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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
13.05.2008
Mississippi Flirts With the Blue

Hard as it was to pass up the sure-to-be-strange Hillary victory celebration tonight in scenic Charleston, WV, the more interesting race today is down in Mississippi, where Democrat Travis Childers might just pick up one of the reddest red congressional seats in the Deep South. As always, the race has its own quirks that resist its transformation into some grand narrative template -- the Republican candidate has to be one of the least good-looking political hopefuls out there, for one thing. Still, it remains stunning that it's even neck-and-neck, and the outcome will help clarify two things:

1. How completely, utterly, entirely, totally, dead-out screwed House Republicans are for November. If the NRCC dumps $1.3+ million, a good fifth of its total money, into a Deep South safe seat and sends Dick Cheney down to campaign and has both W. and Laura Bush record a get-out-the-vote robocall and loses the seat anyway, the debris cloud from John Boehner's head exploding will be visible from space; and

2. How an association with Obama will play for conservative Democrats in white districts. Childers's opponents have been hyping his Obama ties hard:

Mr. Childers’s campaign said his negative rating among voters has risen acutely, internal polls show a sharp narrowing in the contest, and interviews with voters indicated the supposed Childers-Obama link could influence votes.

“It probably would,” said Bill Chism, a refrigeration mechanic. Asked to elaborate, he ducked his head and said, “I’d rather not say,” nodding to a black customer approaching his wife’s flea market stall in Tupelo on Sunday.

--Eve Fairbanks

Posted: Tuesday, May 13, 2008 6:27 PM with 3 comment(s)

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liberal reformer said:

This indicates the parlous state of the Republican party that this seat might go Democratic. The Democrats should pick up seats in  Congress, too. But I still think there could be a tight race between McCain and Obama, depending on how the campaign goes.

May 13, 2008 8:17 PM

anonevent said:

The polls are showing the people who wouldn't have voted for him anyway, they now have an excuse.  It would have been tight period.

The flip side is the Democratic Party needs to grow a spine.  If Obama is going to be the nominee they all need to stand up and say "We are proud to be the party of the first African American presidential candidate."  If it is Clinton, they need to be saying the same thing about a woman.  None of this running away.  All they will do by running away is give the Republicans the ability to imply that the Democrats really didn't want him (or her), so why would the American people.

May 13, 2008 9:18 PM

The Plank said:

In the special election in Mississippi's first congressional district that Eve mentioned , it looks

May 13, 2008 10:20 PM

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