Todays Super Tuesday: Litmus Test for Voter Anger Nationwide

By Sean J. Miller width=254Lawmakers may have little time for anything but election news Tuesday.  Its the new Super Tuesday with races likely to tell incumbents whether voters are heading toward November thirsty for congressional blood.  It is widely agreed that voters are angry with Washington.   Now after the crushing ouster this month of two incumbents one Democrat and one Republican two more senators will learn their fates. Both parties fear a whirlwind of public dissatisfaction building toward the 2010 midterms. Early indications are that voters are in an unforgiving mood. This month three-term incumbent Sen. Bob Bennett (R-Utah) and Rep. Alan Mollohan (D-W.Va.) a 14-term veteran lost their parties nominations to upstart challengers and they may just be the first casualties of May. Sens. Blanche Lincoln (D-Ark.) who chairs the Agriculture Committee and Arlen Specter (D-Pa.) a five-term incumbent could also lose their jobs as a result of width=82Tuesdays vote. In Kentucky the GOP Senate primary tests the influence of the party establishment. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) is backing Trey Grayson against the Tea Party-supported Rand Paul. Meanwhile Pennsylvania will also host the only direct clash between the parties. Observers expect Tuesdays hard-fought special election to fill the late Rep. John Murthas (D-Pa.) seat to foreshadow the outcome of the midterm elections. Democratic strategists are confident that if they hold the district where President Barack Obama is widely disliked theyll be able to hang on to their majority in November. Polls show the race is a toss-up. Prestige is also on the line. Speaker Nancy Pelosi (Calif.) hosted a Washington fundraiser in April for Pennsylvania House candidate Mark Critz (D) a favor she did not extend to either Democrat competing in the Hawaii special election which concludes on Saturday. House Minority Leader John Boehner (R-Ohio) also invested himself in the race hosting a Washington fundraiser for the Republican candidate Tim Burns. Sen. Scott Brown (R-Mass.) also campaigned for Burns while Vice President Joe Biden helped Critz raise money in Pittsburgh last month. Both House campaign committees have invested heavily in the special-election race. The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee spent close to $1 million in the 12th district a figure closely matched by the National Republican Congressional Committee. Congressional leaders are also anxiously watching whether Lincoln makes it through her primary with Lt. Gov. Bill Halter (D). Lincoln received the chairmanship of the Agriculture Committee late last year after Sen. Tom Harkin (D-Iowa) moved to the helm of the Senate Health Education Labor & Pensions Committee following the death of Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.). The move was expected to help her with her reelection bid; agriculture is a $15 billion industry in the Natural State making up roughly 20 percent of its economy. But voters are in no mood to be placated by a members ability to bring in federal dollars. Bennett made a similar pitch in Utah before going down to defeat at his partys convention in Salt Lake City May 8. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (Nev.) who has delivered millions in federal spending to Nevada will surely be hanging on the outcome of Lincolns race. Hes width=226expected to face a tough campaign against likely GOP nominee Sue Lowden. Lincoln or Halter need to break 50 percent of the vote to clinch the nomination; otherwise they will face each other in a June 22 runoff. Its not possible for either to pivot and run as an Independent if they lose according to elections officials. Neither Specter nor Sestak would have the Independent option either according to Pennsylvania officials. The White House political operation could face criticism after Tuesdays vote. It failed to lure Rep. Joe Sestak (D-Pa.) out of the Pennsylvania Democratic primary after Specter switched parties despite reportedly offering him a job in exchange. And in Arkansas it wasnt able to convince its union allies to back away from supporting Halters challenge to Lincoln. White House press secretary Robert Gibbs declined to say what the results might mean for the Obama administration before voters go to the polls. But Gibbs did acknowledge the anti-incumbent environment pointing to Bennetts recent loss and other election results. Obviously I dont think its breaking news to say that this has been based on the election results that we do know its been a tough year for incumbents" Gibbs said. Everyone noticed that a senator from Utah reelected just six years ago with 70 percent of the vote got a quarter of the convention vote to be re-nominated." Gibbs said Obama has not been following the campaigns closely but he said the president has done quite a bit" for Specter and Lincoln even though Obama has not hit the trail for either in recent weeks. I think everyone knows that weve supported who we support in those two races" Gibbs said. Again we have supported incumbent Democratic senators. And weve done a lot on behalf of each campaign. Again there are races all over the country that well have a chance to look at from the Democratic and the Republican side as to what it means." It seems telling that Obama chose to avoid making a last-ditch weekend trip to Pennsylvania in support of Specter as he did for New Jersey Gov. Jon Corzine last November and Massachusetts Senate nominee Martha Coakley (D) in January. (They both lost their races.) Instead Obama played golf on Saturday and basketball on Sunday according to pool reports. As voters head to the polls Tuesday hell travel to Ohio for another Main Street tour" event.
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