Celebrity Watch and Other News

Laura Bush's visit to Greece, NY for a "victory rally" today has gotten some media attention, and will probably get Randy Kuhl more coverage today, though he'll have to share the spotlight with his colleagues Jim Walsh and Tom Reynolds. 

Reader Rich writes to mention that Eric Massa will hold a fundraiser with former first lady and current Senator Hillary Clinton Monday.   I don't think the Hillary event will garner the same attention as the Bush event, but it will probably help Massa maintain his money-raising pace.

Today's New York Times carries an article about the 29th.  I talked to the reporter on background for that one, and she reads this blog.  I thought it was a pretty good piece.

The 29th has moved down a couple of notches (from 33 to 35) in the National Journal House Rankings, though it is still one of "the closest contests in the country" according to analyst Chuck Todd.

New NRCC Ad

Rochesterturning is reporting that a new RNC National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC)  attack ad is running in the Corning area.  Apparently the subject is Social Security, and the images involve old ladies in the cross-hairs.   (Update:  NRCC, not RNC.  Video after the break.)

Pre-General Money Numbers

The FEC has just posted the pre-general election filing summaries for both campaigns. Kuhl's shows that he raised an anemic $65K in the 18 days since the last filing.  Massa raised $171K in the same period, maintaining his $60K per week clip.  Massa's fundraising total is within $145K of Kuhl's.

More importantly, for the first time Massa has more cash on hand than Kuhl:  $341K vs $232K.  Kuhl made a couple of huge media buys in this period, which might reflect some pre-paid ads that are still running, but the fact remains that the Massa campaign had more cash on hand last week and continues to significantly out-raise Kuhl.

Massa has raised $800K of his total from individuals.  $813K of Kuhl's total is from PACs. 

D&C Endorses Massa

Today's edition of the Rochester Democrat & Chronicle carries their endorsement for Eric Massa. The D&C generally supports Democrats, and didn't endorse Kuhl in 2004, so this was no real surprise.

Yesterday's News

Though the Massa campaign has been issuing press releases left and right on Kuhl's Social Security ad, the only media coverage I've seen so far is an article in the Corning Leader.  According to the Leader's headline writer, the barb market in the 29th has been active of late. 

Local bloggers have posted about the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee's addition of Eric Massa to the "Red to Blue List", a fundraising program for races that have turnover potential.  Whether that vote of support will have any meaning is up in the air, as Roll Call reports

At this late stage, however, Democratic sources acknowledged that inclusion on the list is not a guarantee the campaign committee will make independent expenditures, though it does mean these candidates will have access to the DCCC’s list of deep-pocketed donors.


New Massa-Spitzer Ad

The Massa campaign has posted a new ad.  The theme is how Massa and Eliot Spitzer will work together.  Video after the break:

The Female Vote

I agree with the guys at rochesterturning that the Laura Bush visit is all about shoring up base women voters.  I don't agree with Robert Novak's reason why:

Rep. Randy Kuhl (R) in District 29 has seen his support among women evaporate. Kuhl's dirty laundry -- including the old alleged threat against his wife with a shotgun -- had been aired before, but now perhaps it is finding a more receptive audience in this tough Republican election year.

Perhaps the personal issues of the last campaign might have left some residual damage, but there are two issues that have affected every woman I know.  The most recent is the Foley scandal.  Moms are mad at the Republican leadership, who appear to have tolerated a child predator to ensure a safe seat.  More importantly, in the last couple of weeks, death and injury of soldiers in Iraq have been front page news across the district.  The other day, I saw one normally stoic mother shed a tear while reading the story of the latest death.  Even among those who think the war was justified, there's a lot of anger at the perceived incompetence and carelessness of the Republican leadership.  That carelessness has cost a lot of mothers their son or daughter.  Fairly or not, the R after Kuhl's name will cost him votes of women -- especially mothers -- in the district.

Novak's ideological blinders won't allow him to see those factors, so he hones in on what he understands:  personal attacks.

News Roundup

The Messenger-Post, Canandaigua's daily, has a couple of good stories by Julie SherwoodYesterday's was the best "race overview" piece I've seen in the media to date. It also reports that the 29th is one of the races on the national watch list of an election officials group.  Earlier this week, she broke the news that Kuhl, under pressure from farmers, has modified his immigration stance to endorse a guest-worker program. 

In sharp contrast to Julie's quality reporting is this piece in the Hornell Evening Tribune.  It dredges up every cheap shot made by both candidates, and creates the impression that this has been a nasty campaign.  Part of being a good reporter is separating the signal from the noise, and this article is mainly static.

On the national front, conservative Robert Novak has rated the 29th "leaning Democratic takeover". 

Kuhl's Social Security Ad

In Randy Kuhl's new ad, we see the staple of Social Security propaganda:  the confused and outraged old person.  After the obligatory grainy black-and-white montage,  Granny appears and delivers the line: "Raise taxes?  Cut benefits?  Sounds to me like this fella Massa has his priorities a little messed up."

Well, Granny, someone whose priority list includes "remember stool softener" and "put teeth in glass next to bed" probably shouldn't be throwing stones.  Nevertheless, I'm going to try to reason with you.  Turn up your hearing aid for a moment, and I'll tell you how Randy Kuhl tried to pull a fast one on people like me by using you to change the subject.

Let's start with the one citation in Kuhl's ad:  a 15-month-old story in the Elmira Star-Gazette (which is still in Google's cache).  In that story, Massa talked about a four-point plan:

  1. Raise the income ceiling for the Social Security deduction exemption above $90K.
  2. Delay benefits for people just entering the workforce (and the SS system).
  3. Exempt the first $10,000 of income from Social Security taxes.
  4. Stop raiding the SS trust fund for general revenue.

This plan is a bit different from the one Massa mentioned in the debate, and I'll get to that in a moment.  But first, does this mean he'll raise taxes?  The median family income in the 29th was about $50K last census.  Almost 5% of families had an income less than $10K.  This means that the vast majority of the 29th won't pay more tax, and the poorest would actually pay less.

Will he cut benefits?  Not for Granny, or anyone else retiring in the next 40 years.  This plan raises the retirement age , which hasn't happened since the beginning of the Social Security program.  A modest increase in the retirement age for those who will be healthier longer is not "cutting benefits" for people like Granny.

Even so, over the last year, Massa has changed his position.  In the debates, and in a recent interview, he mentioned only reindexing the income cap from $90,000 to $140,000.  His argument is that the cap was based on the 90th percentile income in the early 80's and hasn't changed.  His plan just keeps up with inflation and wage growth, and he thinks this will take care of the system for many years. So, as with the old plan, taxes will be raised on the small percentage of the residents in the 29th who make more that $90K.

The positive content of Kuhl's ad is a distortion but not an outright lie. The real issue with Kuhl's ad is what's missing:  a plan to fix the system.  Unlike Granny, I don't know anyone of my generation or younger who plans to receive a single cent from Social Security.  While everyone pays attention to seniors' incessant whining about their supposedly scant benefits, the post-baby-boomer generation is quietly planning for a future without any benefits whatsoever, since their financial planners won't even include Social Security in retirement income projections.   Our frustration and cynicism grows as plans like Massa's, which are modest and practical, get shot down over and over by scare ads, like Kuhl's, that are aimed at the elderly.  The only programs that end up being discussed are ones, like privatization, that promise fairy-tale endings without sacrifice.

Kuhl has no plan, only a sentiment:  "I regard Social Security as sacred trust".  He was on-board with the soundly rejected Bush plan to privatize Social Security, and he now makes the inane distinction between "privatizing" and "private accounts", saying he's for the latter and not the former.  Well, I'm for eating all the ice cream I want, but not getting fat.  Randy's Social Security "policy" is the financial equivalent of that impossible dream. 

The Kuhl fast one is criticizing someone who makes hard choices without making any of his own, and advancing the fiction that Social Security can be fixed without hard choices.  But that doesn't matter, because Granny is pissed, and a 30-second ad will probably get her to the polls to vote against that bad, bad man, Eric Massa, who's trying to raise her taxes and take away her benefits.

Hillary's $10 Million

Hillary Clinton spent $10.1 million in the last quarter, $7 million of that in the last month alone, the most of any Senate candidate.  Much of that money is going to a "get-out-the-vote operation that we think is going to work for Democratic candidates throughout the state," according to her spokeswoman.  I posted about her GOTV effort earlier.  This is evidence that it is real.

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