Saturday » November 4 » 2006
A look at the races to watch in Tuesday's U.S. mid-term elections
Sheldon Alberts
CanWest News Service
Saturday, November 04, 2006
WASHINGTON -- America's midterm elections are all about President George W. Bush, or so say the pundits. But there'll be plenty of other election intrigue for political junkies on Nov. 7. Here are some of the most interesting people, places and races to watch on Tuesday night.
THE TERMINATOR, Version 2.0 - Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger swept to power in 2003 in a recall election driven by Californians' anger at status quo politicians. His celebrity helped woo Hollywood liberals, as did his promises of bridge building with Democrats. Two years later, he had plummeted to 35 per cent approval ratings and stood accused of bullying his way through Sacramento. Most observers predicted his political demise after Californians rejected several of Schwarzenegger's legislative initiatives in a 2005 special election. The rebuke humbled Schwarzenegger he dropped the references to ``girlie-man'' Democrats and became a model of bipartisan co-operation. His riskiest move mandating greenhouse gas reductions has been hailed as forward-thinking leadership in a state where the car is still king. He has been rewarded with backing from Tinseltown liberals like Steven Spielberg and Jeffrey Katzenberg, and has been endorsed by just about every major newspaper in the state. With his Democratic challenger, state treasurer Phil Angelides, trailing by 14 per cent, the Gubernator appears headed for a second term.
TOO KINKY FOR TEXAS? - He is a cigar-smoking, libertarian, Jewish country music singer who once-headlined a band called the Texas Jewboys. He wants to legalize marijuana and made his literary name with an article titled They Ain't Making Jews like Jesus Anymore. But lately, 62-year-old Kinky Friedman, running as an independent, is best known as the guy who joked about running for governor and ended up a serious candidate to unseat incumbent Rick Perry. Known for spouting one-liners like ``a man without a woman was like a neck without a pain,'' Friedman injected life into an otherwise dull campaign season in the Lone Star state. But any realistic chance of becoming the next Jesse Ventura of American politics were dashed when he called Hurricane Katrina refugees in Texas a bunch of ``crack heads and thugs'' who were driving up the state's crime rate. His pledge to put ``10,000 troops on the border'' to keep out illegal immigrants did him little good with Texas' increasingly powerful Latino voters. Friedman now admits he needs a ``Texas miracle'' on Tuesday. The only thing he seems certain to win is the contest for most free publicity in an election year.
INDIANA, INDIANA, INDIANA - The Hoosier State has never been known as a bellwether of American political attitudes, but when polls close on Tuesday night in the Republican stronghold, all eyes will be on three congressional races that could determine whether the GOP is headed back to the minority. Republican incumbents in the 2nd, 8th and 9th congressional districts are in deep trouble against three strong Democratic challengers. As of mid October, the Republican National Committee had pumped $2.8 million to save the Republicans. Most of the money went to Rep. John Hostetler, a dyed-in-the-wool social conservative who recently warned Democratic leaders were set to impose a ``radical homosexual agenda'' on Washington.
VIRGINIA IS (NOT) FOR LOVERS - Voters in the southern state with an amorous slogan have endured some of the nastiest politics of the 2006 election. Incumbent Senator George Allen recently launched attack ads casting his Democratic opponent, Vietnam vet and former naval secretary Jim Webb, as immoral for writing novels that include explicit sex scenes. Call it changing the subject. Allen, once considered a Republican presidential hopeful, is desperate to save a seat that should have been the safest in the country. His campaign imploded after he was videotaped calling a dark-skinned man ``macaca,'' a racial slur, and after denying his Jewish roots. Then allegations surfaced that he used the n-word to describe African-Americans as a college student. Now jokingly referred to as ``Senator Macacawitz,'' his White House aspirations are likely dashed even if he wins re-election to the Senate.
>more including Duckworth, Duncan Hunter (R-Calif.), Peter King (R-New York), James Sensenbrenner (R-Wis.), Tom Tancredo (R-Colo.), Granholm, Foley, Jefferson, Santorum, and Chafee.
http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/news/story.html?id=4c2a0378-bb0c-4fc0-8433-81474d48a1bc&k=52866&p=3