KY-SEN: Time for Jim Bunning to Pack It In

Political science holds that Senate retirements are a bad thing for the incumbent party. That you want to avoid fighting for open seats at all costs, and instead focus on defending proven incumbents. 

This is true except when it isn't. With all of the Senate retirements so far this cycle, we have recruited or look set to recruit top-flight candidates who in many cases are more conservative and dynamic (and so, electable) than the incumbents they seek to replace. I don't see eye to eye with Marc Ambinder's assessment of recruiting so far -- sure Jeb Bush would have had a cakewalk in FL-SEN, but either Marco Rubio or Connie Mack are rising stars and much stronger candidates than we would have recruited in the '06-'08 environment. A big leading indicator of a party's political fortunes is whether their most talented political entrepreneurs are willing to lay it on the line to run for higher office -- and so far we have our most appealing crop of candidates since the '02 cycle. 

All of this is prelude to the ultimate case of incumbent self-immolation: Jim Bunning. In just the last 72 hours we have had this

At a Lincoln Day Dinner speech over the weekend, Bunning predicted that Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg would likely be dead from pancreatic cancer in nine months, according to the Louisville Courier-Journal. The paper reports that Bunning reiterated his support of conservative judges, saying “that’s going to be in place very shortly because Ruth Bader Ginsburg…has cancer.” “Bad cancer. The kind you don’t get better from,” Bunning went on. “Even though she was operated on, usually nine months is the longest that anybody would live after being diagnosed with pancreatic cancer.”

And to add insult to injury, this: 

FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP) — Republican U.S. Sen. Jim Bunning on Tuesday said he would have grounds for a lawsuit against his party's national campaign arm if backed a GOP challenger to him in the 2010 primary.

Bunning made the comments during his weekly media call a day after Republican Kentucky state Senate President David Williams said he would not rule out a possible run in the primary. The discussion also came a day after he apologized for comments made about Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg's fight with cancer.

In his call, Bunning said that if the National Republican Senatorial Committee backed a Republican challenger in the primary, he would have grounds for a lawsuit.

"In the bylaws of the NRSC, support of incumbents is the only reason for their existence. If they recruited someone and supported them in a primary against me I would be able to sue them because they're not following their bylaws," Bunning said.

Bunning insists he's running -- though his dismal $175,000 COH figure on December 31st, and the fact he's not holding his first fundraiser until the 2nd quarter suggest a basic lack of operational seriousness. Party elders have wanted to avoid a primary to the perpetually gaffe-prone Bunning, but this latest comedy of errors practically invites one. Bunning probably runs second to Roland Burris in the category of incumbent least likely to return in January 2011. 

If Republicans are serious about actively policing themselves, then its incumbents should actively urge Bunning to step aside or support his chief primary challenger. Bunning's errors are not ones of principle or ethics -- but of something even more basic and easily understood: buffoonery. 

Senate President David Williams has been mentioned as a likely Bunning replacement, but keep your eye on 36-year-old Secretary of State Trey Grayson

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Comments

Woudn't this guy work?

Geoff Davis will not be an insurgent

I don't think a sitting Congressman will take on Bunning as an insurgent. See my comment below for why I believe an insurgent primary campaign will be necessary if Bunning intends to run for reelection.

Bunning very likely to lose the general

For the myriad reasons Patrick cites Sen. Bunning is very likely to lose the general in 2010 unless his opponent is beyond objectionable or Bunning gets his weak act very much together very soon.

It seems unlikely that the GOP itself will succeed in convincing him not to run for a variety of reasons. Chairman Steele is backing off his support for primaries against the Stimulus 3, so how will he justify primarying Bunning?

That would suggest that the primary opponent can only emerge from outside the party apparatus. How can that happen? Is anyone KY raising a draft movement? Are any of the identified primary opponents capable of self-funding or building a funding operation that can succeed outside the apparatus through the primary?

JS, the problem here is Bunning has had 11 years...

to get his act together, and he'd managed back to back 1 point wins.  Given how conservative KY is, that's a matter of being lucky, not skillful.

Besides, he's nearly 80. Kind of far along for a makeover, I'd say.

 

 

I'm only saying GOP will not primary Bunning

Because as long as the incumbent wants to run the other incumbents are not going to actively and openly put up a primary opponent.

Would it were otherwise, but it's not. That's why I think it has to be a Lamont style insurrectionary effort--to reference your home state.

Why do you need an apparatus?

You have Bunning's high unfavorables and the Internet?

Am I saying that?

Am I saying that?

That would suggest that the primary opponent can only emerge from outside the party apparatus...Are any of the identified primary opponents capable of self-funding or building a funding operation that can succeed outside the apparatus through the primary?

I'm saying that the GOP apparatus is not going to primary Bunning. If Bunning wants to run, the only way to hold the seat for GOP is for an insurrectionary candidate a la Ned Lamont to take him out in the primary while the GOP establishment sits it out.

You have Bunning's high unfavorables and the Internet?

Unless the internet itself is running in the primary we're going to need a candidate who can raise money and campaign in the primary. I was wondering whether such a candidate was on anyone's radar screen.

Hey gang, been gone for while but thought I'd stop by

As a Kentuckian I agree that Bunning needs to retire but for some reason he won't pack it in.  I have e-mailed his office suggesting that would be the best course of action.  I agree with Ironman that Geof Davis would be a great candidate but he is going to primary challenge Bunning.

By the way, State Senate president David Williams is a total RINO.  He voted for the largest tax hike in the state's history back in 1990 long before he was in the State Senate leadership.  And just recently voted for a tobacco and alchol tax increase after having signed no new taxes pledge.  Although there we're few other Republicans and Democrats who signed the same pledge who likewise voted for it.

Any history of insurrectionary campaigns in KY GOP?

Hey, Ben,

Have there been any recent primary insurrections against incumbents in KY? How have they faired?

I agree that Davis will not take on a sitting incumbent. Few career pols will for obvious reasons.

Well the governor's race back in '07

That is when former Rep. Anne Northup ran aginst former Governor Ernie Fletcher given the man's vulnerability the state hiring non-scandal by the corrupt former AG and nrecently elcted Speaker of the KY House Greg Stumbo (the man personifies eastern KY corruption).  This really divided the state's GOP and even overa year later people are upset about it depended on who they supported.  In fact I know a few KY Repubs that hate Bunning simply because he supported Northup.  Similarly there are few who have turned on McConnell simply because he pubically appears to want Bunning out.  I personally turned on McConnell because he is doing a losuy GOP leader in the senate.

A primary challnge would not do us any good.  Most likely Bunning would prevail and this would only weaken him further against whoever his DEM opponent would be.  At this point I'm guessing Ben Chandler but that is only if he thinks he has real shot of winning both a primary and the election.  Chandler would have beaten Fketcher in an '07 if had chosen to run (and like Fletcher in'03 would not have to resign his house seat to do it) but he took a pass.  This threw the nomination to that recycled partisan hack  Beshear who is by the worst governor I have seen in my lifetime.

well, did the locals learn anything from the Fletcher debacle?

I know one way "damaged" candidates are sent to pasture in my state is the word goes out to the folks who used to raise them money to stand down, and it's hard to win an election without funds.

Yes they have.

There is a double standard, what is okay Democrats is not okay for Republicans.  No matter how much previous governors or the current one for that matter politcize the state hiring system for "non-merit" employees (those that are appointed by the governor), when a Republican governor is even just accused of doing it, it is travesty. 

Of course Fletcher didn't help the situation by trying to end the ongoing inquistion (I mean investigation), by offering a blanket pardon to his entire administration.  That Clintonesque maneuver only added legitmacy to the charges in the mind of the local media and their Democrat sycophants.  While such a act would have been okay if Democrat governor and his administration were under investigation from a GOP AG but not the other way around.