In a Democratic primary, Gov. Codey trails U.S. Sen. Jon Corzine 43 - 33 percent, compared to a 60 - 20 percent gap in a Nov. 17, 2004, poll by the independent Quinnipiac (KWIN-uh-pe-ack) University.
Codey beats two possible Republican challengers 2 - 1:
The general election race to watch is Virginia. Virginia is particularly important for Democrats, since its partisan index indicates that, for the first time since Carter, it is not a swing state. Also, Governor Warner is a promising member of the Democratic bench on the Senate, Vice-Presidential and Presidential levels. Defeat for the 2005 Democratic candidate would take much of the shine off Warner's future. The candidates are already in place, unless there are minor primary challengers of whom I am unaware. Here is some more:
In New Jersey, a "blue" state that Democrat John Kerry won easily last fall, Democrats appear to hold the upper hand, with multimillionaire U.S. Sen. Jon Corzine considered the early favorite for governor. But a Democratic victory in New Jersey, analysts say, would not match the symbolism of a win in a Republican stronghold like Virginia.
"Virginia will probably get more attention than anything else this year," said Earl Black, a scholar of Southern politics at Rice University in Texas. "Democrats would be looking to embarrass President Bush if they could hold the governorship in Virginia, next door to the White House."
The clearest sign of Democratic resolve came earlier this month, when the national party pledged $5 million for the Virginia race - the party's largest investment ever made in a governor's contest.
"This money signifies a long-term commitment by the DNC to building party infrastructure, building the grassroots from the bottom up, and helping races from governor to House delegate," said Terry McAuliffe, who steps down next month as national party chairman.
Republicans dismissed the financial pledge, saying it will do little to mask what they describe as Kaine's record of higher taxes and opposition to the death penalty.
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