Today is Tuesday, 14th May 2024

Posts Tagged ‘Iowa’


GOP Looks to Gain in Iowa House

From DesMoinesRegister.com:

Iowa House leaders of both parties met last week with lobbyists and other check-writers to tout their candidates and show how they’ll gain or retain the majority in November.

I imagine these gatherings are a bit like a Billy Mays-style miracle product demonstration at the State Fair. Everybody knows they’re being spun, at least to some degree, but some will be Sham-wowed.

Republicans, who currently hold 44 seats, are pitching this as their year to regain the majority in the Iowa House. If they re-elect all 38 incumbents and hold the six GOP open seats, that means they need to pick up seven Democratic seats to reach a 51-seat majority.

A seven-seat gain is a tall order in most years, but Republicans argue this isn’t like most years. They point to midterm election years like 1978 and 1994, when Democratic presidents’ approval was in the tank and the GOP made double-digit gains in the Iowa House. This is one time when Republicans are eager to talk about climate change. Their theme song could be “Hot, Hot, Hot.”

Read the Rest…



Iowa GOP Optimistic

From Omaha.com:

Iowa Republicans are expressing optimism about their chances for regaining control of the state House and Senate, but Democrats say they’re confident they can hold their majorities in both chambers.

House Minority Leader Kraig Paulsen notes Republicans are fielding more candidates for legislative seats. He also expects two top Republicans on the November ballot, governor candidate Terry Branstad and Sen. Charles Grassley, to help other Republicans.

Read the Rest…



Iowa Readies for Redistricting

From wcfcourier.com:

Lawmakers in Iowa are about to launch their most overtly partisan chore: the redrawing of legislative and congressional districts.

Every 10 years after the census is conducted, the Legislature must approve new congressional and legislative district lines reflect



Top Iowa Dems Say Their Candidate for Governor is Losing

From SiouxCityJournal.com:

Two statewide elected Democrats are conceding that Gov. Chet Culver is trailing former Republican Gov. Terry Branstad in his bid for a second term but they say the race will be close.

Attorney General Tom Miller and Secretary of State Michael Mauro says Culver is the underdog in the race but that his campaign has been energized by the lagging poll numbers.

Polls have shown Branstad with a double-digit edge over Culver.


Read the Rest…



IA: Republican Picks State Senator as Running Mate

From WCFCourier.com:

Former Gov. Terry Branstad announced today that state Sen. Kim Reynolds, an Osceola Republican, is his choice for running mate in his bid for a fifth term as governor in November.

Reynolds, who served four terms as Clarke County treasurer, is half way through her first term in the Iowa Senate after winning election to the District 48 seat in 2008 — which encompasses Adams, Clarke, Decatur, Montgomery, Ringgold, Taylor and Union counties. She also served as a member of the Iowa Public Employees Retirement System (IPERS) board as a Branstad appointee from 1996 to 2001.

Branstad, who won the 2010 GOP gubernatorial nomination by beating Bob Vander Plaats of Sioux City and Rod Roberts of Carroll, said he went through a thoughtful and deliberative process in finding the best possible choice for running mate.

Read the Rest…



Pawlenty’s PAC to aid Republicans in Iowa

From DesMoinesRegister.com:

Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty has established political action committees to help him raise money for candidates this year in Iowa and New Hampshire, expected to hold the first 2012 presidential nominating contests.

The move by Pawlenty is a first by a would-be presidential prospect in Iowa, although Pawlenty aides say the maneuver is solely about this November’s elections.

“We filed these committees now because now is the time to start organizing on the grass-roots level for 2010,” Alex Conant, a Pawlenty spokesman, told The Des Moines Register on Tuesday. “The governor doesn’t know what he’s going to do when he’s done being governor. He’ll decide that early next year.”

Read the Rest…



IA: Republicans say Party Will Unify

From GazetteOnline:

Top Republicans predicted Thursday their party will unify behind gubernatorial candidate Terry Branstad and the GOP ticket once it becomes clear what competing ideologies are at stake in Iowa’s Nov. 2 general election.

GOP winners in Tuesday’s primary — Branstad for governor, Brenna Findley for attorney general and Ag Secretary Bill Northey – stressed the need for unity in a “road to victory tour” at Branstad’s northeast Iowa campaign headquarters in Marion June 10.

Read the Rest…



IA: Republicans pick their Secretary of State Candidate

From DesMoinesRegister.com:

Matthew Schultz, an attorney from Council Bluffs, won the Republican primary Tuesday to challenge Secretary of State Michael Mauro in November’s elections, according to the Associated Press.

With 95 percent of precincts counted late Tuesday, Schultz had 47 percent of the votes, leading two other Republicans. George Eichhorn, a lawyer from Stratford and former state representative, had 27 percent, and Des Moines resident Christopher Sanger, the owner of a bakery, had 26 percent.

Read the Rest…



IA: Republican SOS Hopefuls want election Reform

From Quad-City Times:

Three Republicans seeking the nomination for Iowa secretary of state are calling for stronger election laws and streamlined business filing procedures.

Lawyers George Eichhorn of Stratford and Matt Schultz of Council Bluffs and business owner Chris Sanger of Des Moines are competing in the June 8 primary election for the GOP nomination. The winner will face first-term Democrat Michael Mauro.

The three share several goals and concerns, including making it easier and more convenient for businesses that must file with the secretary of state office and ensuring the integrity of the election process.

Read the Rest…



Democrats Nervous in Iowa

From THOnline.com:

Some Democrats who hold statewide office are feeling nervous as they face anti-incumbent sentiment coupled with a lack of campaign cash to get their message out.

State Treasurer Michael Fitzgerald, who is seeking his eighth term, said it’s a tough time fo




Share this Story on Facebook

Main Menu

Top