congress.
08:07 AM on 06/01/2010
Why do all the Rethuglican candidates for governorships look like the same fat old White guy?
08:04 AM on 06/01/2010
This brings to mind my recurring question: Why do the Republicans prefer under-educated incompetents?
Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour, for example, is incredibly ignorant. He claims the oil spill will just go away, the sea will clean itself up. Its no wonder our economy was destroyed by 8 years of those under-educated dinosaurs. They vote for anyone who can say "tax cut", has an arsenal of guns, never actually read anything factual, and who believes war will solve any international conflict.
07:20 AM on 06/01/2010
You win some, you lose some.
01:56 AM on 06/01/2010
Spending? Oh... it's comming! Scared of what's to come? Wait until another natural disaster hits! "Coming soon!" The San Madrid Fault, the biggest. Something to ponder! Oil is a lubricant to the earth. It's being drained from the gulf. The plates are going to have friction, and shift! The earth will shake soon.... more spending is coming. And heart's broken, emotions involved,and lost of life and money. believe that!
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DeanOfTomatoes
Farmer/Fisherman
02:12 AM on 06/01/2010
I know you meant to say New Madrid Fault.
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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
01:14 AM on 06/01/2010
More likely, Michael Steele will continue to embarrass the Rethugs.