Election Watch: Foley scandal impacting Southern races

Hastings Wyman, the long-time editor of the useful Southern Political Report, sees the scandals surrounding Florida Rep. Mark Foley (R) having a big impact on races in Florida and the rest of the South this November:

Across the South, beginning with Foley's own 16th District -- where voters have to cast a ballot for Foley for it to count for the GOP's new nominee, Joe Negron -- the Democrats should be major gainers. Southern Political Report now ranks the 16th as Likely Democratic; safe Democratic might even be more appropriate. In Florida, the 13th and 22nd Districts, both with competitive races before the scandal broke, are adjacent to Foley's district and voters have been subject to the same media onslaught. In the 13th (Sarasota, etc.), Katherine Harris's (R) district, Democrat Christine Jennings (R) has released a poll showing her lead has increased from 8 points to 12 points in the past three weeks. My best guess is that both the 13th and 22nd will join the 16th in electing Democrats next month. And Florida's 8th District, with another competitive race, is further north, but could still be affected by the story. After all, Foley was the leading Republican US Senate contender in Florida for months in 2004 and is not unknown. [...]

Finally, the Foley issue -- especially when combined with a variety of other voter complaints about the Bush Administration -- could help the Democrats in a number of other congressional races across the South. In Kentucky's 2nd District, which was already hotly contested, GOP incumbent Ron Lewis canceled a fundraiser featuring Speaker Hastert because of the scandal. And in Kentucky 4, ex-US Rep. Ken Lucas (D) is using the issue against freshman Geoff Davis (R). In Virginia 2, freshman Thelma Drake (R) must depend on the votes from an area heavily influenced by Pat Robertson's resident headquarters and educational establishments; will they vote this time? Indeed, all of the competitive races in the South -- such as North Carolina's 8th and 11th districts -- are likely to be affected to some degree.

Earlier this week, Wyman -- a former Republican operative -- predicted Democrats would pick up seven U.S. House seats (pdf). Further: "We forecast no off-setting GOP gains."

The proof will be in the November election returns, but I give this analysis a bit more weight than Tom Schaller's dismissive piece in the most recent In These Times (not online yet), which claims that "[T]wo things are certain: The Democrats are going to gain seats in the 2006 midterms, and those gains will come from outside the South."

We'll see how it pans out, but either way it's clear that events have a way changing things, and in politics, nothing is "certain."

[H/T Political Wire and reader BD]