Saturday, August 19, 2006

Kansas Governor Race

Race of the Day

August 19, 2006
80 Days Until Election Day

Kansas Governor

Status: Democrat Incumbent
2004 Presidential Result: Red State (Midwest)

Outlook: Likely Democrat

Kansas is certainly one of the more strongly Republican states in America but in 2002, Democrat Kathleen Sebelius was able to capitalize on her image as a likeable, non-ideological figure in addition to Republican divisions among moderates and conservatives in the state Republican party, to win election as Governor.

This year, Sebelius seeks reelection as a heavy favorite. Her numbers have been fairly high throughout her first term, and like she did in 2002, she has once again selected somebody from the Republican Party to be her candidate for Lt. Governor on the Democrat ticket. In this case, it is the man who was the state Republican Chairman in 2002, and had been very critical of Sebelius at that time.

Her Republican opponent is State Senator Jim Barnett, who is also a physician. Barnett comes from the conservative wing of the Kansas GOP, but is not viewed as overly divisive. Polling had shown him running somewhat better against Sebelius than other Republicans seeking the nomination and he came out on top in a crowded primary. There has been some talk that former Wichita Mayor Bob Knight, a more moderate Republican who lost in the 2002 primary for Governor, was prepared to jump into the race as an Independent, but there does not seem to be much evidence to back that up. Needless, to say, the presence of another Republican on the ballot would split the vote and help Sebelius win by a larger margin.

Recent polls have all had Sebelius running at just about the 50 percent mark, which indicates that a Democrat can never truly be safe in a conservative state like Kansas. Before the primary, a poll had even shown Barnett within striking distance, but since then, Sebelius has regained a healthy double-digit advantage over her Republican opponent.

Barnett would probably stand a decent chance of keeping the often fractious coalition of Kansas Republicans somewhat together, but it would take something very unexpected in order for him to get just about all the undecided voters in his column at Election Day to give him a chance to win.

So, it certainly appears that Sebelius, another one of the several popular moderate Governors from both parties who govern states that are very favorably disposed to the other party, is in good shape to win another four years. If her margin is big enough, and if the 2008 Presidential nominee were to be male, the daughter of a former Ohio Governor may receive a lot of mention for a spot on the national Democrat ticket.


Barnett campaign link:

http://www.barnettforgovernor.com/

2006 Governor races predicted thus far: 3 D, 11 R
Post-election total of Governors predicted thus far: 11 D, 17 R

4 Comments:

At 2:22 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Corey, good analysis. I know that you are a Republican, but do you have any concern that the ideological divisions in the KS GOP are going to cause problems in other statewide races in 2006? Do you anticipate that the GOP will resolve their ideological differences and resume their one-party dominance at the state level after 2010? Alternatively, is there a chance that there will be a political realignment in KS that results in a competitive two-party system in the state?

 
At 4:02 PM, Blogger Corey said...

Thanks for the comment.

I guess the only race in Kansas that could be competitive is the Attorney General one where a moderate Republican became a Democrat in order to challenge the conservative incumbent. We will have to see what happens there, but I would tend to give an edge to Phill Kline since he is the incumbent.

And of course, the divisions in the party have really hurt the chances of Republicans being able to knock off Dennis Moore in Congress. He has beaten both moderates and Republicans. He will always have a tough race, but is probably pretty entrenched now.

As for 2010 when Sebelius is term limited, maybe the Republicans will have a good shot of winning the office back. Who do the Democrats really have on their bench? If Dennis Moore ran for Governor, that would really put his seat at risk.

Most likely in 2010, somebody like Rep. Jim Moran will run, or maybe Sam Brownback, once he gets the Presidential ambition thing out of his system.

 
At 10:40 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I think you mean Jerry Moran. Jim Moran is a Democratic congressman from Virginia.

And by "moderates and Republicans" you mean moderates and conservatives, right? (Or are only strong conservatives qualified to be Republicans?)

 
At 11:19 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Thanks for being my proofreader.

I was in a hurry when I left those comments yesterday.

 

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