Timothy McNulty | July 2, 2009
Here's a preview of something we bet we'll see a lot from the national media over the next year -- comparing the underdog Senate runs of two members of Congress (Joe Sestak and Carolyn Maloney) against White House-supported Dem incumbents, in two big media-saturated Northeast states. From Roll Call:
Two House Democrats moved even closer to challenging incumbent
Senators in primaries next year, according to local media reports
Wednesday.
It's been no secret that Reps. Joe Sestak (D-Pa.) and
Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.) have been gearing up to challenge Sens. Arlen
Specter (D-Pa.) and Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.), respectively, for
their jobs next year.
Both Members seem undeterred by the fact
that the two Senators enjoy the strong support of national party
leaders, including powerful forces within the White House.
Sestak
made a definitive statement to the Wayne Independent on Wednesday,
saying he's in the race, period. Previously, Sestak had said he
intended to run, but he had to get the approval of his family.
"I am going to get into the race against Arlen Specter in the Democratic race for Senator," Sestak told the newspaper.
Meanwhile,
in New York, the White House was instrumental in clearing Rep. Steve
Israel (D), who was set to challenge Gillibrand, out of the primary in
May. But a report Wednesday in the New York Daily News said Maloney
doesn't intend to be shoved aside.
"She's definitely decided to run," a senior Maloney adviser told the newspaper. "She's in it."
Recent polling has shown that both Gillibrand and Specter would be vulnerable to a primary challenge from the left.
Posted
Jul 02 2009, 10:57 AM
by
Timothy McNulty