Today’s installment of campaign-related news items that wouldn’t generate a post of their own, but may be of interest to political observers:
* It’s Election Day for several parts of the country, and voters will decide more than just Virginia’s and New Jersey’s gubernatorial races, and the New York City mayoral fight. Voters will also be electing mayors today including in Detroit, Boston, Houston, Cleveland, Minneapolis, St. Paul, San Diego, and Pittsburgh, while Bloomberg has a helpful list of the 39 statewide ballot measures to be decided today, including ones in California and Ohio that may have national implications.
* In a rare recruiting victory for Illinois Republicans, Illinois Treasurer Judy Baar Topinka (R) signaled Monday that she will run for governor next year against incumbent Gov. Rod Blagojevich (D). Topinka, who stopped short of a formal announcement, will be the fifth GOP candidate to enter the race, and her Republican rivals are already fighting for position. Some GOP candidates noted yesterday that that Topinka’s pro-choice positions make her too liberal; she has too many ties to former Gov. George Ryan (who is now on trial for corruption); and her Treasurer’s office was “hobbled” by a subpoena seeking payroll records as part of a broader government probe into the misuse of state resources for political work.
* In Ohio, a poll conducted by the Columbus Dispatch shows Sen. Mike DeWine (R-Ohio) struggling significantly in advance of next year’s re-election fight. In a hypothetical match-up against his Dem rivals, DeWine trails Rep. Sherrod Brown by four points (35% to 31%) and is only slightly ahead of Paul Hackett (32% to 30%).
* Rep. Bernie Sanders (I) is looking very strong in advance of next year’s open Senate race. A Research 2000 poll conducted for WCAX had Sanders leading businessman Richard Tarrant (R), the most likely GOP candidate, 64% to 16%.
* Speaking of Vermont, with Sanders moving up to the Senate, the state’s lone House seat is up for grabs. Republicans are rallying behind Maj. Gen. Martha Rainville, adjutant general of the Vermont National Guard, while Dems are backing State Senate President Peter Welch (D). True to form, Vermont’s further-left party, the Progressives, seem anxious to help elect a Republican by running State Rep. David Zuckerman to split the left. Zuckerman got a boost recently when Jerry Greenfield, co-founder of Ben & Jerry’s ice cream, signed on as the exploratory committee’s treasurer.
* The Wall Street Journal and Zogby Interactive have just published their monthly polling data for all of the nation’s upcoming gubernatorial and Senate campaigns. As with previous months, the WSJ is now making the data available to everyone, including non-subscribers.