
Warnock enters special Senate election in GA
Raphael Warnock entered the all-party Nov. 3 special election for Senate in Georgia. Politico's James Arkin called Warnock the most prominent Democrat in the race. Currently, the race includes four Democrats, four Republicans, and one independent.
The Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee and 2018 Democratic gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams endorsed Warnock.
Warnock is a pastor at Atlanta's Ebenezer Baptist Church and was chairman of the New Georgia Project, a voter registration group Abrams founded.
Warnock's Jan. 30 announcement came one day after U.S. Rep. Doug Collins (R) entered the race. Incumbent Sen. Kelly Loeffler (R) is also running. Gov. Brian Kemp (R) appointed her to fill the seat following Johnny Isakson's resignation in December. Several media outlets reported that President Donald Trump wanted Kemp to appoint Collins to the Senate seat.
After the Warnock and Collins announcements, The Cook Political Report changed its special election rating from Likely Republican to Lean Republican:
"All these dynamics — long and protracted attacks between Collins and Loeffler and the entrance of Warnock — make it clear that this race is moving up the list of GOP headaches and Democratic opportunities, giving them yet another seat in their path to a majority. With its rapidly changing demographics, Georgia is a state that will be contested at the presidential level, and also sees Republican Sen. David Perdue running for re-election. But this is the more competitive race of the two."
If no candidate receives a majority of the vote, a runoff between the top two will be Jan. 5, 2021.
While the all-party special general election is not a primary, the race will be the first contest for the Senate seat in Georgia, and it is unlike most other Nov. 3 general elections in that it may not be the last.
Polls show many voters still undecided in Texas Senate race
Two polls conducted in January show voters are still making up their minds about who to support among the 12 candidates seeking the Democratic Senate nomination in Texas.
The Dallas Morning News and the University of Texas-Tyler conducted a poll Jan. 21-30 in which 56% of respondents said they weren't sure who they'd support. M.J. Hegar polled at 8%. Royce West had 6% support and Annie Garcia had 5%. Four candidates polled at 4%, and five polled at 2% or below.
The poll had a sample of 487 Democratic primary voters and had a margin of error of +/- 4.4 percentage points.
The Texas Lyceum conducted a poll between Jan.10-19 that showed 19% of respondents didn't know who they'd like to see as the Democratic nominee, and 17% responded "none of the above." The poll showed Hegar with 11% support, West at 8%, Cristina Tzintzún Ramirez with 7%, and Amanda Edwards at 6%. Four candidates polled at 5%. The remaining four candidates were at 4% or less.
The Texas Lyceum conducted their poll among 401 potential Democratic primary voters, with a margin of error of +/-4.9 percentage points. The group describes itself as a "nonprofit, nonpartisan, statewide leadership organization focused on identifying the state’s next generation of leaders and providing a forum for civil discourse on the important policy discussions facing our state."
Sen. John Cornyn (R), who is seeking a fourth term, first won election in 2002 and won in 2014 by 27 percentage points. In the 2018 election between Sen. Ted Cruz (R) and Beto O'Rourke (D), Cruz won by 2.6 percentage points.
Open top-two primary for CA-50 down to one Democratic candidate
Marisa Calderon suspended her campaign for California's 50th District House seat Jan. 31, citing a need to support ill family members. That leaves Ammar Campa-Najjar as the lone Democrat in the March 3 top-two primary.
Rep. Duncan Hunter resigned from Congress after pleading guilty to a count of conspiracy to misuse campaign funds. The seat will remain vacant until the 2020 winner takes office in January 2021. Campa-Najjar lost to Hunter by 3.4 percentage points in 2018.
The two candidates with the most votes on March 3, regardless of party, will advance to the Nov. 3 general election.
Four Republicans, three independents, and one member of the Peace and Freedom Party of California are also running. Republican candidates include former 49th Congressional District Rep. Darrell Issa, state Sen. Brian Jones, and former San Diego City Councilmember Carl DeMaio.
California first used its top-two congressional primary system in 2012. In each 50th District election since, a Democrat and Republican have advanced from the top-two primary, and Hunter won each general election. Of previous 50th District top-two primaries, 2018 had the largest candidate field of seven, including three Republicans, three Democrats, and one independent.
Three ratings outlets rate the general election Safe/Solid Republican.
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