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:
* SurveyUSA has published its latest 50-state poll, this time gauging support for each member of the Senate. Five of the top seven senators with the highest approval ratings are Dems, though Maine’s Olympia Snowe (R) and Susan Collins (R) lead the pack with approval ratings of 75% and 74%, respectively. The poll is probably most disappointing for Sen. Conrad Burns (R-Mont.), whose 46% disapproval rating is the highest of any incumbent seeking re-election next year.
* A new Quinnipiac poll shows New York’s big 2006 races continuing to shift away from the GOP. In the Senate race, Hillary Clinton now leads Jeanine Pirro by more than a 2-to-1 margin, ahead 62% to 30%. If Pirro quits to run for State Attorney General, she still trails the Dems in the race. The poll shows Andrew Cuomo ahead of Pirro in a hypothetical race, 49% to 32%, while Mark Green leads Pirro 43% to 35%. For what it’s worth, the New York Post reported today that Pirro will switch to the other race early in the new year.
* As for New York’s gubernatorial race, the same Quinnipiac poll shows State Attorney General Eliot Spitzer (D) looking very strong with a 68% approval rating and big leads over all of his likely GOP rivals. The Republican who does the best in a hypothetical match-up, Tom Golisano, still trails by 38 points, 60% to 22%. As for the GOP primary, Golisano is ahead with 36%, followed by 9% for John Faso, though “undecided” is the clear winning with 42%.
* In Texas, Comptroller Carole Keeton Strayhorn (R) is still vowing to take on Gov. Rick Perry (R) next year, but apparently, she’s at least considering the possibility of doing so as an independent. While Strayhorn insisted she is “a Republican candidate for governor in 2006,” she would neither confirm nor deny her interest in running as an independent or in another party. Speculation picked up recently when someone conducted a poll asking about a scenario in which Strayhorn might run as an independent. Strayhorn’s campaign has refused to comment on whether it was behind the survey.
* For nearly a decade, Dems have targeted Rep. Anne Northup (R-Ky.) as a vulnerable incumbent in a swing Louisville-based district, but so far the party’s come up short every time. As of this week, however, Northup may face a Marine. Attorney and retired Marine Lt. Col. Andrew Horne (D) is apparently poised to enter the House race after receiving encouragement from his friend and fellow vet Paul Hackett. Horne, who fought in both Iraq wars, was in DC this week to talk with party leaders about the race and has begun interviewing consultants.