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Republicans lose Mississippi House seat despite anti-Obama
campaign
By Patrick Martin
15 May 2008
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In a contest widely viewed as an indicator of the November
general election, the Republican Party lost the runoff vote for
a House seat in northeast Mississippi, with Democrat Travis Childers
easily defeating his Republican opponent Greg Davis.
Childers, the chancery clerk of Prentiss County (a position
roughly equivalent to controller), had 57,276 votes compared to
49,314 votes for Davis, mayor of Southaven, a suburb of Memphis,
Tennessee. Voter turnout was high for a special election.
The First Congressional District of Mississippi had been held
by the Republican Party since 1995, but the seat fell vacant when
the incumbent Roger Wicker was elevated to the US Senate after
the resignation of former majority leader Trent Lott, who quit
to become a highly paid Washington lobbyist.
Childers will enter Congress immediately, serving out the remaining
eight months of Wickers term. He will face Davis again in
the November general election for a full two-year term.
The result was the third major defeat for Republican candidates
in congressional special elections in recent months, following
the loss of the seat of former House speaker Dennis Hastert in
Illinois March 8, and the loss of a Baton Rouge, Louisiana seat
May 3. Each of the three districts had voted heavily for President
Bush in 2004.
The Mississippi district was the most conservative of the three,
but the result Tuesday showed a huge 20 percent swing against
the Republican Party. Davis took only 46 percent of the vote,
compared to 66 percent for Wicker in his last reelection campaign
in 2006.
In the runoff, Childers actually increased his margin of victory
from the first round held April 22, when he polled 49 percent
compared to 46 percent for Davis, with the rest divided among
three other candidates. Childers had fallen only 400 votes short
of the 50 percent required for outright victory in the first round,
making the two-man runoff necessary.
During the three weeks between the first round and the runoff,
both the state and national Republican parties intervened heavily
in an attempt to hold the seat. Wicker, Lott and Governor Haley
Barbour campaigned for Davis, while the national party poured
in $1.3 million to buy commercials linking Childers to national
Democrats like House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and presidential frontrunner
Barack Obama.
The First District was bombarded with recorded telephone calls
from President Bush, who carried the district with 62 percent
of the vote in 2004, as well as from Laura Bush and Senator John
McCain, the presumptive Republican presidential nominee. Defeated
presidential candidate Mike Huckabee, former governor of neighboring
Arkansas, also put in an appearance.
The day before the vote, Vice President Dick Cheney campaigned
in Daviss home town of Southaven, declaring, What
we need in Washington is a strong conservative congressman from
Mississippi, not another Democrat going to bat for Nancy Pelosi.
Davis introduced Cheney with a blast against Pelosi, Obama and
Senator John Kerry, calling them liberals with liberal ideas
who do not represent our Mississippi values.
The district is largely rural and lower income, including only
a few small cities like Tupelo and Columbus, as well as Oxford,
home of the University of Mississippi, and one sizeable suburban
area, Desoto County, adjacent to Memphis. While most local government
officials are conservative Democrats, the district has voted for
Republican presidential candidates since the civil rights era,
when it was the scene of fierce battles over desegregation.
Both parties played to this heritage of racism in the final
days of the campaign. The Davis campaign ran television ads portraying
the Rev. Jeremiah Wright, Obamas former pastor, criticizing
Childers for not publicly denouncing Wright and claiming that
Obama had endorsed Childers. Childers denied any contact with
the Obama campaign and declared himself a Mississippi Democrat,
presenting himself as a representative of rural values against
his suburban Republican opponent. (Childers speaks with a strong
Southern drawl, while Davis does not).
The anti-Obama campaign appeared to produce a backlash among
black voters, who comprise 27 percent of the district. There was
increased turnout among rural black voters compared to the April
22 first-round vote, and Childers carried 20 of the 24 counties
in the district compared to only 16 counties three weeks ago.
Black turnout was also spurred by reports that Davis had supported
the placing of a statue of Confederate General Nathan Bedford
Forrest, founder of the Ku Klux Klan, in Southaven.
While presenting himself as a conservative on cultural issues
like abortion and gun control, Childers adopted the economic populist
demagogy of the national Democratic Party, including opposition
to free trade agreements and denunciations of big business. He
criticized the war in Iraq from the standpoint that it was diverting
resources that could be better spent at home.
In a written statement issued on the day of Cheneys visit,
Childers said, Greg Davis votes to raise taxes on oil, takes
thousands from Big Oil companies and today brings Big Oils
best friend, Dick Cheney, to North Mississippi.
Childers was also sustained by enormous financial support from
the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, which spent more
than $1.5 million on the race.
The cumulative result of the three congressional special elections,
in Illinois, Louisiana and Mississippi, has been to greatly undermine
Republican morale and prospects for the general election. The
two parties spent nearly $5 million apiece on the three races,
but from very unequal bankrolls: according to figures filed with
the Federal Election Commission, the House Democrats had raised
$44.3 million through March 31, compared to only $7.1 million
for the House Republicans.
The chairman of the National Republican Congressional Committee,
Rep. Tom Cole of Oklahoma, issued a warning after the Mississippi
vote that Republican candidates needed to take stock of
their campaigns and position themselves for challenging campaigns
this fall... The political environment is such that voters remain
pessimistic about the direction of the country and the Republican
Party in general.
Some 25 Republicans have already decided to retire or resign
from the House of Representatives, more than one in ten of the
Republican caucus. Nearly all these open seats are vulnerable
to a Democratic takeover in November. The mood on Capitol Hill
was summed up by one Republican aide who told Politico.com
last week, If we dont win in Mississippi, I think
you are going to see a lot of people running around here looking
for windows to jump out of.
The Mississippi result came as a shock not only to the Republican
Party, but to the Democrats and to much of the national media.
On the eve of the vote, the New York Times wrote pessimistically
that while an anti-Obama campaign had failed to shift voters in
the Louisiana special election, there are signs that here
in Mississippi, with its tortured legacy of race-based politics,
the tactic may be working, particularly in a district with a comparatively
smaller black population than in Louisiana, 26 percent.
Childers himself told the Times that voters in his district
believed the Republicans were trying to play the race card.
While his campaign claimed that its internal polling showed the
contest narrowing as a result of the anti-Obama ads, Childers
margin actually increased.
See Also:
Tensions rise in Democratic contest as
Obama nears nomination
[10 May 2008]
Obama builds lead over Clinton after
North Carolina, Indiana primaries
[7 May 2008]
Bush, Democrats seek to fund Iraq war
into next administration
[6 May 2008]
Obama repudiates Reverend Wright in bid
for support from the political establishment
[1 May 2008]
Obama vows to back Bush war
commander
[29 April 2008]
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