Democrats Wondering Whether It's 2002 All Over Again in NJ
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  Democrats Wondering Whether It's 2002 All Over Again in NJ
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Question: If, if being the key word, Bob Menendez is replaced on the ballot, who will replace him?
#1
Rep. Frank Pallone
#2
Rep. Steve Rothman
#3
Rep. Bob Andrews
#4
St. Sen. Dick Codey
#5
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Author Topic: Democrats Wondering Whether It's 2002 All Over Again in NJ  (Read 3900 times)
DownWithTheLeft
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« on: September 09, 2006, 08:01:51 AM »

http://www.bergenrecord.com/page.php?qstr=eXJpcnk3ZjcxN2Y3dnFlZUVFeXkyJmZnYmVsN2Y3dnFlZUVFeXk2OTg5OTMz

News of subpoenas at a non-profit group tied to U.S. Sen. Bob Menendez set Democratic insiders buzzing Friday about whether to repeat the "2002 switcheroo" that replaced a wounded candidate with a winner in the final weeks of the campaign.

  
"It's not at the point where party leaders are saying to Bob, 'You gotta get out,' but it could get that way fast," one insider said by phone from a party conference in Atlantic City where Menendez called the subpoenas politically motivated.

"It's all the buzz down here: Are we going to go back to the switcheroo? Can we?" he said.

But the answer, several Democrats said, appears to be "no."

The same factor that made Menendez the odds-on favorite to replace Governor Corzine in January -- a huge campaign bankroll that totaled $7.4 million on June 30 -- could be what keeps him in the race to the end.

"Say the party bosses sat down at a back room at Bally's and decided they needed to get someone else. Who [are] you going to get to do it? Where are they going to raise the money?" said one Washington Democrat.

When Sen. Bob Torricelli ended his reelection campaign on Sept. 30, 2002, Democrats got the state Supreme Court's approval for a last-minute replacement by recently retired Sen. Frank Lautenberg.

Lautenberg had won three statewide elections and was well known to Washington interest groups willing to work for him and contribute money. He also opened his own checkbook and lent his campaign $1.5 million.

One potential replacement for Menendez would be state Senate President Richard Codey, D-Essex, whose political popularity surged while serving as acting governor in 2005. But Codey has never run statewide, and would have to start fund raising from scratch because of the differences in state and federal contribution laws.

The three Democrats in the House with Senate aspirations, Rob Andrews of Haddon Heights, Frank Pallone of Long Branch and Steve Rothman of Fair Lawn, have about $2 million apiece in their campaign accounts.

But with Democrats expecting to recapture the House this year, it's questionable whether any of them would want to give up the chance of serving in the majority for a long-shot chance of a Senate seat.

Finally, the candidate on the other side of the ballot is different in 2006.

"You're not running against [2002 Republican Senate nominee] Doug Forrester, who was an empty suit with money," the Washington insider said. "You're running against a Kean. I think Menendez is just going to stick it out and go into nuclear mode" to try to convince voters that both he and opponent Tom Kean Jr. are tarnished so voters base their choice on Washington issues rather than personalities.

Officially, Democrats offered support for Menendez on Friday. The chairman of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, Sen. Chuck Schumer of New York, called Menendez an "outstanding senator" and assailed Kean for using the "GOP attack machine" to smear him.

But in background conversations, Democrats said they did not know whether Menendez would find himself in the same situation as Torricelli, unable to talk about issues such as Iraq and education and health care and the minimum wage because the press only wants to ask questions about possible corruption.

An expectation is widespread that federal indictments are imminent for at least one and possibly more prominent Democrats. The charges are not connected to Menendez, but could still put the party on the defensive.

Finally, former Gov. James E. McGreevey's tell-all book is also due out this month, and coverage of his discussions of internal party politics could derail any Menendez effort to focus attention elsewhere.

Republicans in the state Senate sent a letter to Codey on Friday urging him to schedule a vote on a bill that would make it impossible to replace a candidate closer to election day than 48 days.

"We believe that a hearing and a vote on this measure is vitally important to preserve the integrity of the electoral process," Sens. Leonard Lance, R-Hunterdon, and Anthony Bucco, R-Morris, wrote to Codey.


So, could it be 2002 all over again?  Will Dems pull off another switch-a-roo?  My bet is they will not, but it is certainly possible.

I hope it is Steve Rothman, because this could set up an open seat in my district and maybe even give Vince Micco the chance to run unopposed.

If I had to guess I'd say Codey, and if he passes Bob Andrews.

Only Codey would be considered the favorite against Kean, the other would not have the baggage of Menendez, but I'm sure the GOP could find something.  This also do not have the money Menendez has, so I don't know if they could compete.  If the ballot includes Tom Kean and anyone but Dick Codey on Election Day, Tom Kean Jr. will be the next senator from NJ.
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Adlai Stevenson
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« Reply #1 on: September 09, 2006, 10:11:04 AM »

If this did happen I think either Rep. Andrews or Codey would be a good idea.
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DownWithTheLeft
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« Reply #2 on: September 09, 2006, 10:43:48 AM »

Downwithdaleft, with easy passing day, i am getting closer to support kean....

I think that is the feeling of the majority of Menendez supporters Smiley

I know I called Menendez to be caught up in a cloud of corruption in one of my first posts, anyone call for him to go down big before me?
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TomC
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« Reply #3 on: September 09, 2006, 10:45:15 AM »

I like Andrews, but I have no idea who's likely to be a replacement.
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DownWithTheLeft
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« Reply #4 on: September 09, 2006, 11:18:16 AM »

Anyone think this is likely?
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Moooooo
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« Reply #5 on: September 09, 2006, 11:20:30 AM »

Codey's wife already made it clear, he stays in the state senate.
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TeePee4Prez
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« Reply #6 on: September 09, 2006, 11:25:09 AM »

Rep. Rob Andrews.  South Jersey needs more influence.
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DownWithTheLeft
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« Reply #7 on: September 09, 2006, 11:25:20 AM »

Codey's wife already made it clear, he stays in the state senate.

Yeah, but that's so the Dem machine doesn't put them at the bottom of the Hudson Smiley
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DownWithTheLeft
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« Reply #8 on: September 09, 2006, 11:46:11 AM »

Good to see most aren't as unlogically and bias as Conan and Smash, there still saying Menendez is the favorite.
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Conan
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« Reply #9 on: September 09, 2006, 12:23:01 PM »

http://www.bergenrecord.com/page.php?qstr=eXJpcnk3ZjcxN2Y3dnFlZUVFeXkyJmZnYmVsN2Y3dnFlZUVFeXk2OTg5OTMz

News of subpoenas at a non-profit group tied to U.S. Sen. Bob Menendez set Democratic insiders buzzing Friday about whether to repeat the "2002 switcheroo" that replaced a wounded candidate with a winner in the final weeks of the campaign.

  
"It's not at the point where party leaders are saying to Bob, 'You gotta get out,' but it could get that way fast," one insider said by phone from a party conference in Atlantic City where Menendez called the subpoenas politically motivated.

"It's all the buzz down here: Are we going to go back to the switcheroo? Can we?" he said.

But the answer, several Democrats said, appears to be "no."

The same factor that made Menendez the odds-on favorite to replace Governor Corzine in January -- a huge campaign bankroll that totaled $7.4 million on June 30 -- could be what keeps him in the race to the end.

"Say the party bosses sat down at a back room at Bally's and decided they needed to get someone else. Who [are] you going to get to do it? Where are they going to raise the money?" said one Washington Democrat.

When Sen. Bob Torricelli ended his reelection campaign on Sept. 30, 2002, Democrats got the state Supreme Court's approval for a last-minute replacement by recently retired Sen. Frank Lautenberg.

Lautenberg had won three statewide elections and was well known to Washington interest groups willing to work for him and contribute money. He also opened his own checkbook and lent his campaign $1.5 million.

One potential replacement for Menendez would be state Senate President Richard Codey, D-Essex, whose political popularity surged while serving as acting governor in 2005. But Codey has never run statewide, and would have to start fund raising from scratch because of the differences in state and federal contribution laws.

The three Democrats in the House with Senate aspirations, Rob Andrews of Haddon Heights, Frank Pallone of Long Branch and Steve Rothman of Fair Lawn, have about $2 million apiece in their campaign accounts.

But with Democrats expecting to recapture the House this year, it's questionable whether any of them would want to give up the chance of serving in the majority for a long-shot chance of a Senate seat.

Finally, the candidate on the other side of the ballot is different in 2006.

"You're not running against [2002 Republican Senate nominee] Doug Forrester, who was an empty suit with money," the Washington insider said. "You're running against a Kean. I think Menendez is just going to stick it out and go into nuclear mode" to try to convince voters that both he and opponent Tom Kean Jr. are tarnished so voters base their choice on Washington issues rather than personalities.

Officially, Democrats offered support for Menendez on Friday. The chairman of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, Sen. Chuck Schumer of New York, called Menendez an "outstanding senator" and assailed Kean for using the "GOP attack machine" to smear him.

But in background conversations, Democrats said they did not know whether Menendez would find himself in the same situation as Torricelli, unable to talk about issues such as Iraq and education and health care and the minimum wage because the press only wants to ask questions about possible corruption.

An expectation is widespread that federal indictments are imminent for at least one and possibly more prominent Democrats. The charges are not connected to Menendez, but could still put the party on the defensive.

Finally, former Gov. James E. McGreevey's tell-all book is also due out this month, and coverage of his discussions of internal party politics could derail any Menendez effort to focus attention elsewhere.

Republicans in the state Senate sent a letter to Codey on Friday urging him to schedule a vote on a bill that would make it impossible to replace a candidate closer to election day than 48 days.

"We believe that a hearing and a vote on this measure is vitally important to preserve the integrity of the electoral process," Sens. Leonard Lance, R-Hunterdon, and Anthony Bucco, R-Morris, wrote to Codey.


So, could it be 2002 all over again?  Will Dems pull off another switch-a-roo?  My bet is they will not, but it is certainly possible.

I hope it is Steve Rothman, because this could set up an open seat in my district and maybe even give Vince Micco the chance to run unopposed.

If I had to guess I'd say Codey, and if he passes Bob Andrews.

Only Codey would be considered the favorite against Kean, the other would not have the baggage of Menendez, but I'm sure the GOP could find something.  This also do not have the money Menendez has, so I don't know if they could compete.  If the ballot includes Tom Kean and anyone but Dick Codey on Election Day, Tom Kean Jr. will be the next senator from NJ.

It says all the others except Codey have around 2 million dollars. They could compete with that because theyd be tied with Kean. Kean only has a measly 2 million dollars. None of this news is new.
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DownWithTheLeft
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« Reply #10 on: September 09, 2006, 12:24:19 PM »

None is new?

I never heard Dem party bosses saying maybe it is time Menendez steps aside.  Come on Conan, even you must admit that at least at this point Kean is the favorite.
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Keystone Phil
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« Reply #11 on: September 09, 2006, 12:36:13 PM »

It doesn't matter who is picked. If they do this again, they will lose. I understand that it is NJ and almost anything goes there but it would be very different this time.
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Conan
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« Reply #12 on: September 09, 2006, 12:40:55 PM »

None is new?

I never heard Dem party bosses saying maybe it is time Menendez steps aside.  Come on Conan, even you must admit that at least at this point Kean is the favorite.
Read the article. No one is saying step aside. Besides I was saying the rental deal was nothing new. NJ is lean democratic still.
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DownWithTheLeft
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« Reply #13 on: September 09, 2006, 12:44:21 PM »

None is new?

I never heard Dem party bosses saying maybe it is time Menendez steps aside.  Come on Conan, even you must admit that at least at this point Kean is the favorite.
Read the article. No one is saying step aside. Besides I was saying the rental deal was nothing new. NJ is lean democratic still.

I WANT WHATEVER YOUR SMOKING Smiley

Please explain how NJ is lean Dem despite the new polls and new accusations, the impending subpoena, and the fact that more is being found out every day?  Maybe you can say Menendez can rebound, but for right now he is not the favorite.

BTW, Bush=Kean is not an acceptbale answer, b/c I'm sure that one-note song is what you were going to say.

And you have lost any credibility on this w/our ludacris statements.  Tossup/Dem maybe, but definetly not lean Dem.  But I hope more Dems think like you, it really helps the Republican
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Conan
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« Reply #14 on: September 09, 2006, 12:47:32 PM »

None is new?

I never heard Dem party bosses saying maybe it is time Menendez steps aside.  Come on Conan, even you must admit that at least at this point Kean is the favorite.
Read the article. No one is saying step aside. Besides I was saying the rental deal was nothing new. NJ is lean democratic still.

I WANT WHATEVER YOUR SMOKING Smiley

Please explain how NJ is lean Dem despite the new polls and new accusations, the impending subpoena, and the fact that more is being found out every day?  Maybe you can say Menendez can rebound, but for right now he is not the favorite.

BTW, Bush=Kean is not an acceptbale answer, b/c I'm sure that one-note song is what you were going to say.

And you have lost any credibility on this w/our ludacris statements.  Tossup/Dem maybe, but definetly not lean Dem.  But I hope more Dems think like you, it really helps the Republican
If more dems thought like me, then wouldnt they still vote for Menendez? I dont think that could help republicans much.
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DownWithTheLeft
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« Reply #15 on: September 09, 2006, 12:50:13 PM »

None is new?

I never heard Dem party bosses saying maybe it is time Menendez steps aside.  Come on Conan, even you must admit that at least at this point Kean is the favorite.
Read the article. No one is saying step aside. Besides I was saying the rental deal was nothing new. NJ is lean democratic still.

I WANT WHATEVER YOUR SMOKING Smiley

Please explain how NJ is lean Dem despite the new polls and new accusations, the impending subpoena, and the fact that more is being found out every day?  Maybe you can say Menendez can rebound, but for right now he is not the favorite.

BTW, Bush=Kean is not an acceptbale answer, b/c I'm sure that one-note song is what you were going to say.

And you have lost any credibility on this w/our ludacris statements.  Tossup/Dem maybe, but definetly not lean Dem.  But I hope more Dems think like you, it really helps the Republican
If more dems thought like me, then wouldnt they still vote for Menendez? I dont think that could help republicans much.

They would stop campaigning, obviously you missed the point and just strayed from the fact your argument has no logical basis.
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MarkWarner08
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« Reply #16 on: September 09, 2006, 01:51:50 PM »

Here's how Menendez can still win this race:

1. Use his COH advantage: Menendez has over $7 million in the bank to spend. A friend of mine in Jersey politics says Menendez is planning one major ad blitz to wipe out Kean. Menendez needs to spend every dollar he has on defaming Kean's record. The Hotline said that since August, Republican insiders have grown less and less sanguine about their party's chances in this race. If the DSCC and Menendez can hit Kean hard, they can take this race off the playing board.

2. Kean/Bush: We all know that Jon Corzine was a weak candidate in 2000 and 2005. The reason he won in 2000 was his purse and in 2005, it was George W. Bush. If this election is about Iraq and Bush, Menendez wins by 2-3%, if it's about corruption, the GOP wins.

3. Nationalize it: Democrats have to make this election a referendum on the failed Bush policies on Iraq, health care, energy, terror and the incompetence of the GOP. If Kean becomes  just "another Republican," Menendez.

4. Attack Kean: Menendez is calling Kean "Quid Pro Kean "-- that's a start. The Senator needs to attack Kean for his ethical problems, thus muddying the waters and confusing voters.  Democrats CANNOT allow the GOP to apply a duplicitous moral standard on Menendez. If this race come down to  two corrupt pols in a Democratic year in a Democratic state, Menendez wins.

5. Attack the investigation: If this is a blatant attempt to misuse the judiciary to harm a Democrat's reelection chances, then Menendez has a shot of becoming the victim. Democrats need to talk about the GOP conspiracy to take down a U.S Senator.
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MarkWarner08
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« Reply #17 on: September 09, 2006, 01:59:59 PM »

"Bob Menendez is an outstanding senator who works tirelessly for the people of New Jersey," said Sen. Charles E. Schumer (D., N.Y.), head of the Democrats' Senate reelection committee. "From day one of this campaign, Tom Kean Jr. has relied on smears to cover up his own ties to George Bush."

I don't like Bob Menendez, but Democrats MUST support him in order to take back the Senate.
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DownWithTheLeft
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« Reply #18 on: September 09, 2006, 02:27:56 PM »

Trust me, he will not win, don't let Conan's opinions and partisanship sway you into a sense of denial, I know your smarter than that.
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MarkWarner08
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« Reply #19 on: September 09, 2006, 02:33:02 PM »

Trust me, he will not win, don't let Conan's opinions and partisanship sway you into a sense of denial, I know your smarter than that.

I'm not swayed by Conan or anyone else. I don't believe that Chuck Schumer is going to allow Bob Menendez to lose. If need be, the DSCC will drag Menendez across the finish line.

If the scandal worsens, Kean wins; otherwise, this is race still has a very slight Democratic edge.
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DownWithTheLeft
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« Reply #20 on: September 09, 2006, 04:11:45 PM »

Trust me, he will not win, don't let Conan's opinions and partisanship sway you into a sense of denial, I know your smarter than that.

I'm not swayed by Conan or anyone else. I don't believe that Chuck Schumer is going to allow Bob Menendez to lose. If need be, the DSCC will drag Menendez across the finish line.

If the scandal worsens, Kean wins; otherwise, this is race still has a very slight Democratic edge.

I don't think Chuck Schumer has any more tug on this race than Dole and RSCC or whatever have on this race.  All this and no one mentions that Tom Kean Sr. has yet to make campaign stops frequently.  When he comes out, expect a more direct correlation between him and his son and this race will soon become a runaway.
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MarkWarner08
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« Reply #21 on: September 09, 2006, 04:26:00 PM »

Trust me, he will not win, don't let Conan's opinions and partisanship sway you into a sense of denial, I know your smarter than that.

I'm not swayed by Conan or anyone else. I don't believe that Chuck Schumer is going to allow Bob Menendez to lose. If need be, the DSCC will drag Menendez across the finish line.

If the scandal worsens, Kean wins; otherwise, this is race still has a very slight Democratic edge.

I don't think Chuck Schumer has any more tug on this race than Dole and RSCC or whatever have on this race.  All this and no one mentions that Tom Kean Sr. has yet to make campaign stops frequently.  When he comes out, expect a more direct correlation between him and his son and this race will soon become a runaway.

Chuck Schumer is one of the best strategists in D.C. Period. According to Roll Call, the GOP was worried about losing the House back in January 2005. You know why? Because Rahm Emanuel had just been choosen as the DCCC chairman.

Emanuel and Schumer are bulldogs who have out-raised, out-smarted and out-recruited their Republican foes. Other the other hand, Dole has been a miserable failure with the NRSC and Reynolds is too busy fighting a reelection battle to do an effective job for the NRCC.

I have read interviews with the Harvard educated Schumer and I've seen how aggressive and smart he is. He will find a way to help Democrats save this seat.

California had the "Terminator," Senate Democrats have the "Schumenator." I have faith in Schumer.
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DownWithTheLeft
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« Reply #22 on: September 09, 2006, 04:28:04 PM »

Trust me, he will not win, don't let Conan's opinions and partisanship sway you into a sense of denial, I know your smarter than that.

I'm not swayed by Conan or anyone else. I don't believe that Chuck Schumer is going to allow Bob Menendez to lose. If need be, the DSCC will drag Menendez across the finish line.

If the scandal worsens, Kean wins; otherwise, this is race still has a very slight Democratic edge.

I don't think Chuck Schumer has any more tug on this race than Dole and RSCC or whatever have on this race.  All this and no one mentions that Tom Kean Sr. has yet to make campaign stops frequently.  When he comes out, expect a more direct correlation between him and his son and this race will soon become a runaway.

Chuck Schumer is one of the best strategists in D.C. Period. According to Roll Call, the GOP was worried about losing the House back in January 2005. You know why? Because Rahm Emanuel had just been choosen as the DCCC chairman.

Emanuel and Schumer are bulldogs who have out-raised, out-smarted and out-recruited their Republican foes. Other the other hand, Dole has been a miserable failure with the NRSC and Reynolds is too busy fighting a reelection battle to do an effective job for the NRCC.

I have read interviews with the Harvard educated Schumer and I've seen how aggressive and smart he is. He will find a way to help Democrats save this seat.

California had the "Terminator," Senate Democrats have the "Schumenator." I have faith in Schumer.

That's funny, because I have faith in Tom Kean Jr., the next senator from the awful state of NJ Smiley
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MarkWarner08
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« Reply #23 on: September 09, 2006, 04:32:54 PM »

Trust me, he will not win, don't let Conan's opinions and partisanship sway you into a sense of denial, I know your smarter than that.

I'm not swayed by Conan or anyone else. I don't believe that Chuck Schumer is going to allow Bob Menendez to lose. If need be, the DSCC will drag Menendez across the finish line.

If the scandal worsens, Kean wins; otherwise, this is race still has a very slight Democratic edge.

I don't think Chuck Schumer has any more tug on this race than Dole and RSCC or whatever have on this race.  All this and no one mentions that Tom Kean Sr. has yet to make campaign stops frequently.  When he comes out, expect a more direct correlation between him and his son and this race will soon become a runaway.

Chuck Schumer is one of the best strategists in D.C. Period. According to Roll Call, the GOP was worried about losing the House back in January 2005. You know why? Because Rahm Emanuel had just been choosen as the DCCC chairman.

Emanuel and Schumer are bulldogs who have out-raised, out-smarted and out-recruited their Republican foes. Other the other hand, Dole has been a miserable failure with the NRSC and Reynolds is too busy fighting a reelection battle to do an effective job for the NRCC.

I have read interviews with the Harvard educated Schumer and I've seen how aggressive and smart he is. He will find a way to help Democrats save this seat.

California had the "Terminator," Senate Democrats have the "Schumenator." I have faith in Schumer.

That's funny, because I have faith in Tom Kean Jr., the next senator from the awful state of NJ Smiley

We'll see. It'll be a battle between the two Ivy League educated pols: Kean and Schumer
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Conan
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« Reply #24 on: September 09, 2006, 06:49:35 PM »

None is new?

I never heard Dem party bosses saying maybe it is time Menendez steps aside.  Come on Conan, even you must admit that at least at this point Kean is the favorite.
Read the article. No one is saying step aside. Besides I was saying the rental deal was nothing new. NJ is lean democratic still.

I WANT WHATEVER YOUR SMOKING Smiley

Please explain how NJ is lean Dem despite the new polls and new accusations, the impending subpoena, and the fact that more is being found out every day?  Maybe you can say Menendez can rebound, but for right now he is not the favorite.

BTW, Bush=Kean is not an acceptbale answer, b/c I'm sure that one-note song is what you were going to say.

And you have lost any credibility on this w/our ludacris statements.  Tossup/Dem maybe, but definetly not lean Dem.  But I hope more Dems think like you, it really helps the Republican
If more dems thought like me, then wouldnt they still vote for Menendez? I dont think that could help republicans much.

They would stop campaigning, obviously you missed the point and just strayed from the fact your argument has no logical basis.
Keep your hopes up.
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