Sign up now to get it in your inbox every weekday.
8:19 AM PT (David Jarman): CO-Sen: Arapahoe Co. District Attorney George Brauchler hasn't even announced his bid for the Republican Senate nomination in Colorado yet (though that looks imminent, once October starts and Q3 ends), but he's already the subject of a poll from a Democratic group. The decision to release the poll at first glance seems like an odd one, because it doesn't show Dem incumbent Michael Bennet in a particularly dominant position; he leads Brauchler only 45-42, according to Dem pollster Clarity Campaign Labs. He also leads GOP self-funder Robert Blaha 45-41; both those results seem to hinge on their Generic R status, as only 15 percent of respondents have any opinion about Brauchler (12 percent for Blaha).
What's going on, probably, is that the Senate race wasn't really the main point of the poll; it was sponsored by the group End Citizens United and, predictably, the poll finds that Coloradans do want to end the Citizens United decision (by a 66-17 margin among all respondents); the Senate race aspect was probably just an add-on for them to get some press. Another important caveat: the poll's sample is only 8 percent Latino, which is very different from the 14 percent Latino turnout from 2012, according to exit polls.
8:56 AM PT (Steve Singiser): LA-Gov: If you've been waiting anxiously for new data in the forthcoming battle to determine the next Governor of Louisiana, wait no more. Because in the past day or so, we have been treated to three different surveys on the lay of the land down on the bayou.
Two of the polls bear fairly close resemblance, in that they forecast the same "top two" (remember that the first round is merely an all-party primary, with the top two vote getters advancing to a runoff). They do flip the order, however.
The Triumph poll, which has been a regular fixture this cycle, has Democratic state legislator John Bel Edwards out to a fairly decent lead over Republican U.S. Sen. David Vitter (36-29), with PSC member Scott Angelle (12 percent) and Lt. Governor Jay Dardenne (11 percent) well behind.
Meanwhile, a MarblePort poll for the local blog The Hayride shows Vitter leading Edwards (29-26), with Angelle (15 percent) and Dardenne (14 percent) well back.
But one of these ones is not like the others—a new poll from Causeway Solutions had an all-GOP final two as David Vitter (24 percent) and Scott Angelle (21 percent), with the lone Democrat in the field (John Bel Edwards) just missing the cutoff at 20 percent (Dardenne was well back at 10 percent). They also were the only ones to poll a perspective general election, and found Angelle up double digits on Vitter (43-32). Given the lofty status for Angelle in this poll, perhaps it will not surprise you that the poll was commissioned" by Louisiana Rising, which happens to be a pro-Angelle super PAC.
9:20 AM PT (Steve Singiser): LA-Gov: In addition to new polling, we see a trio of new ads as the campaign shifts into the final stretch. The Louisiana Water Coalition goes negative on Republican Sen. David Vitter with an ad clearly targeted at female voters, while both Democrat John Bel Edwards and Republican Scott Angelle go positive with self-narrated 30-second spots in front of smiling, applauding audiences.
9:46 AM PT (Steve Singiser): MD-Sen/MD-07: Longtime Rep. Elijah Cummings has told folks that his decision on a potential U.S. Senate bid would come in the next couple of weeks. But the secret is out, presumably, after a chain of events Tuesday night. Local Rev. Jamal Bryant announced to his congregation that his campaign for Cummings' House seat, which lasted little more than a week, was over. He told WBAL-TV, in an interview after the announcement, that he backed off of a House bid after personally talking with Cummings. Cummings, for his part, is keeping mum for now.
10:32 AM PT (Steve Singiser): House: A group of nearly a dozen GOP freshmen have penned an open letter to their colleagues beseeching them to avoid a government shutdown, which looms in the coming weeks. The fact that all of them were GOP freshmen, and virtually all of them were in competitive districts (California's Mimi Walters being a possible exception) tells us that this might be more of an exercise in 2016 inoculation than a legitimate attempt to avoid a shutdown. To wit: the other person loudly ringing the "no shutdown" bell is New Hampshire U.S. Sen. Kelly Ayotte, who notably (and vocally) jumped her colleagues for trying to attach defunding of Planned Parenthood to a stopgap spending measure. Ayotte, of course, is looking at a potentially competitive 2016 U.S. Senate race, especially if Democratic Gov. Maggie Hassan makes the plunge.
10:53 AM PT (Steve Singiser): NH-01: Former Democratic Rep. Carol Shea-Porter, who announced her bid to reclaim this seat for the third time over the weekend, has chased one potential Democratic opponent out of the race. Executive Councillor Chris Pappas, who had been talked up for the seat prior to CSP's entry, announced that he will not run for Congress, and instead endorsed Shea-Porter. Meanwhile, NH1's Paul Steinhauser has talked with embattled GOP incumbent Rep. Frank Guinta, and Guinta appears determined to press onward. Guinta, whose campaign finance travails have led even some fellow Republicans to suggest he step aside, seems certain to face a primary challenge, with former candidates Rich Ashooh and Dan Innis at the top of the list.
11:03 AM PT (David Jarman): Demographics: Here's an interesting follow-up to the Wonkblog post earlier in the week about the dominant housing types (and, thus, density) in the nation's major cities. Instead of using city limits -- which is problematic, because some older cities like New York City are surrounded by almost-equally-dense suburbs, while other newer cities like Phoenix have boundaries that stretch out into vast emptiness -- it uses the Census-defined urbanized area within each metropolitan area.
The order changes only slightly: New York City moves into Philly's slot with the metro with the fewest single-family-detached homes, as Philadelphia has less dense suburbs. Compared with the previous list, Atlanta seems to fall down the list more than anyone else, thanks to the endless sprawl ringing it.
11:05 AM PT (Steve Singiser): MT-Gov: The Republican primary to challenge incumbent Democratic Gov. Steve Bullock got a little more crowded today with the (not unexpected) news that Republican and state public service commissioner Brad Johnson would throw his hat into the race. Johnson, who also served as Montana's secretary of state from 2005-2009, becomes the second major GOP candidate in the field, as wealthy businessman Greg Gianforte entered the race last month. Ironically, Johnson was once an employee of Gianforte, having been in sales for Gianforte's RightNow Technologies over a decade ago.
11:19 AM PT (David Jarman): Demographics: And here's some more food for thought on why it's better to think holistically about an entire metro area, rather than relying on where city limits arbitrarily fall. We've commented before on how the congressional districts that have the highest levels of inequality (as measured by the Gini coefficient) tend to be the most heavily Democratic ones, because they also tend to be in the central part of our older cities. Here's a more thorough explanation from City Observatory on why that's the case: cities, by virtue of their mixed uses and block-by-block variation, tend to be where both the richest and the poorest residents of a metropolitan area congregate. Exclusionary zoning and poor public transportation tend to keep the suburbs "equal" -- simply in the sense of being uniform in terms of who can afford the cost of entry, though, rather than by providing equality of opportunity.
11:27 AM PT (David Jarman): Congress: Pew Research has an interesting chart tracking, over time, the percentage of members of Congress who are immigrants. The number right now is very low: only six, or 1 percent of Congress. The highest percentage was at the very start of the nation's history, where 10 percent were born abroad (instead of in one of the colonies), and then it spiked again in the period of the most immigration, in the 1890s and first decades of the 20th century.
The six members, if you're wondering are Maizie Hirono (Japan), Raul Ruiz (Mexico), Ted Lieu (Taiwan), Norma Torres (Guatemala), and Albio Sires and Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (Cuba). The list excludes members who were born abroad, but to U.S. citizens, like, notoriously, Ted Cruz, as well as Tammy Duckworth (who was born in Thailand).
11:49 AM PT (Steve Singiser): VA-10: Apparently, there was one other Harper/NRCC poll on top of that pile of other GOP-friendly polls. But this one, out of GOP freshman Rep. Barbara Comstock's district in NoVa, is different for two reasons. For one thing, the VA-10 poll is of a district that, with a court order pending, will not necessarily retain the same lines after the mandatory remap. For another, the lack of a name-brand Democrat left Harper and the NRCC to pair Comstock with a "generic Democrat". For what it is worth (and it might not be much), Comstock leads Generic Dem 49-36.
12:36 PM PT (Steve Singiser): PA-02: It is entirely possible that I'm only putting this in the digest so I can use the phrase "Commissioner Gordon", but this is actually somewhat notable: Brian Gordon, Lower Merion (PA) Township Commissioner, is leaning towards a bid for Congress, challenging scandal-wracked longtime Democratic Rep. Chaka Fattah. One might wonder, though, if Commissioner Gordon's entry might actually save Fattah—Gordon is the second Dem challenger to announce, following Philly Ward Leader Dan Muroff, who announced his bid last month. Could the anti-Fattah vote split evenly, allowing the embattled incumbent to slide through with a plurality win?
One factor working against Fattah: his trial date would be just after the primary, and would undoubtedly be a gigantic cloud over the campaign for the incumbent, since even if he is exonerated, it will happen well after the primary.
12:44 PM PT (Steve Singiser): CO-Sen: Hmm...looks like Colorado GOPers might have not one, but two, potential candidates that have spent a lot of time in the media conversation in recent years.
On the heels of the recruiting efforts to lure Arapahoe County DA George Brauchler into the primary (he was the lead prosector of the Aurora shooting case—he said he will make a decision in October), now comes word that Larimer County Sheriff Justin Smith is mulling a bid. Smith garnered a ton of publicity in 2013 for being the most vocal public official critical of the gun control efforts of Gov. John Hickenlooper. He would immediately be the darling of the very politically active Colorado gun owners rights' crowd, but he did qualify his interest by saying he might defer to Brauchler.