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Home arrow Campaign 2008 arrow Special-election outcomes are only the beginning in Ill., Ind. districts
Campaign 2008 PDF Print E-mail
Special-election outcomes are only the beginning in Ill., Ind. districts
Posted: 03/10/08 05:44 PM [ET]

Democrats are trumpeting Bill Foster’s win in former House Speaker Dennis Hastert’s (R-Ill.) district as a symbolic victory for the party, but neither Foster nor the winner of Tuesday’s special election in Indiana should get too comfortable in Washington.

GOP candidate Jim Oberweis, who lost to Foster, views the March 8 special election as a warm-up round, with the ultimate contest set for November. The situation is similar in Indiana, where the Democrats will hold a big primary just two months after the special election.

The winner’s lot appears particularly perilous in the district of the late Rep. Julia Carson (D-Ind.). Indianapolis City-County Councilman Andre Carson (D), who is Carson’s grandson and a heavy favorite Tuesday, would face a crowded primary just 56 days later, while Republican state Rep. Jon Elrod would face an undoubtedly tough reelection battle in a heavily Democratic district.

“Whoever wins the (special) will be very proud and likely to call themselves ‘congressman’ for the next few weeks, but that’s a pretty short-term title,” said former Indiana Health Commissioner Woody Myers, one of three big-name Democrats waiting to challenge Carson.

In Oberweis’s case, the race is being filed away with all the other GOP-leaning seats the party is trying to win back or retain in November. The National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC) spent $1.3 million in independent expenditures on the special election, but in November the race will be competing for attention with dozens of GOP-held open seats and potentially more attractive takeover opportunities.

GOPers have privately expressed dismay with Oberweis’s candidacy, but they are stuck with him. He was voted their November nominee at the same time he was given the special election nod in February.

He fell 53-47 in the special election on Saturday in a district that never gave Hastert less than 60 percent of the vote. Hastert supported Oberweis from the outset.

Oberweis spokesman Bill Pascoe said the race is now simply an eight-month contest against an incumbent.

Pascoe said the campaign needs to examine the turnout before deciding how to proceed. If Republicans turned out, he said, it was a message problem. If they didn’t, he said, it was an organizational problem getting voters to the polls.

“That’s the first thing we’ve got to find out — where were we weak?” Pascoe said. “My suspicion is that we didn’t turn out the vote.”

The party is hopeful that eight months of voting will make Foster less attractive, but Oberweis, who has spent millions of his wealth in four consecutive elections, might be on his own this time.

“His negatives were through the roof by the end of the campaign, and much of the baggage that came along with his previous statewide runs came back to haunt him,” said a GOP aide. “He will have to spend some time repairing his image, while at the same time increasing Foster’s negatives. It’s not an easy task.”

The GOP is facing a disaster scenario in Illinois overall, with the vital X-factor in the race being whether Illinois Sen. Barack Obama becomes the Democratic presidential nominee.

One Illinois GOP source acknowledged such a development could cost an already staggering state party several more House seats, including retiring Rep. Jerry Weller’s (R-Ill.), Rep. Mark Kirk’s (R-Ill.), Rep. Peter Roskam’s (R-Ill.), and maybe more. Many GOP-held seats in Illinois lean Republican but, as with Hastert’s, not overwhelmingly.

Foster, a scientist, was assured beyond any doubt Monday that he would be his party’s nominee in November, as carpenter John Laesch, the 2006 Democratic nominee, announced he was dropping his challenge to the result in the general election primary.


 
 
 
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