DCCC: This week, the DCCC added another five candidates to their Red to Blue program. Red to Blue is meant to highlight the candidates the committee thinks are the strongest in key House races in large part to encourage donors and other liberal organizations to support them. Below are the candidates, each seat's 2012 and 2016 presidential numbers included.
AR-02: Clarke Tucker (52-42 Trump, 55-43 Romney)
CA-39: Gil Cisneros (51-43 Clinton, 51-47 Romney)
NJ-07: Tom Malinowski (49-48 Clinton, 53-46 Romney)
NY-24: Juanita Perez Williams (49-45 Clinton, 57-41 Obama)
OH-07: Ken Harbaugh (62-33 Trump, 54-44 Romney)
There are a few interesting things about this latest batch, and we'll start with perhaps the most important development.
Democrats have fretted that two Republicans could advance through the June top-two primary in a number of California House seats, and national Democrats have said they're looking for ways to prevent this kind of disaster. Navy veteran Gil Cisneros is the first California House candidate they've endorsed in a contested primary (the committee previously backed TJ Cox, who is the only candidate whatsoever challenging GOP Rep. David Valadeo in the 21st District), so they're betting that he has the best chance to advance to the general. Cisneros also already had the support of 11 different California House members.
Over in New York's 24th, former Syracuse corporation counsel Juanita Perez Williams announced in January that she wouldn't run despite the DCCC's attempts to recruit her, but she changed her mind this month. Syracuse University professor Dana Balter has been campaigning against GOP Rep. John Katko for months, and she has the support of all four county Democratic parties.
After the news broke that Perez Williams had changed her mind, the county-party chairs put out a statement accusing the DCCC of "meddling" in the June primary. But Balter only had $75,000 in the bank at the end of March to Katko's $1.25 million, and the DCCC seems to have decided that angering the local Democratic leaders is a risk they need to take in order to get a different nominee.
The situation is very different in New Jersey. Former State Department official Tom Malinowski has support of each county party in the district, which gives him the important organization line in every corner of the seat. Malinowski, who is challenging GOP Rep. Leonard Lance, also has considerably more money in the bank than either of his June primary foes. Malinowski had $734,000 on-hand at the end of the quarter to attorney Goutam Jois' $301,000, while 2016 nominee Peter Jacob had only $27,000. (Lance had $850,000 to spend.) A surprise is always possible in June, but backing Malinowski before the primary seems like a pretty safe call for the DCCC.
The DCCC reportedly spent months trying to convince state Rep. Claude Tucker to challenge Arkansas Rep. French Hill, so it's not a surprise they're backing him now. Tucker had $445,000 in the bank after just a few months in the race, but he does have a noteworthy opponent in the May primary. High school teacher Paul Spencer has been running since late June, and he had $120,000 to spend at the end of March.
Finally, retired Navy pilot Ken Harbaugh faces only minor primary opposition in Ohio, but he's an interesting inductee for another reason. GOP Rep. Bob Gibbs has never been seriously targeted before now, and his very-gerrymandered seat backed Trump by a punishing 62-33 margin.
But Harbaugh, who ran a disaster relief organization, has been a strong fundraiser. Gibbs had a large $1.37 million to $727,000 cash-on-hand lead, but Harbaugh has enough resources to run a serious campaign. This is by far Trump's best district of all the 38 currently on Red to Blue (Trump's second-largest margin of victory was in Kansas' 2nd, which backed him "just" 56-37), so it's noteworthy that the DCCC is betting that it can flip.