How is the tea party doing in Senate races?
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If the 2012 elections are all about outsiders pounding on the door of the political establishment 鈥 mainly in the form of the tea party insurgency 鈥 it鈥檚 worth taking a look at how their most prominent figures are doing the last few days before we鈥檝e all voted and can concentrate on the World Series. (You heard it here: Giants in seven.)
The tea-fueled GOP is all but certain to take control of the US House of Representatives. So we鈥檒l stick with the Senate, where the D鈥檚 have more than a fighting chance of hanging on to their majority.
Sharron Angle in Nevada
Expert poll watcher Nate Silver, who blogs at FiveThirtyEight.com for The New York Times, says Sharron Angle 鈥渉as been improving her position in our forecast in recent days, and for the first time since the spring has better than a three-in-four chance to win her race against Harry Reid.鈥
A TIME/CNN/Opinion Research survey this week has Ms. Angle up four points over Senate Majority Leader Reid.
Using a complicated online formula, prognosticators at the Daily Beast鈥檚 鈥淓lection Oracle鈥 give Angle a 60 percent chance of winning. More on this methodology .
But allegations of early voting fraud and voter intimidation in Nevada may be setting the scene for a legal battle after next Tuesday. Lawyers from both parties are getting ready for a fight that could delay election results. Did someone say 鈥渉anging chads?鈥
Joe Miller in Alaska
Joe Miller鈥檚 main threat comes not from Democratic candidate Scott McAdams but from incumbent Republican and write-in candidate Sen. Lisa Murkowski. And from his self-made image problems, like finally admitting under court order this week that he 鈥渓ied about what I was doing鈥 (as he wrote in a 2008 e-mail) in inappropriately using government computers when he worked as a part-time lawyer in the Fairbanks North Star Borough.
CNN finds Mr. Miller and Senator Murkowski essentially tied among likely voters with Democrat Mr. McAdams lagging behind. But a new poll of 500 likely voters paid for by a labor union and released Thursday has Miller running third at 23 percent with 29 percent for McAdams and 34 percent for "write in candidate" 鈥 presumably Murkowski.
Murkowski got a boost this week when the Alaska Supreme Court ruled that voters can see a list of write-in candidates when they go to the poll. At least that鈥檒l help people remember how to spell 鈥淢urkowski.鈥
"Murkowski has run a smart campaign and dedicated a lot of resources to educating voters about how to vote for her," a senior GOP strategist told Washington Post political blogger Chris Cillizza. "Next to a hapless McAdams and disastrous Joe Miller, she has a decent shot to make history.鈥
Rand Paul in Kentucky
The TIME/CNN/Opinion Research poll has Rand Paul ahead of Democrat Jack Conway, the state's attorney general, by a comfortable 7 percentage points (50 to 43) 鈥 including a whopping 63 to 26 among independent voters.
A Rasmussen Reports poll for Fox News gives Mr. Paul that same 7 point edge. The Daily Beast鈥檚 鈥淓lection Oracle鈥 gives Paul an 80 percent chance of winning next week.
But Paul鈥檚 message got 鈥渟tomped on鈥 this week when a couple of his male supporters wrestled to the ground a female activist from the liberal group MoveOn.org. A photo of one the pro-Paul guys pressing his foot to her head ricocheted around the media.
Kentucky seems to be tea party country. Seventy-two percent of those polled say they are either "dissatisfied" or "angry" about the way the federal government is working. Still, questions remain about Paul, whose father 鈥 US Rep. Ron Paul (R) of Texas 鈥 is described in a long Atlantic magazine profile as 鈥渢he tea party鈥檚 brain.鈥
In the Rasmussen survey, 42 percent said they are "concerned" that Paul is "too extreme," and just 43 percent said he "shared their values."
Christine O鈥橠onnell in Delaware
The Senate candidate, who bested the GOP establishment鈥檚 US Rep. Mike Castle in a rancorous primary, is far behind Democrat Chris Coons 鈥 21 percentage points (57 to 36) in a survey by her alma mater, Fairleigh Dickinson University.
Christine O鈥橠onnell is best known for her unusual background and pronouncements that sounded just plain weird. Her 鈥淚 am not a witch鈥 TV spot will be studied by political science undergrads for years.
Ms. O鈥橠onnell鈥檚 problem also may be one of geography. Delaware is a politically moderate state, and a CNN/Public Opinion Research poll earlier this month finds Coons with a 68-22 percent advantage among moderates.
鈥淪he鈥檚 running in absolutely the wrong place,鈥 Fairleigh Dickinson political science professor and survey analyst Dan Cassino told the News Journal newspaper in Delaware. 鈥淚f she were in Kentucky or Alaska, she鈥檇 be winning.鈥欌
In Delaware, the Daily Beast鈥檚 Election Oracle says, O鈥橠onnell has only a 10 percent chance of winning.
Marco Rubio in Florida
Marco Rubio is still ahead, but his margin is slipping in Florida鈥檚 three-way race, according to a Quinnipiac University poll released Thursday.
Mr. Rubio has 42 to 35 percent for Gov. Charlie Crist, who鈥檚 running as an independent. Democrat Kendrick Meek trails at 15 percent. Two weeks ago, Rubio led Governor Crist by nearly twice that margin (44 to 30 percent) in the Quinnipiac poll.
A TCPalm.com/Zogby poll of likely voters has essentially the same result and trend.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 think you can put a fork into it quite yet,鈥 University of Florida political science professor Daniel Smith told TCPalm.com. 鈥Mark Rubio鈥檚 lead is now outside the margin of error, but the fact of the matter is we don鈥檛 know how the undecided will break. They鈥檙e not often given the opportunity to vote for a third party candidate as we have in Charlie Crist.鈥
Still, Mr. Silver鈥檚 model has Rubio winning 43.6 percent of the vote next Tuesday, compared to 31.7 for Crist and 23.7 for Mr. Meek.
In what may be a desperation move prompted by the strength of the tea party movement, Crist has a new TV spot urging Floridians to vote for him as the way to stop 鈥渆xtremism 鈥 the road Sarah Palin, the tea party, and Marco Rubio want to take us down.鈥
Funny, that. Back in 2008, loyal Republican Crist was saying Ms. Palin as John McCain鈥檚 running mate would do a 鈥済reat job鈥 if she had to step in as president.