IA-02: First Loebsack tv ad, and how close is this race anyway?

If campaign strategy is anything to go by, four-term U.S. Representative Dave Loebsack is a creature of habit. Loebsack’s debut television commercial launched late last week, and I’ve enclosed the video and transcript after the jump, with my initial thoughts about the message. The biographical information and visuals echo Loebsack’s opening commercial from his 2010 re-election campaign. The ad highlights the same public policy he led with in 2012. The same narrator performs the voice-over. The mid-September launch is precisely when he went up on the air in 2010 and 2012. (Loebsack’s not the greatest fundraiser in Congress, so he can’t afford to advertise district-wide for more than a couple of months.)

Several Bleeding Heartland readers have asked me about last week’s Loras College poll, showing Loebsack ahead of Miller-Meeks by 48.7 percent to 32.1 percent among 300 likely voters in the second Congressional district. I have a hard time believing those results, partly because Loras doesn’t have a long track record with polling. In addition, the statewide sample for the Loras poll includes too high a proportion of no-party voters for a mid-term election. Although a plurality of Iowa registered voters are independents, no-party voters comprised only about a quarter of the electorate in the last three Iowa midterm elections (click through for reports on turnout in 2010, 2006, and 2002). Perhaps most important, Loebsack defeated the less-credible challenger John Archer by a little more than 12 percent in 2012, a presidential election year. So I consider it unlikely he’s 16 points ahead of Miller-Meeks, who came fairly close to beating him in 2010.

By the same token, I don’t believe the Tarrance Group survey that the Miller-Meeks campaign hyped in mid-August, showing her trailing Loebsack by just 45 to 42 percent. Internal polls are always suspect, especially when the campaign releases almost no information about the sample demographics, question wording or question order.

Miller-Meeks and her suporters are optimistic because the district leans less Democratic than the one where Loebsack won his first three elections to Congress. The old IA-02 had a partisan voting index of D+7, whereas the current district is D+4. The latest figures from the Iowa Secretary of State’s Office indicate that the 24 counties in IA-02 contain 165,834 active registered Democrats, 139,034 Republicans, and 180,843 no-party voters. In contrast, Democrats had a voter registration advantage of nearly 48,000 in IA-02 going into the 2010 general election, when Loebsack defeated Miller-Meeks by about 11,500 votes. Notably, Loebsack’s current district includes the Quad Cities area (Scott County), traditionally more Republican-leaning than the Cedar Rapids area (Linn County), which was part of his old district. Under the previous map, Bruce Braley narrowly lost Scott County to his GOP challenger Ben Lange in 2010.

That analysis overlooks a few salient points, though. Since Iowa lawmakers adopted the current map of political boundaries, Loebsack has had three and a half years to build up his name recognition and support in the Quad Cities. He’s attended hundreds of public events there. He’s gone to bat for the Rock Island Arsenal, a major local employer. Nor are the new IA-02 counties a natural base of support for Miller-Meeks, who has spent most of her career in the Ottumwa area. In fact, her woefully under-funded opponent Mark Lofgren carried Scott County and neighboring Clinton County, as well as his home base of Muscatine, in this year’s Republican primary to represent IA-02.

I suspect we would have seen a greater sense of urgency from Loebsack’s campaign and the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee if Democratic polling indicated a close race here. The DCCC swooped in to rescue Loebsack in 2010, running a couple of negative spots against Miller-Meeks in the final weeks. I’ll believe Miller-Meeks has a real shot if we see more independent expenditures for both candidates than occurred in IA-02 during the Loebsack’s race against Archer. While the National Republican Congressional Committee placed Miller-Meeks on the top tier of their program for challengers, I have seen no sign that the NRCC plans to spend significant money on this race.

Dave Loebsack campaign commercial “Doors,” launched on September 12:

My transcript:

Male voice-over: In Iowa, it’s about these doors. Honest pay for honest work. [Viewer sees footage of doors opening on farm building, man carrying bale of hay outside.]

Raised by a single mother, Dave Loebsack worked to put himself through college. [Camera pans over black and white photo of Loebsack as a young child with his brothers, then footage of the candidate walking out of a barn, with farm equipment in view and words DAVE LOEBSACK on screen]

He understands the middle-class struggle first-hand. [Footage of casually-dressed Loebsack walking with man and woman in front of farm buildings, DAVE LOEBSACK remains on screen]

But in Washington, it’s too often a revolving door, with Congress cashing in for personal profit. [Footage of man wearing suit entering building through revolving door, phone to ear, word CONGRESS on screen, then LOBBYIST]

It’s why Dave Loebsack pushed to ban members of Congress from becoming lobbyists permanently. [footage of Loebsack talking with two men in front of barn with farm scene in background; words on screen include quote from Cedar Rapids Gazette, April 2, 2012, Dave Loebsack “ban former Congress members from lobbying”]

Loebsack: I’m Dave Loebsack, and I approved this message because it’s time to do what’s right. [Loebsack speaks directly to camera, in rural setting with old-fashioned barn in background.]

This is not a ground-breaking or attention-getting commercial. On the other hand, it’s a safe start that plays to a few of Loebsack’s strengths. He came from humble beginnings, so he can relate to the challenges of constituents who live from paycheck to paycheck. The photo of him as a child has been a image in Loebsack’s commercials for years, with good reason. The shot is adorable. The farm footage is picturesque. The ad would create favorable associations even when watched with the sound muted.

Even Loebsack’s detractors would have to admit that he has not used his position in Congress to enrich himself or live in luxury. He isn’t the type to cash in on his public service with a high-paid lobbying gig, as so many others have done (most recently former House Majority Leader Eric Cantor).

A permanent ban on lobbying by former members of Congress is about as likely to pass as single-payer health care, but no doubt it sounds like a great idea to the average person, regardless of party. As I mentioned above, the debut tv ad from Loebsack’s 2012 re-election campaign featured the same proposal.

Any comments about the IA-02 race are welcome in this thread.  

About the Author(s)

desmoinesdem

  • Chicken at Steak Fry

    When pulling into the Steak Fry yesterday, I’m pretty sure I saw a person dressed in a chicken suit with a sign stating something along the lines of Loebsack being chicken to debate. Did I see that correctly?

    Haven’t they already debated during this cycle with more planned? Furthermore, how many times have these two debated in the past? I suppose with a newly configured district, there are new voters to appeal to but a lot of this has to be old news that we’ve heard before.

    • Debate was last week

      I think the chicken was in reference to an absurd MMM proposal for some insane number of debates. Can’t remember exactly but I think it was 20 debates one in every county. The kind of proposal a challenger makes expecting it to get rejected, just to have something to complain about.

    • yes, they already debated once

      for Iowa Public Television, and Loebsack has agreed to at least one other debate. Miller-Meeks has requested more debates in venues she believes would be favorable to her. Which suggests to me that she knows the race isn’t (yet) as close as her internal poll made it out to be.

  • IA-02

    I am new to the discussion board, but I have always loved this site, and have appreciated the information you post.

    I live in Bettendorf, which is pretty republican unfortunately. Literally the only Democrat I have seen any activism for has been Maria Bribriesco. She has signage and they are door knocking a lot (they have been to my place three times).

    I have seen absolutely nothing substantial for Jack Hatch, Bruce Braley, or Dave Loebsack. There are MMM signs everywhere, Joni Ernst signs are even more plentiful, and there are yet even more Branstad signs. And a ton of this problem isn’t centered in Bettendorf, but in Davenport. And that is a problem. It’s as if they aren’t even trying here in Scott County, and that is a huge issue. There are no yard signs whatsoever for the above mentioned candidates. I am very worried. I am pulling out as many people that have never voted as possible, but that can’t save us all haha.  

    • the Democratic campaigns

      aren’t spending a lot on signs this year. I have not seen many yard signs for Braley, Hatch, or Staci Appel anywhere in central Iowa. So I wouldn’t conclude that Democrats are not trying in Scott County based on the yard sign differential. Iowa House and Senate races are different–candidates tend to put more into signs. But the statewide campaigns are spending their money on paid media and field operations. As the saying goes, “Yard signs don’t vote.”

      Whether the Iowa Democratic Party’s coordinated campaign is doing well enough with direct voter contacts in Scott County, I couldn’t tell you. As of today, someone in the Scott County auditor’s elections office told me that registered Democrats have requested 3,746 absentee ballots in the county, Republicans have requested 1,729 ballots, and no-party voters have requested 1,910 ballots.

      • To those Scott County numbers

        You can positively add an additional 3 Democratic early votes from my family. Within the first couple days that we learn we can early vote in-person we will be down there at the Auditors counter doing just that.

        As for signs in Bettendorf and Davenport, leja’s right about the Rs vastly outnumbering the Ds, however that pattern has been that way as long as I can remember. I don’t take it as any alarming big deal. Personally I won’t advertise anything, candidate, team, or product. That means yard signs, bumper stickers, caps or sweat or tee shirts, which means that our three votes at the least, will never be included in any estimated prediction based on yard signage.

        I doubt I’m the only one of either Party who won’t display.

        • Good

          That’s good to hear. I really hope there are some last minute stops by some high profile people for our candidates in this area. I will have about 8-10 people I am going to take to the auditor’s office as soon as possible. I hope we can pull this off everyone. I am pretty concerned about Scott County. Hopefully my worries will be for naught.  

Comments