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Democrat Travis Childers jumps into Mississippi U.S. Senate race

Childers, a former congressman, hopes to unseat Republican U.S. Senator Thad Cochran

♦By Rich Shumate, Chickenfriedpolitics.com

mississippi mugTUPELO, Mississippi (CFP) — U.S. Senator Thad Cochran’s quest for a seventh term faces a new complication with a potentially formidable Democrat, Travis Childers, entering the race even as Cochran is dealing with a primary challenge.

Former U.S. Rep. Travis Childers

Former U.S. Rep. Travis Childers

Childers, who represented northern Mississippi in the U.S. House from 2008 to 2011, said he’s running because Washington is “more partisan and dysfunctional than ever.”

“What I know is that the old ways of Washington aren’t working, and a new breed of partisanship isn’t the answer,” Childers, 55, said in statement announcing his candidacy on February 28.

“Mississippians know that I have a solid record of being an independent guy who will work across party lines and stand up to the powers that be when needed.”

When he ran for re-election to his U.S. House seat in 2010, Childers, who styles himself a Blue Dog Democrat, had the backing of the National Right to Life Committee and the National Rifle Association. But he still lost in the GOP wave to U.S. Rep. Alan Nunnalee.

Despite the Magnolia State’s pronounced Republican tilt, Childers gives the Democrats at least a fighting chance in the general election, particularly if Cochran doesn’t survive a primary challenge from State Senator Chris  McDaniel, a Tea Party favorite who is getting backing from national conservative groups.

McDaniel, 41, has been endorsed by both the Club for Growth and the Senate Conservatives Fund, which have been critical of Cochran for being, in their view, insufficiently conservative. Chief among Cochran’s sins: His vote in favor of the compromise legislation that restarted the government.

U.S. Senator Thad Cochran

U.S. Senator Thad Cochran

Cochran, 75, is the most senior Republican in the Senate and was a former chairman of the powerful Senate Appropriations Committee. Since winning election in 1978, he hasn’t faced serious opposition, winning re-election four times with more than 60 percent of the vote.

Cochran is one of five Southern Republican senators facing a Tea Party-inspired prmary challenges this year. Those other races are in Texas, South Carolina, Tennessee and Kentucy.

Party leaders have expressed concerns that if any of those Republicans fall, it could open those seats to Democrats and imperil GOP hopes of taking back the Senate this year.

Poll: Greg Abbott increases lead over Wendy Davis in Texas governor’s race

New poll shows Abbott, the presumptive Republican nominee, with an 11-point gap over Davis, the only major Democrat in the race

♦By Rich Shumate, Chickenfriedpolitics.com editor

texas mugAUSTIN, Texas (CFP) — Republican Attorney General Greg Abbott has opened up a double-digit lead over his Democratic challenger, State Senator Wendy Davis, which is nearly double the lead he held in October.

Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott

Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott

The University of Texas/Texas Tribune poll put Abbott’s support at 47 percent to 36 percent for Davis in a head-to-head match-up. Seventeen percent were undecided or had no opinion.

The latest poll comes on the heels of two controversies that have ensnared to Davis, who rocketed to national fame last summer after filibustering a bill that would have outlawed abortions in Texase after 20 weeks.

First, the Dallas Morning news raised questions about her rags-to-riches campaign biography. Then, Davis gave an interview in which she said she would have supported the anti-abortion bill if it had been worded differently.

Texas State Senator Wendy Davis

Texas State Senator Wendy Davis

The poll found that the percentage of voters who viewed Davis unfavorably rose from 31 percent in October to 36 percent in February, while the number of voters who viewed her favorably stayed steady at 37 percent.

At the same time, Abbott made strong gains in the number of voters who viewed him favorably, which rose from 36 percent to 45 percent. Just 25 percent of voters viewed him unfavorably.

Abbott also continues to hold a staggering advantage in fundraising over Davis. Reports to the Texas Ethics Commission show he has raised $29.4 million for the race, compared to $3.9 million for Davis.

The University of Texas/Texas Tribune internet survey of 1,200 registered voters was conducted February 7-17 and has a margin of error of plus or minus 2.83 percentage points.

Arkansas U.S. Rep. Tim Griffin is running for lieutenant governor

Griffin, who announced in October that he was leaving Congress, enters a crowded GOP primary

♦By Rich Shumate, Chickenfriedpolitics.com editor

arkansas mugLITTLE ROCK (CFP) — Less than four months after announcing he would leave Congress to spend more time with his family, U.S. Rep. Tim Griffin has entered the lieutenant governor’s race back home in Arkansas.

U.S. Rep. Tim Griffin

U.S. Rep. Tim Griffin

In interviews with local Little Rock media February 13, Griffin said serving as lieutenant governor would allow him to remain with his young children in Arkansas rather than living in Washington.

The state’s number two spot would also set up Griffin for a potential run for governor in 2018.

Griffin, a former U.S. Attorney and aide to Karl Rove in the Bush White House, won his seat in the Republican landslide in 2010 and easily won re-election in 2012. His decision not to seek a third term in the House – at a time when he had $500,000 in campaign cash on hand — surprised the Arkansas political establishment.

His entry into the lieutenant governor’s race has already shaken up the GOP prmary, with one of the announced candidates, State Rep. Charlie Collins, exiting the race. Still in the running are State Reps. Andy Mayberry and Debra Hobbs.

Hobbs had been running for governor but announced February 12 that she would run for lieutenant governor instead.

On the Democratic side, John Burkhalter, a state highway commissioner, is the only announced candidate and has been endorsed by the likely Democractic candidate for governor, former U.S. Rep. Mike Ross.

The lieutenant governor’s office is currently vacant after Republican Mark Darr resigned rather than face likely impeachment for ethics violations. The state legislature is currently considering a bill to leave the office vacant until after the November election, rather than calling a special election to replace Darr.

Texas governor’s candidate Wendy Davis says she would back 20-week abortion ban

Davis, who shot to national prominence for filibustering a 20-week abortion ban, now says she objected only to the way the law was written

♦By Rich Shumate, Chickenfriedpolitics.com editor

texas mugDALLAS (CFP) — Texas State Senator Wendy Davis, the likely Democratic nominee for governor, now says she would support a ban on abortions after 20 weeks as long as the final decision were left up to mothers and their doctors, rather than under circumstances defined by the legislature.

Texas State Senator Wendy Davis

Texas State Senator Wendy Davis

Last June, Davis garnered national attention by leading a more than 11-hour filibuster that delayed efforts by the Republican-controlled Texas Legislature to pass a bill that would have prohibited abortions after 20 weeks.

That national attention helped fuel Davis’s entry into the governor’s race, where she is expected to face Republican Attorney General Greg Abbott.

But in an interview with the editorial board of The Dallas Morning News, published February 11, Davis said she could have supported the bill if it had been written differently.

“My concern, even in the way the 20-week ban was written in this particular bill, was that it didn’t give enough deference between a woman and her doctor making this difficult decision and instead tried to legislatively define what it was,” she told the paper.

She said less than 1 percent of abortions in Texas occur after 20 weeks of pregnancy, and most of those are in cases where the mother’s health was in danger or there were fetal abnormalities.

“I would line up with most people in Texas who would prefer that that’s not something that happens outside of those two arenas,” she said.

The bill that Davis filibustered also required abortion clinics to meet the same requirements as outpatient surgery centers and forced abortion doctors to get admitting privileges at nearby hospitals. Davis also objected to both of those provisions.

Her filibuster ran out the clock on a special legislative session called by Governor Rick Perry. He promptly called another special session – which cost Texas taxpayers $800,000 – and the legislature passed the abortion restrictions, which are now being challenged in court.

After The Dallas Morning News reported Davis’s comments, her campaign insisted that what she said did not amount to a change in her position. But her comments lit up the message board on the newspaper’s Web site, where she was called “flip flop Barbie” and readers questioned the point of her filibuster.

Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott

Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott

Abbott has made Davis’s filibuster an issue in conservative Texas, telling a crowd of anti-abortion activists in January that Davis is “partnering with Planned Parenthood to return Texas to late term abortion on demand.”

Abbott has been defending the new abortion restrictions in court.

Davis’s latest comments on abortion come as her campaign was fighting back against questions about the details of her life story she has told during the campaign.

Davis has highlighted her past as a divorced teenage mother who lived in a trailer before working her way through Texas Christian University and Harvard Law School. But in a January 18 story, The Morning News challenged some of those details:

  • Davis divorced at 21, not 19 as she has previously said, and lived in a trailer for only a few months after the divorce with her daughter, Amber, before moving into an apartment.
  • Three years later, she married for the second time, and her husband helped pay for the remainder of her education at TCU and law school at Harvard. Together, they had a second daughter, Dru.
  • She left her second husband, Jeff Davis, the day after the last payment was made on her student loans at Harvard, according to Jeff Davis.
  • When they divorced, Jeff Davis was granted custody of both daughters, and Wendy Davis was ordered to pay $1,200 in monthly child support.

After the story ran, Davis issued a statement clarifying some of the details of her life story. However, she defended overall impression left by her previous characterizations.

“The truth is that at age 19, I was a teenage mother living alone with my daughter in a trailer and struggling to keep us afloat on my way to a divorce,” she said. “And I knew then that I was going to have to work my way up and out of that life if I was going to give my daughter a better life and a better future, and that’s what I’ve done.”

Republican Governors Association airs attack ad in Arkansas governor’s race

The new ad ties Democrat Mike Ross to President Obama and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi

♦By Rich Shumate, Chickenfriedpolitcs.com editor

arkansas mugLITTLE ROCK (CFP) — The first attack ad in the 2014 Arkansas governor’s race is a salvo from the Republican Governors Association painting former U.S. Rep. Mike Ross, the presumptive Democratic nominee, as a free spending liberal in the mode of Barack Obama and Nancy Pelosi.

Democratic nominee Mike Ross

Democratic nominee Mike Ross

The ad, entitled “Trillions,” started airing in heavy rotation in the Natural State on February 11. The RGA hasn’t said how much money it plans to spend, but the ad is clearly an effort to stop the well-funded Ross from building momentum while Republicans are fighting it out in a three-way primary.

In the ad, pictures of Ross are seen alongside Obama and Pelosi the House Democratic leader, noting that the national debt rose to $10.7 trillion during Ross’s time in Congress.

The RGA criticizes Ross for voting for the TARP rescue plan and the bailout of the auto industry, as well as supporting increases in the debt limit.

The tagline is that Ross, Obama and Pelosi have “trillions of things in common, all of them wasted.”

The irony is that when Ross was in Congress, the Blue Dog Democrat was often criticized by liberals back home for not being sufficiently supportive of the Democratic agenda in Washington, most notably his vote against Obamacare.

Ross has already been up on TV for the past two months, starting with an ad in which he was endorsed by popular Democratic Governor Mike Beebe, who is term limited.

Ross, 52, from Prescott, represented southern and western Arkansas in Congress from 2001 to 2013. He faces no primary opposition and has raised more than $3.6. million for the race.

That’s more than all of his three GOP opponents have raised combined. None of them have begun television advertising.

On the Repubican side, former U.S. Rep. Asa Hutchinson is battling Little Rock businessman Curtis Coleman and State Rep. Debra Hobbs of Rogers for the nomination.

Given that Obama lost Arkansas in 2012 by a staggering 23 points, the RGA’s strategy of linking Ross to the president is understandable. However, Arkansas voters tend to behave much differently in state and federal elections.

While the state’s entire congressional delegation is in Republican hands, Democrats still hold the governorship and most of the other statewide elected offices. While the GOP controls the state Senate, it has but a thin one-vote majority in the state House.

View the RGA’s ad against Ross: