2006 United States Senate election in Pennsylvania explained

Election Name:2006 United States Senate election in Pennsylvania
Country:Pennsylvania
Type:presidential
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:2000 United States Senate election in Pennsylvania
Previous Year:2000
Next Election:2012 United States Senate election in Pennsylvania
Next Year:2012
Election Date:November 7, 2006
Image1:Senator Bob Casey official photo 2007 (cropped).jpg
Nominee1:Bob Casey Jr.
Party1:Democratic Party (United States)
Popular Vote1:2,392,984
Percentage1:58.64%
Nominee2:Rick Santorum
Party2:Republican Party (United States)
Popular Vote2:1,684,778
Percentage2:41.28%
U.S. Senator
Before Election:Rick Santorum
Before Party:Republican Party (United States)
After Election:Bob Casey Jr.
After Party:Democratic Party (United States)

The 2006 United States Senate election in Pennsylvania was held on November 7, 2006. Incumbent Republican Rick Santorum ran for re-election to a third term, but was defeated by Democratic State Treasurer Bob Casey, Jr., the son of former Pennsylvania governorBob Casey Sr.[1] Casey was elected to serve between January 3, 2007, and January 3, 2013.

Santorum trailed Casey in every public poll taken during the campaign. Casey's margin of victory (nearly 18% of those who voted) was the largest ever for a Democratic Senate nominee in Pennsylvania, the largest margin of victory for a Senate challenger in the 2006 elections, and the largest general election margin of defeat for an incumbent U.S. senator since 1980.[2] Casey was the first Pennsylvania Democrat to win a full term in the Senate since Joseph S. Clark Jr. in 1962, and the first Democrat to win a Senate election since 1991. He was the first Democrat to win a full term for this seat since 1940.

As of, this was the last time the following counties have voted Democratic in a Senate election: Greene, Washington, Westmoreland, Somerset, Lawrence, Mercer, Armstrong, Indiana, Cambria, Warren, Forest, Elk, Clearfield, Clinton, Schuylkill, Columbia, and Carbon.To date, this is the last time that an incumbent senator from Pennsylvania lost re-election.

Republican primary

Candidates

Nominee

Withdrew

Featherman withdrew his candidacy after a Republican party petition challenge because he did not have the necessary number of signatures to get on the ballot. As a result, Santorum won the Republican nomination unopposed.[3]

Results

Democratic primary

The Democratic primary was held May 16, 2006.

Candidates

Nominee

Eliminated in primary

Declined

Results

Casey won a landslide victory in the primary.[7]

General election

Candidates

Declined

Michelman decided against running and tacitly endorsed Casey in March 2006[8]

Disqualified

Romanelli was removed from the ballot by a Commonwealth Court judge on September 25, 2006, following a challenge from Democrats for failing to collect enough valid signatures required of third-party candidates. He lost the appeal to the state Supreme Court challenging the required number of signatures, on October 3, 2006[9] Carl Romanelli was ordered to pay more than $80,000 in legal fees stemming from his failed effort to make the ballot.[10]

Campaign

Santorum's support for Arlen Specter

Republican strategists took Santorum's primary result in 2006 as a bad omen, in which he ran unopposed for the Republican nomination. Republican gubernatorial nominee Lynn Swann, also unopposed, garnered 22,000 more votes statewide than Santorum in the primary, meaning thousands of Republican voters abstained from endorsing Santorum for another Senate term. This may have been partly due to Santorum's support for Arlen Specter over Congressman Pat Toomey in the 2004 Republican primary for the U.S. Senate. Even though Santorum was only slightly less conservative than Toomey, he joined virtually all of the state and national Republican establishment in supporting the moderate Specter. This led many socially and fiscally conservative Republicans to consider Santorum's support of Specter to be a betrayal of their cause.[11] [12] [13] However, Santorum said he supported Specter to avoid risking a Toomey loss in the general election, which would have prevented President George W. Bush's judicial nominees from Senate confirmation. Santorum says Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito would not have been confirmed without the help of Specter, who was chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee at the time.[14]

Santorum's controversial views

In the Senate, Santorum was an outspoken conservative from a state with a history of electing moderates. This led many political commentators to speculate that his low approval ratings were due to some of his more controversial statements and opinions.

Among these controversies were his views on the privatization of Social Security[15] [16] and the teaching of intelligent design in public schools.[17] In addition, his involvement in the Terri Schiavo case was considered by many in his state to be out of place.[18] [19]

All this left Santorum in a precarious position throughout the race. On May 31, 2006, the polling firm Rasmussen Reports declared that Santorum was the "most vulnerable incumbent" among the senators running for re-election.[20] SurveyUSA polling taken right before the election showed that Santorum was the least popular of all 100 senators, with a 38% approval rating and a net approval rating of -19%.[21]

Santorum's residency

While Santorum maintained a small residence in Penn Hills, a township near Pittsburgh, his family primarily lived in a large house in Leesburg, a suburb of Washington, D.C. in Northern Virginia. Santorum faced charges of hypocrisy from critics who noted the similarities between his living situation and that of former Representative Doug Walgren, who Santorum defeated in 1990. Back then, Santorum had claimed that Walgren was out of touch with his district; these claims were backed up with commercials showing Walgren's home in the Virginia suburbs.[22]

On NBC's Meet the Press on September 3, 2006, Santorum admitted that he only spent "maybe a month a year, something like that" at his Pennsylvania residence.[23]

Santorum also drew criticism for enrolling five of his six children in an online "cyber school" in Pennsylvania's Allegheny County (home to Pittsburgh and most of its suburbs), despite the fact that the children lived in Virginia. The Penn Hills School District was billed $73,000 in tuition for the cyber classes.[24]

Casey's momentum

Santorum began his contrast campaign against Casey early, charging him with relentlessly seeking higher political office[25] and failing to take definitive stands on issues.[26] While these charges kept the race competitive, in late September and through October, Casey's campaign seemed to regain the momentum it had had throughout most of the campaign, as most polls showed Casey widening his lead after a summer slump. In a Quinnipiac University Polling Institute poll, released on September 26, 2006, Casey was favored by 14 points.[27] An October 18, 2006 poll conducted by Rasmussen Reports showed Casey with a similar double-digit lead. In the Rasmussen poll, only 46% of voters surveyed had a favorable view of Santorum, while 57% of voters viewed Casey favorably.[28]

Negative advertisements

At least one of Santorum's television ads called into question his campaign's use of the facts regarding Casey and people who had donated money to the Casey campaign.[29] The ad, which aired in September, showed several men seated around a table, while talking amongst themselves and smoking cigars, inside a jail cell. While none of the figures, who were played by actors, were named personally, the narrator provided the job descriptions, previous donations to Casey, and ethical and/or legal troubles of each. The Santorum campaign later provided the names of the people portrayed. An editorial in Casey's hometown newspaper, The Times-Tribune, pointed out that all but one of the contributions "[was] made to Casey campaigns when he was running for other offices, at which time none of the contributors were known to be under investigation for anything."[30] In fact, two of the persons cited in the Santorum campaign ad had actually given contributions to Santorum's 2006 Senate campaign. Another of the figures portrayed had died in 2004. Political scientist Larry Sabato called the ad "over the top" and suspected that the fallout would hurt Santorum.[31]

Debates

Predictions

SourceRankingAs of
align=left The Cook Political Report[32] November 6, 2006
align=left Sabato's Crystal Ball[33] November 6, 2006
align=left Rothenberg Political Report[34] November 6, 2006
align=left Real Clear Politics[35] November 6, 2006

Polling

SourceDateBob
Casey Jr. (D)
Rick
Santorum (R)
align=left Quinnipiac[36] February 16, 200546%41%
align=left SurveyUSA[37] March 8–9, 200549%42%
align=left Keystone[38] March 22, 200544%43%
align=left Quinnipiac[39] April 23, 200549%35%
align=left Keystone[40] June 6, 200544%37%
align=left Quinnipiac[41] July 13, 200550%39%
align=left Rasmussen[42] July 22, 200552%41%
align=left Strategic Vision (R)[43] July 31, 200551%40%
align=left Strategic Vision (R)[44] September 12, 200552%38%
align=left Keystone[45] September 13, 200550%37%
align=left Quinnipiac[46] October 3, 200552%34%
align=left Strategic Vision (R)[47] October 16, 200552%36%
align=left Keystone[48] November 10, 200551%35%
align=left Rasmussen[49] November 10, 200554%34%
align=left Strategic Vision (R)[50] November 16, 200551%36%
align=left Quinnipiac[51] December 13, 200550%38%
align=left Strategic Vision (R)[52] December 18, 200550%39%
align=left Rasmussen[53] January 15, 200653%38%
align=left Strategic Vision (R)[54] January 25, 200650%40%
align=left Keystone[55] February 9, 200650%39%
align=left Quinnipiac[56] February 13, 200651%36%
align=left Rasmussen[57] February 16, 200652%36%
align=left Muhlenberg College[58] March 2, 200649%37%
align=left Mansfield University[59] March 7, 200645%31%
align=left Rasmussen[60] March 14, 200648%38%
align=left Rasmussen[61] March 29, 200650%41%
align=left Quinnipiac[62] April 6, 200648%37%
align=left Strategic Vision (R)[63] April 13, 200650%40%
align=left Rasmussen[64] April 20, 200651%38%
align=left Muhlenberg/Morning Call[65] April 26, 200646%38%
align=left Keystone[66] May 4, 200647%41%
align=left Strategic Vision (R)[67] May 10, 200649%41%
align=left Quinnipiac[68] May 11, 200649%36%
align=left Rasmussen[69] May 22, 200656%33%
align=left American Research Group[70] May 25, 200654%41%
align=left Strategic Vision (R)[71] June 15, 200649%40%
align=left Rasmussen[72] June 19, 200652%37%
align=left Quinnipiac[73] June 21, 200652%34%
align=left Strategic Vision (R)[74] July 20, 200650%40%
align=left Rasmussen[75] July 26, 200650%39%
align=left Muhlenberg College[76] August 5, 200645%39%
align=left Quinnipiac[77] August 15, 200647%40%
align=left Benenson Strategy Group (D)[78] August 16, 200651%37%
align=left Strategic Vision (R)[79] August 17, 200647%41%
align=left Rasmussen[80] August 22, 200648%40%
align=left Keystone[81] August 24, 200644%39%
align=left USA Today/Gallup[82] August 27, 200656%38%
align=left Keystone[83] September 18, 200645%38%
align=left Princeton Research Associates[84] September 18, 200652%31%
align=left Rasmussen[85] September 20, 200649%39%
align=left Temple/Philadelphia Inquirer[86] September 24, 200649%39%
align=left Quinnipiac[87] September 26, 200654%40%
align=left Strategic Vision (R)[88] September 28, 200650%40%
align=left Mason-Dixon/McClatchy-MSNBC[89] October 2, 200649%40%
align=left Rasmussen[90] October 5, 200650%37%
align=left Zogby International/Reuters[91] October 5, 200648%36%
align=left Muhlenberg/Morning Call[92] October 8, 200646%41%
align=left Rasmussen[93] October 16, 200655%43%
align=left Democracy Corps[94] October 17, 200654%37%
align=left Strategic Vision (R)[95] October 23, 200649%42%
align=left West Chester University[96] October 27, 200650%39%
align=left Rasmussen[97] October 28, 200655%42%
align=left Temple/Philadelphia Inquirer[98] October 29, 200654%38%
align=left Strategic Vision (R)[99] October 30, 200649%39%
align=left Quinnipiac[100] November 1, 200652%42%
align=left Keystone[101] November 1, 200653%38%
align=left Reuters/Zogby International[102] November 2, 200648%40%
align=left Muhlenberg/Morning Call[103] November 3, 200651%43%
align=left Mason-Dixon/McClatchy-MSNBC[104] November 5, 200652%39%
align=left Strategic Vision (R)[105] November 6, 200652%40%

Results

At 9:45 PM EST on Election Night, Santorum called Casey to concede defeat.[106]

Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic

By congressional district

Bob Casey Jr won 14 of 19 congressional districts, including the 3rd, 6th, 15th and 18th districts, which elected Republicans to the House.[107]

DistrictCasey Jr.SantorumRepresentative
1st87.7%12.3%Bob Brady
2nd89.6%10.4%
Chaka Fattah
3rd54.0%46.0%Phil English
4th54.9%45.1%Melissa Hart (109th Congress)
Jason Altmire (110th Congress)
5th49.9%50.1%John E. Peterson
6th58.5%41.5%Jim Gerlach
7th59.1%40.9%Curt Weldon (109th Congress)
Joe Sestak (110th Congress)
8th58.8%41.2%Mike Fitzpatrick (109th Congress)
Patrick Murphy (110th Congress)
9th44.9%55.1%Bill Shuster
10th49.1%50.9%Don Sherwood (109th Congress)
Chris Carney (110th Congress)
11th62.3%37.7%Paul Kanjorski
12th62.9%37.1%John Murtha
13th63.0%37.0%Allyson Schwartz
14th76.4%23.6%Mike Doyle
15th56.9%43.1%Charlie Dent
16th45.8%54.2%Joe Pitts
17th51.3%48.7%Tim Holden
18th55.2%44.8%Tim Murphy
19th45.6%54.4%Todd R. Platts

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. [James O'Toole (reporter)|James O'Toole]
  2. Borys Krawczeniuk. The Times-Tribune. "Casey dominated like no one before." November 9, 2006. Accessed February 8, 2007.
  3. Kimberly Hefling, The Associated Press. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. "Santorum's only GOP challenger bowing out of primary." March 16, 2006. Accessed February 8, 2007.
  4. [James O'Toole (reporter)|James O'Toole]
  5. Bob Casey for US Senate. "Hafer endorses Casey for U.S. Senate." June 7, 2006. Accessed February 8, 2007.
  6. [Peter Jackson (journalist)|Peter Jackson]
  7. Pennsylvania Department of State. Commonwealth of PA - Elections Information. Accessed February 8, 2007.
  8. [James O'Toole (reporter)|James O'Toole]
  9. [James O'Toole (reporter)|James O'Toole]
  10. Web site: The Citizens Voice - Breaking News: Romanelli ordered to pay more than $80,000 . July 18, 2007 . https://web.archive.org/web/20070930035713/http://www.zwire.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=17748994&BRD=2259&PAG=461&dept_id=455154&rfi=6 . September 30, 2007 . dead .
  11. News: Outside Santorum's Sanctum. Jerry Bowyer. New York Sun. October 10, 2006. February 23, 2011. January 19, 2008. https://web.archive.org/web/20080119235739/http://www.nysun.com/article/41237. dead.
  12. News: Santorum's Shame. Stephen Moore. National Review. April 15, 2004.
  13. News: Betrayal in Pennsylvania. Timothy P. . Carney. AFF's Brainwash. November 1, 2009.
  14. http://www.latimes.com/news/politics/la-pn-santorum-dogged-by-specter-endorsement-in-iowa-20120102,0,7833929.story In Iowa, Specter endorsement haunts Rick Santorum
  15. Maeve Reston. Pittsburgh-Post Gazette. "Santorum finds many minds made up on Social Security." February 22, 2005. Accessed February 8, 2007.
  16. Americans United. "Americans United announces "Mobilization against Privatization." April 19, 2005. Accessed February 8, 2007.
  17. The Associated Press. The Washington Post. Santorum breaks with Christian Right law center." December 23, 2005. Accessed February 8, 2007.
  18. [Tom Barnes (American journalist)|Tom Barnes]
  19. Page Rockwell. Salon. "Rick Santorum's Schiavo woes." April 25, 2005. Accessed February 8, 2005.
  20. Rasmussen Reports. "Pennsylvania Senate: Casey by 23." May 31, 2006. Accessed February 8, 2007.
  21. SurveyUSA. "Approval Ratings for all 100 U.S. Senators as of 10/24/06." October 24, 2006. Accessed February 8, 2007.
  22. Brian O'Neill. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Santorum: Hoisted on his own back yard." May 25, 2006. Accessed February 8, 2007.
  23. Meet the Press with Tim Russert. "MTP Transcript for Sept. 3." September 6, 2006. Accessed February 8, 2007.
  24. News: Dems Press Cyber Cost Issue . Vera Miller . . September 20, 2006 .
  25. RickSantorum.com. "Hey There, Hi There, Ho There." August 26, 2006. Accessed February 12, 2007.
  26. Bill Toland. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. "Santorum, Casey go toe-to-toe in debate." October 13, 2006. Accessed February 12, 2007.
  27. Quinnipiac University Polling Institute. "Casey leads Santorum among likely voters, Quinnipiac University Pennsylvania poll finds; incumbent's momentum has stalled." September 26, 2006. Accessed February 8, 2007.
  28. Rasmussen Reports. "Pennsylvania Senate: Santorum trailing by 13." October 18, 2006. Accessed February 8, 2007.
  29. RickSantorum.com. "Corner Bar." September 13, 2006. Accessed February 8, 2007.
  30. News: Santorum hurls the low hard one . . 15 September 2006 . https://web.archive.org/web/20070927000600/http://www.thetimes-tribune.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=17200385&BRD=2185&PAG=461&dept_id=418218&rfi=6 . 2007-09-27 . dead.
  31. News: Eichel . Larry . Santorum ad impugns ethics of Casey 'team'. It portrays investigated men. None, however, has a formal campaign role . 2019-12-16 . . 14 September 2006 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160130193720/http://articles.philly.com/2006-09-14/news/25413197_1_larry-smar-santorum-democrat-bob-casey . 2016-01-30 . dead.
  32. Web site: 2006 Senate Race Ratings for November 6, 2006 . The Cook Political Report . https://web.archive.org/web/20080605093937/https://cookpolitical.com/races/report_pdfs/2006_sen_ratings_nov6.pdf . September 30, 2021. June 5, 2008 .
  33. Web site: Election Eve 2006: THE FINAL PREDICTIONS . Sabato's Crystal Ball . June 25, 2021.
  34. Web site: 2006 Senate Ratings . Senate Ratings . The Rothenberg Political Report . June 25, 2021.
  35. Web site: Election 2006 . Real Clear Politics . June 25, 2021.
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