
OK, now I’ve heard it all. Don Stenberg is unhappy about the phone calls Pete Ricketts is making (Ricketts phone calls irk Stenberg – OWH –
Don, as you go down in your final race, to quote Don Corleone, “You could act like a man!”



Governor 2006:
Nebraska: Betting against Rep. Tom Osborne (R) in Nebraska is akin to betting against Saint Patrick in Ireland. Yet even the latter had his setbacks, and we expect one for Osborne on May 9 primary day that will likely end his political career.There is a significant amount of resentment over the former football coach's decision to run for governor against a popular incumbent from his own party. There are no major issues in the race that particularly recommend a change of horses, beyond Osborne's wild popularity throughout the state thanks to his years of coaching the Cornhuskers.
Osborne's run therefore smacks of vanity. Many believe that it results mainly from his own well-known weariness with being a congressman. Moreover, many Nebraskans feel Osborne is too old for the job. If victorious, he would turn 70 within a month of taking the oath of office. On the other hand, the primary in his district to replace him will drive up turnout in his part of the state, which could help him.
Gov. Dave Heineman (R), who replaced Gov. Mike Johanns (R) after he was named secretary of Agriculture, has pleased all the right people and has received positive press lately. He and Osborne are in a dead heat as the election approaches, which is already a bad sign for Nebraska's most revered resident. It's not likely that Osborne will suddenly enjoy a late surge, given that everyone knows who he is and likes him already. The only way for Osborne to win is for Heineman to make a tremendous gaffe.
The most recent published survey, which puts Heineman one point down, is of "registered" and not "likely" Republican voters -- which misrepresents the electorate in a way that likely overstates Osborne's support.
Compound this with the fact that the quixotic third candidate, Dave Nabity (R) may break into double digits. Nabity was recently endorsed by a farmers' group (a harmless endorsement for them, since he has no chance of winning) that is spending money to put him on the air. Their actual goal is to use the Nabity campaign as a front to push a local water issue. Leaning Heineman.
House 2006: Nebraska-3:
State Sen. Adrian Smith must be considered the frontrunner in the race for the Republican nomination to succeed Rep. Tom Osborne (R) in the Western half of Nebraska district. He faces Osborne aide John Hanson and Grand Island Mayor Jay Vavricek. The latter supposedly has money to put into his campaign, but has been loath so far to use it. Smith has raised the most money, and he is by far the most active of the three top candidates right now. The primary is May 9. Leaning Smith.


He compared the sale of 10,000 metric tons of beans there for $5 million to the sale of the same size order to Iraq earlier this year for $6.5 million — a sale he helped coordinate.“I guess I can compare beans to beans in those cases,” he said.Said Osborne of the Cuban sale: “I can’t see where that would have resulted in a profit.”But the Nebraska bean salesman said:
…he could understand what Osborne was saying, “that the two dollar amounts were different.” But prices often change substantially from day to day and “we don’t lose money on any business deal.”(Osborne hails sale of corn to Colombia – LJS – 4/25/06.)



Where do you like to vacation outside of Nebraska?(Candidate fun facts - LJS - 4/24/06)
Ricketts: "Africa. I've climbed Kilimanjaro and gone on safari in the Serengeti."
Stenberg: "We like to vacation in Colorado at Copper Mountain and go driving on jeep trails."
Kramer: "We like to take the kids (two boys) to Panama to see grandmother, who lives on a farm."

Stenberg for Senate 2006
April 20, 2006
Letter from Don: Entering the "Spin Zone."
With less than three weeks to go before the primary election, we are entering the "spin zone."
This is when competing campaigns all claim that their candidate is ahead in the polls, they have a great organization, they have great momentum, and so forth.
For several weeks now the Ricketts campaign has been making tens of thousands of "push poll" calls. These calls are so extensive that members of my campaign Treasurer's family have received these calls. Members of campaign staff's families have received these calls. The Ricketts campaign even called my brother, Neal Stenberg, with the Ricketts push poll.
On Wednesday, when the Ricketts push poll was released, I was being interviewed by the editor of a weekly newspaper in Northeast Nebraska. He asked me about the poll. I told him it was an invalid push poll. He smiled, nodded, and said, "Yes, I know. I received one of the push poll calls." Probably many of you did too.
Here's how the Ricketts push poll worked. They would call a registered voter and ask who he or she would vote for in the United States Senate race – Pete Ricketts, Dave Kramer, or Don Stenberg.
When the person said, "Don Stenberg," they would say something like, "If you knew Pete Ricketts was a fourth-generation Nebraskan, would you vote for him?" If the person said, "no," they would ask another question, such as, "if you knew Pete Ricketts was pro-life, would you vote for him?" If that didn't work, they asked still more questions.
I had several supporters call me and tell me they finally told the "pollster" they would vote for Ricketts just to get the annoying "pollster" off the phone. However, on election day, they will vote for Don Stenberg.
The Ricketts push poll was so questionable the Associated Press refused to publish it. They said it did not meet their standards.
The Omaha World Herald apparently has lower standards than the Associated Press and published the push poll as news. The Ricketts campaign claimed to be ahead by 10 points.
I can guarantee you that if the Stenberg campaign did a poll that way, it would show us ahead by 40 or 50 points.
The reality is, as nearly as we can tell, that we are in the lead by about 20 points.
However, with the election just two weeks from Tuesday, I am asking you to campaign for us as though we were 10 points behind. (I trailed in a legitimate poll by 13 points with 10 days to go in the 1990 Attorney General primary and won 38 percent to 37 percent to 25 percent.)
Our radio ads started last Monday and some of our TV ads will start this coming Monday. Please make a financial contribution today to support this effort.
Also, please put a yard sign in your yard, help us put up yard signs, volunteer to help with our early voter program, and encourage your friends and neighbors to vote for Don Stenberg on May 9. Word of mouth is still the best advertising (and it doesn't cost millions of dollars).
Thank you for your support. May God bless.
Don

"We think it's a last-ditch effort by a campaign which has spent millions on TV ads that, by all indications, aren't connecting with voters," said Stenberg aide Dan Parsons.So does Donno think that Ricketts is LYING about the poll results? That’s what one gathers from this statement. At least David Kramer’s camp makes the good point that he hasn’t begun airing his ads yet, and that when he does the numbers will change (though it’s probably too little too late for DK).


Well, the designs for the Bridge to Nowhere are in! (City gets three bridge designs – OWH –



"We're probably the only country in the world that allows this kind of demonstration.”
(3rd District candidates: Reform needed – GII – 4/11/06)
Now we don’t mean to bash someone for an off-hand comment…but geeeeeeez! Have ya watched any television lately Adrian? Are you familiar with what’s going on in France? And they practically have a mass-protest-a-day in Germany. Just to help you, here are a few images from France, Germany, the UK, Brazil, Canada and Australia:





Pete Ricketts (R-NE) is set to receive a "major endorsement" at 3:30 pm ET
in Lincoln, NE.

Four candidates in particular have caught our attention: Mike McGavick in Washington, Mike Bouchard in Michigan, Pete Ricketts in Nebraska and John Raese in West Virginia....
The cream of this crop is McGavick...
After McGavick, Nebraskans have a very solid Republican recruit in Pete Ricketts. He still has a primary to deal with that could, of course, cut his potential for stardom short. But something tells us that $4-5 million (the amount of money it appears he is on pace to spend in the primary) is enough to buy a primary victory in the Cornhusker State.
Once in the general, Ricketts might be the only one with a message that gives him even a remote shot at knocking off the elusive Sen. Ben Nelson (D). Ricketts essentially plans to go after Nelson's strength (he's a non-ideological pragmatist) and try to make it a weakness. For instance, Ricketts will try to claim that Nelson's push for Nebraska pork isn't leadership. It's not the easiest message to sell, but running against Nelson isn't easy, and Ricketts seems genuine in his ability to sell the message...
It's more than likely that none of these four will win, especially if the landscape remains as it is today: slanted a great deal toward the Democrats. And frankly, we've seen solid recruiting classes go down in defeat even when the wind was just barely blowing in the wrong direction. Just look at 2002 and 2004 -- perhaps the best two recruiting cycles in the history of the DSCC. From Ron Kirk, Jeanne Shaheen and Alex Sanders to Erskine Bowles, Betty Castor and Inez Tenenbaum, Democrats had a lot of interesting recruits who just couldn't win against a mild headwind.
And that's the problem facing McGavick, Bouchard, Ricketts and Raese. It may not be a mild headwind come November; it could be a hurricane. Still, if any of these four win this cycle, they'll become instant players.