With what seems to be a decent number of absentee and provisional ballots remaining,
Busby has 43.92% of the vote, the non-Republican total is at 47.27%, Bilbray is at 15.15%, and turnout looks to be around 135K. I don't know what the ratio of absentee / provisional ballots are among the remaining votes, so I don't have a good idea of whether or not Busby's totals will rise or fall. Either way, she is right at
the 43.8% total I was looking at yesterday morning. That means this is a great result, if not as clearly so as I would have liked. I think Busby is the favorite here, though not much.
June 6th now looms large in
the primary calendar. Just two days before the start of YearlyKos, two netroots candidates, Francine Busby and Jon Tester, will be facing the voters. Alabama, Iowa, Mississippi, New Jersey, New Mexico, and South Dakota have also scheduled primaries for that day. In between now and then, May 2nd features Indiana, North Carolina and Ohio. Nebraska and West Virginia are on May 9th. My primary, in Pennsylvania, is on May 16th, as are primaries in Kentucky and Oregon. Arkansas and Idaho are on May 23rd.
Republicans are clearly weak in 2006. They spent over $5M on this race, much more than they will be able to spend on any district in November, and still are going to come well under the 55%+ Republican performance in the district. With fourteen Republicans in the race, virtually every type of Republican was available for the voters in this heavily Republican district to choose from, and yet they still under-performed. Republicans are fractured too--not a single candidate could pull in more than 15% of the vote yesterday.
Then again, even with all of that in mind, we still haven't put together the pieces for a landslide election in the House. For narrow control, maybe, but not for a landslide. Our basic problem seems to be that turnout is low. It isn't massively lower than 2002, but it is lower. After Texas and Illinois, this is starting to look like a pattern. It is entirely possible that running on Republican corruption could be a double-edged sword that depresses Republican turnout, but also depresses all turnout as people grow disgusted with politicians in general. There probably needs to be more work from good field people to really determine if we are facing a turnout problem, but there also need to be more work done to motivate Democratic voters.
We are making progress, but clearly have a lot of work left to do. Taking back the country was always going to be a marathon, not a sprint. Onwards and upwards.