Are there any moderate House members who can be bribed into switching parties? (user search)
       |           

Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?
June 20, 2024, 03:14:16 PM
News: Election Simulator 2.0 Released. Senate/Gubernatorial maps, proportional electoral votes, and more - Read more

  Talk Elections
  Other Elections - Analysis and Discussion
  Congressional Elections (Moderators: Brittain33, GeorgiaModerate, Gass3268, Virginiá, Gracile)
  Are there any moderate House members who can be bribed into switching parties? (search mode)
Pages: [1]
Author Topic: Are there any moderate House members who can be bribed into switching parties?  (Read 2037 times)
Smash255
Atlas Icon
*****
Posts: 15,464


« on: August 20, 2006, 01:25:16 AM »

When was the last time a House member jumped from R to D; the were a few D to R in the 1980's.

I think Steve Forbes in NY-01 switched from the GOP to Dems in like 1996 or 1998.  He was, then, defeated (I think in the Dem primary) and the seat went to Felix Grucci who held it until 2002 when he lost because he made false accusations that his opponent, now Congressman Steve Bishop, had allowed some type of sexual harrassment cover-up while he was President of some small local college in the district.  The negative attacks backfired so tremendously on Grucci, a fireworks company owner, that his political career went up in a cloud of smoke.

Of course, the most recent switch was by Louisiana's congressman Alexander who won a seat in a very close December Louisiana run-off election as a Democrat in a seat that had been gerrymandered by the Democratic legislature to possibly elect a conservative Democrat.  He was bribed by an Appropriations committee spot and fear of (or belief in?) GOP demogaguery on the "war on terror."

I think that recently defeated MI GOP rep. Schwarz would have been a good candidate for conversion (with the help of a few incentives) to the Democratic party.  But, alas, he's no longer in Congress.  Perhaps Dems could convince Iowas rep. Leach to switch sides.

I don't see any Dems going to the GOP.  After all, why switch parties after all those years in a marginalized minority party when your party is in power or has more seats than its had in a long time?  Neither do I think there's really much potential for any switcheroos from GOP to Dem unless the Dems already have more than 218 seats, at which point there might be a few opportunistic bandwagoners.

Got the names mixed up a bit.

The former Congressman was Mike Forbes.  He switched to the Democrats in 1999, and lost in the Democratic Primary in 2000 to regina Seltzer, by a mere 35 votes.  He remained on the ballot on the Working Famlies line, grucci won by a solid margin.

In 2002 Grucci ran against Tim bishop and lost.  Grucci faulted Bishop for more rapes occuring at SouthHampton College during Bishop's tenure their.  A highly misleading and very dirty slam which backfired.  the amount of rapes ddid increase slightly, but the % actually dropped quite a bit, the enrollment during Bishp's tenure there went way up.  Rather nasty and insane accusations cost Grucci the election, and now Bishop seems to have a lock on the seat for awhile.
Logged
Smash255
Atlas Icon
*****
Posts: 15,464


« Reply #1 on: August 20, 2006, 04:24:39 PM »

When was the last time a House member jumped from R to D; the were a few D to R in the 1980's.

I think Steve Forbes in NY-01 switched from the GOP to Dems in like 1996 or 1998.  He was, then, defeated (I think in the Dem primary) and the seat went to Felix Grucci who held it until 2002 when he lost because he made false accusations that his opponent, now Congressman Steve Bishop, had allowed some type of sexual harrassment cover-up while he was President of some small local college in the district.  The negative attacks backfired so tremendously on Grucci, a fireworks company owner, that his political career went up in a cloud of smoke.

Of course, the most recent switch was by Louisiana's congressman Alexander who won a seat in a very close December Louisiana run-off election as a Democrat in a seat that had been gerrymandered by the Democratic legislature to possibly elect a conservative Democrat.  He was bribed by an Appropriations committee spot and fear of (or belief in?) GOP demogaguery on the "war on terror."

I think that recently defeated MI GOP rep. Schwarz would have been a good candidate for conversion (with the help of a few incentives) to the Democratic party.  But, alas, he's no longer in Congress.  Perhaps Dems could convince Iowas rep. Leach to switch sides.

I don't see any Dems going to the GOP.  After all, why switch parties after all those years in a marginalized minority party when your party is in power or has more seats than its had in a long time?  Neither do I think there's really much potential for any switcheroos from GOP to Dem unless the Dems already have more than 218 seats, at which point there might be a few opportunistic bandwagoners.

Got the names mixed up a bit.

The former Congressman was Mike Forbes.  He switched to the Democrats in 1999, and lost in the Democratic Primary in 2000 to regina Seltzer, by a mere 35 votes.  He remained on the ballot on the Working Famlies line, grucci won by a solid margin.

In 2002 Grucci ran against Tim bishop and lost.  Grucci faulted Bishop for more rapes occuring at SouthHampton College during Bishop's tenure their.  A highly misleading and very dirty slam which backfired.  the amount of rapes ddid increase slightly, but the % actually dropped quite a bit, the enrollment during Bishp's tenure there went way up.  Rather nasty and insane accusations cost Grucci the election, and now Bishop seems to have a lock on the seat for awhile.

Well, I was going off memory and I've never even been to NY so  cut me some slack! :-P

Ha ha its ok.  I was actually in NY-01 during the 2000 & 2002 election (was attending Stony Brook University, dormed on campus & was registered there.  Voted for Seltzer in her loss in 2000 & voted for Bishop's victory in 2002.
Logged
Pages: [1]  
Jump to:  


Login with username, password and session length

Terms of Service - DMCA Agent and Policy - Privacy Policy and Cookies

Powered by SMF 1.1.21 | SMF © 2015, Simple Machines

Page created in 0.023 seconds with 12 queries.