What Bill Hobbs said. Not that I’d expect the Tennessean to know any better…
I guess this means I won’t be getting a job at Virginia. Ah well, I’ll live.
What Bill Hobbs said. Not that I’d expect the Tennessean to know any better…
I guess this means I won’t be getting a job at Virginia. Ah well, I’ll live.
I’ve already insulted Larry Sabato once in this blog, so why not do it again? Today he handicaps the Mississippi governor’s race for the Jackson Clarion-Ledger; let’s figure out what Larry thinks will happen:
... Larry Sabato, a political scientist at the University of Virginia, said he expects Bush to swing through all three Southern states as he builds a coalition for his re-election bid next year.
Sabato said he expects Bush to rally support for Barbour.
Ok, so Bush is going to help Barbour, right?
But if the president actively campaigns for Barbour, it could also help energize the opposition, [Sabato] said. ... “I can also see Bush campaigning for Barbour generating a large black turnout for Musgrove because of the black community’s dislike of Bush,” Sabato said.
Maybe not. But Sabato doesn’t think this will matter much:
Although the race for governor has barely made it out of the gate, Sabato gives Barbour the edge because of Mississippi voters’ natural inclination to vote Republican and the state budget troubles haunting Musgrove.
Good points all. But…
Still, he doesn’t discount Musgrove. “He’s the incumbent governor. He worked hard to get there, and he’ll work hard to keep it,” Sabato said.
Ok. So how is Barbour’s campaign going to affect down-ticket races (like mine)?
Both [University of South Mississippi political scientist Joseph] Parker and Sabato said Mississippi voters have idiosyncrasies that make it difficult to say with certainty that statewide Republican candidates could ride Bush’s coattails.
Bush carried the state in the 2000 presidential election, but most of the statewide elected officials in Mississippi are Democrats.
So maybe Mississippi voters have split-level partisanship… but maybe they don’t:
“That’s left over from the old days,” Sabato said. “Most Southern states had that kind of schizophrenic voter behavior. They would vote Republican for president because Democrats were liberal. Democratic nominees on the state level were more moderate. That (behavior) is changing over time.”
Front page in the Clarion-Ledger. Absolutely no story. Another article for Sabato’s clippings file… but completely unenlightening otherwise.