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2009 New York's 20th congressional district special election

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2009 New York's 20th congressional district special election

← 2008
March 31, 2009 (2009-03-31)
2010 →

New York's 20th congressional district
 
NomineeScott MurphyJim Tedisco
PartyDemocraticRepublican
Popular vote80,83380,107
Percentage50.23%49.77%

County results
Murphy:     50–60%
Tedisco:     50–60%

U.S. Representative before election

Kirsten Gillibrand
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Scott Murphy
Democratic

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On March 31, 2009, New York held aspecial election to fill a vacancy inits 20th congressional district. In January, the district's representative,Kirsten Gillibrand, was appointedUS senator from New York, replacingHillary Clinton, who had been appointedSecretary of State in theObama administration. The two major-party candidates wereScott Murphy, aDemocrat and private businessman, andJim Tedisco, aRepublican and theminority leader of theNew York State Assembly. ALibertarian candidate, Eric Sundwall, was initially included in the race, but later removed from the ballot.

The 20th congressional district has historically been conservative, and early polls favored Tedisco, but by February 2009 the race was considered a toss-up. The Republican Party considered the election to be a referendum onPresident Obama's economic policy and as such, injected significant funding into Tedisco's campaign, using well-known Republicans such as formerSpeaker of the HouseNewt Gingrich,House Minority LeaderJohn Boehner, and former New York governorGeorge Pataki for support. Democrats used Senator Gillibrand, Vice PresidentJoe Biden, and an endorsement from President Obama to support theMurphy campaign.

Major issues brought up during the campaign were the candidates' positions on President Obama'sstimulus plan, which Tedisco did not take a stance on until late in the race. Murphy supported it while Tedisco eventually opposed it. Tedisco portrayed Murphy's support of the plan as a potential cause of theAIG bonus scandal. Tedisco's campaign also brought up Murphy's failure to pay taxes on a company he founded in the 1990s. A frequent Murphytalking point was that Tedisco's primary residence was not in the Congressional district.

The race was so close that one early vote count had the candidates tied at 77,225 votes each. Absentee ballots decided the election; ballots were accepted until April 13. While Tedisco had been ahead in early counts, by April 10, Murphy was leading, and by April 23 Murphy had a 401-vote advantage. Tedisco conceded the race the following day, and Murphy was sworn in on April 29. Democratic electoral successes in November 2008 and Murphy's clear support of thestimulus package were credited for his success.

Background

[edit]
Main article:New York's 20th congressional district

New York's 20th congressional district in 2009 encompassed all or part ofColumbia,Dutchess,Delaware,Essex,Greene,Otsego,Rensselaer,Saratoga,Warren, andWashington counties.[1] Traditionally conservative, it had been considered asafe seat for Republicans[Note 1] untilBlue Dog Democrat Kirsten Gillibrand defeatedincumbentJohn E. Sweeney in the2006 election.[3] In November 2008, the Republican Party held an enrollment advantage of 70,632 registered voters across the district, down from a 93,337-voter advantage when the district lines were drawn by theNew York State Legislature in 2002.[4][5] Although RepublicanGeorge W. Bush carried the district by an eight-point margin in the2004 presidential election,[6] DemocratBarack Obama won the districtin 2008 by a three-point margin, or approximately 10,000 votes of over 330,000 cast.[7] Gillibrand was reelected in 2008 by 24 points, a fourfold increase over her 2006 margin.[3]

One of Barack Obama's first decisions as president-elect was to appointHillary Clinton, U.S. Senator from New York and formerDemocratic presidential primary opponent, asSecretary of State; Clinton resigned her Senate seat to take the position.[8] The district's seat became vacant in January 2009 whenGovernorDavid Paterson appointed Gillibrand to theUnited States Senate to replace Clinton.[3] On February 23, 2009, Governor Paterson issued a proclamation setting the date for the special election as March 31, 2009.[9] Under state law, Paterson was not required to issue a proclamation for a special election until July 2010.[10] Both theRothenberg Political Report and theCook Political Report listed the race as a toss-up.[11][12]

Candidates

[edit]

In lieu ofpartyprimaries, the party nominees were chosen by a weighted vote among the county committees. The weight of the vote depended on the population of registered party voters (Republican or Democrat) in a given county.[13]

Republican Party

[edit]

State SenatorBetty Little and former state Assembly minority leader and2006 Republican gubernatorial candidateJohn Faso had been in the running for the Republican nomination.[14] Richard Wager, a former aide toNew York City MayorMichael Bloomberg, and State SenatorStephen Saland had also been mentioned.[15][16]Alexander "Sandy" Treadwell, the formerNew York Secretary of State and2008 U.S. House challenger, had announced he would not run.[17] On January 24,State AssemblyMinority LeaderJim Tedisco received the endorsement of Saratoga County's Republican chairman,[18] while theGreene County GOP endorsed Faso.[19]

Jim Tedisco was the eventual Republican nominee, winning theGOP nomination on January 27, 2009.[20] Tedisco represented the 110th Assembly District, which includes a significant portion of Saratoga County.[21] Tedisco's primary residence was not in the congressional district, although he did own a house inSaratoga Springs and much of his assembly district overlapped the congressional district.[22] This issue would become a major talking point during the campaign.

Democratic Party

[edit]

On January 31,The Post-Star reported that the Democrats had narrowed the field of potential candidates from over two dozen applicants down to six. The Democratic chairpersons met with all six candidates at adiner in Albany on February 1, and selectedScott Murphy ofGlens Falls,[23] president of the Upstate Venture Association of New York,[24] as their candidate.[25][26] Other confirmed candidates includedSaratoga County Democratic Chairman Larry Bulman,[15] formerNew York Rangers goaltenderMike Richter,[15]Coxsackie Town Supervisor Alex Betke,[27] andTracey Brooks, failed candidate for the nomination for the21st district election in 2008.[16]

Third parties

[edit]

New York allowselectoral fusion, which is an arrangement allowing two or morequalified parties to list the same candidate on a ballot.[28][29] TheConservative Party chose to cross-endorse Tedisco on February 9,[30] while theWorking Families Party gave its endorsement to Murphy on February 17.[31][32] On March 1, theIndependence Party, the largest third party in the 20th district,[33] gave its endorsement to Murphy.[34] This was the first time the Independence Party had endorsed a Democrat in the district.[35]

Eric Sundwall, Chair of theNew York Libertarian Party, was the Libertarian candidate for the seat. However, he was removed from the ballot on March 25, after 3,786 of the 6,730 signatures his campaign had collected were ruled invalid.[36] Under state election law, independent congressional candidates must collect at least 3,500 valid signatures to be on the ballot.[37] Two Saratoga County residents challenged over 6,000 of Sundwall's signatures; Sundwall blamed Tedisco for the effort to have him removed from the ballot.[38] The vast majority of the rejected signatures were from voters who put down their mailing address instead of the municipality in which they physically lived. Votes for Sundwall on absentee ballots, which were mailed out before he was removed from the ballot, were voided.[36] On March 27, Sundwall announced that he would vote for Murphy in the election and urged his supporters to join him.[39]

Campaign

[edit]

The campaigns agreed to hold four debates.[40] The first debate took place on March 2, between Tedisco and Murphy.[41][42] The second debate, sponsored byWMHT and theTimes Union, took place on March 19 between Murphy and Libertarian candidate Eric Sundwall.[40][43][44] Jim Tedisco held atown hall meeting rather than attend, claiming the debate was not one of the four originally agreed upon.[45] The third debate took place on March 23[46][47] and the final debate was on March 26.[48][49]

Strategists from both parties viewed the outcome of the race as a "referendum on President Obama's handling of theeconomy". ChairmanMichael Steele of theRepublican National Committee said the special election was the first of three elections that were "incredibly important" for the Republicans to win.[50] The Republican leadership made this race a top priority, and Chairman Steele, former GovernorGeorge Pataki,House Minority LeaderJohn Boehner, and formerSpeaker of the HouseNewt Gingrich helped Tedisco with fundraising. Steele visited the district twice.[51] On the Democratic side, Senator Gillibrand appeared in commercials androbocalls for Murphy, and SenatorChuck Schumer helped Murphy's campaign with fundraising.[51] Less than a week before the election, President Obama formally endorsed Murphy in a mass email to supporters[52] and urged supporters to organize and vote for Murphy.[53] A radio adVice PresidentJoe Biden recorded for Murphy was released on March 25. That same day,Democratic National Committee (DNC) ChairmanTim Kaine emailed 500 of the party's top donors asking them to contribute to Murphy's campaign.[54]

Scott Murphy andSenatorKirsten Gillibrand at a campaign stop on March 29, 2009[55]

The RNC spent $100,000 on Tedisco's behalf.[56] TheDemocratic Congressional Campaign Committee spent $150,000[57] and theService Employees International Union spent $315,000 for Murphy.[58] TheNew York State United Teachers made an effort to call its members on Murphy's behalf, while theNational Right to Life,National Republican Trust andNew York State Rifle and Pistol Association organizations paid for ads and mailings supporting Tedisco.[59]

Each candidate aimed to discredit the other by pointing out his opponent's flaws or mistakes. Republicans called attention to Murphy's failure to pay taxes on a start-up computer software company he had founded in the 1990s, drawing comparison to three high-profile Obama administration nominees who failed to pay all of their taxes.[60] Tedisco also called attention to Murphy's failure to regularly vote in elections[61] after theNational Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC) announced that Murphy had failed to vote in the 2000 presidential election, along with seven other primaries and general elections between 2000 and 2003.[62] Believing the negative ads run by the NRCC were responsible for his drop in the polls, Tedisco announced that he would take control of campaign advertising from the NRCC.[63]

Murphy spent the first months of the campaign criticizing Tedisco's early refusal to disclose his position on President Obama'sAmerican Recovery and Reinvestment Act.[61] When Tedisco came out in opposition to the legislation on March 16, Murphy responded by writing "it's just shameful it took well over a month for Assemblyman Tedisco to finally admit that he'd vote 'No'".[64] Murphy's campaign described Tedisco as a career Albany politician.[65]

By mid-March, a provision in the stimulus package that grandfathered in bonuses paid to executives at troubled insurance giantAIG and otherTARP recipients became a campaign issue. Tedisco, who had been criticized by Murphy for opposing the package, used theoutrage over the AIG bonuses to reframe the debate.[66] On March 19, Tedisco called for the resignation ofTreasury SecretaryTim Geithner over the AIG controversy.[67] Murphy responded by insisting that the stimulus package was necessary for job creation.[68]

Media endorsements

[edit]
  • March 22, 2009: Declaring "the upcoming special election in the 20th Congressional District nothing less than a referendum on the Obama economic stimulus plan", theKingston-basedDaily Freeman endorsed Murphy for his support of the plan.[69]
  • March 22, 2009: Expressing a desire for "having candid, dissenting voices in any political body to keep the majority from going astray", thePoughkeepsie Journal endorsed Tedisco.[70]
  • March 26, 2009: Calling him "[not] ideal... [but] the better candidate", the Glens Falls-basedThe Chronicle gave Jim Tedisco its endorsement.[71]
  • March 26, 2009: TheNew York Post gave its support to Jim Tedisco, calling him "a far better fit for the largely conservative district".[72]
  • March 29, 2009: While acknowledging Tedisco's role in creating theSTAR Program and his vocal support for a property tax cap, TheTimes Union endorsed Murphy as "a candidate who would work with Mr. Obama to achieve his goals".[73]
  • March 29, 2009: Citing the need for "an experienced, effective representative in Congress",The Post-Star endorsed Tedisco.[74]
  • March 29, 2009: Impressed by his "public service, experience and political philosophy", as well as his opposition toa union card check bill,The Saratogian endorsed Tedisco.[75]
  • March 29, 2009: Claiming that "Tedisco has the track record that will make him a solid check and balance in Washington", theTroy Record endorsed Tedisco.[76]

Polling

[edit]
Poll sourceDate administeredScott Murphy (D)Jim Tedisco (R)Eric Sundwall (L)
Siena Research Institute[77]March 25–26[78]47%43%2%
Siena Research Institute[79]March 9–10[80]41%45%1%
Benenson Strategy Group[51]February 24–25[51]37%44%4%
Siena Research Institute[81]February 18–19[82]34%46%N/a
Public Opinion Strategies[83]February 3–4[83]29%50%N/a

Commissioned by Tedisco's campaign and theNRCC
Commissioned by theDCCC

Results

[edit]

With 100 percent of precincts reporting, initial counts from the election had Murphy leading by about 60 votes out of over 150,000 cast.[84][85] Columbia County's Board of Elections amended its tally the following day, reducing Murphy's lead to 25 votes.[86] The lead alternated between the two candidates throughout early recanvassing; at one point theNew York State Board of Elections had listed the election at a zero-vote margin, with each candidate having exactly 77,225 votes.[87] By April 2, Tedisco was ahead by 12 votes. He resigned the position of Assembly Minority Leader on April 5 in preparation for a transition to Congress,[88] and was replaced byBrian Kolb the following day.[89] On April 7, Tedisco was ahead by 97 votes.[90] The close tally meant that absentee ballots would decide the race.[91]

All ballots, absentee ballot envelopes, and voting machines were impounded under a court injunction sought by state Republicans. Under the court order, absentee ballots were counted in central locations rather than individual precincts.[91] Of the 10,000 absentee ballots sent out to voters, 6,000 were returned.[85] Absentee ballots mailed within the United States had to be received by April 7 to be counted. The deadline for overseas (including military) ballots was extended to April 13 after theUnited States Department of Justice sued the state to ensure they would have a reasonable chance of being counted.[92] Counting of the absentee ballots due by April 7 began on April 8 under aNew York State Supreme Court ruling sought by Murphy's campaign.[93]

The legality of about 600 absentee ballots were contested during the count,[94] including Senator Gillibrand's ballot.[95] By April 23, Murphy was ahead by 401 votes,[96] and Tedisco conceded the following day.[97] Murphy was sworn in on April 29.[98] The official results came out in May and had Murphy winning the election with 80,833 votes (50.23%) against Tedisco's 80,107 votes (49.77%).[99]

Unofficial results
DateScott MurphyJim TediscoDifference
April 3[87]77,22577,2250
April 6[100]76,81776,91497
April 7[101]77,01777,03417
April 8[102]77,01877,03517
April 9[103]76,99277,06068
April 10[104]77,77377,72746
April 13[105]77,90777,88225
April 14[106]77,98277,93547
April 15[107]79,10579,01986
April 16[108]79,45279,274178
April 17[109]79,83979,566273
April 23[96]80,36879,967401
Official breakdown by county[99]
CountyScott MurphyJim Tedisco
Columbia9,1616,852
Delaware3,5063,509
Dutchess10,0199,304
Essex1,3751,101
Greene4,6075,724
Otsego1,0841,147
Rensselaer7,8378,293
Saratoga26,29031,066
Warren9,3237,298
Washington7,6315,813
2009 NY-20 special congressional election[99]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
DemocraticScott Murphy70,240
IndependenceScott Murphy6,754
Working FamiliesScott Murphy3,839
TotalScott Murphy80,83350.23
RepublicanJim Tedisco68,775
ConservativeJim Tedisco11,332
TotalJim Tedisco80,10749.77
Majority726
Turnout160,940
DemocraticholdSwing−11.9

Aftermath

[edit]

Murphy's victory was credited to acoattail effect from Barack Obama'selection in 2008.[110] His support of the stimulus package, coupled with Tedisco's failed attempt at cogently explaining his own opposition to the package, also may have had an impact.[111] Further explanations for the Republican defeat ranged from accusations that Tedisco "dither[ed] on the stimulus bill", to intimations that Tedisco only became his party's nominee by manipulating the selection process.[112] In an editorial, theWall Street Journal contended that being an "Albany careerist" and running confusing campaign ads had hurt Tedisco.[113] Tedisco's loss immediately made him appear vulnerable to Democrats hoping to capture his seat in the Assembly.[114]

The day after being sworn in, Murphy hired Todd Schulte, his campaign manager, as his new chief of staff.[115] He also hired one of Governor Paterson's aides, Maggie McKeon, as his communications director.[116] For his district director, Murphy turned to Rob Scholz, a Republican. Scholz had worked on Murphy's campaign and had received praise from Larry Bulman, the chairman of the Saratoga County Democratic Committee.[117] Within a month of being elected, Murphy opened offices in Saratoga Springs andHudson.[118][119] Murphy served the remainder of his term, but lost a reelection bid on November 2, 2010, to challengerChris Gibson, a retiredArmycolonel.[120]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^After redistricting in 2002, then-CongressmanJohn E. Sweeney was quoted as saying that "no Republican can ever lose" the district.[2]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Congressional District 20"(PDF).National Atlas of the United States. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on September 4, 2014. RetrievedNovember 16, 2010.
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  3. ^abcSteinhauser, Paul (January 23, 2009)."Gillibrand's House seat could be GOP opportunity".CNN. Atlanta, GA:Turner Broadcasting System. Archived fromthe original on December 8, 2014. RetrievedJanuary 30, 2009.
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