Tag: IA-Gov

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Culver vs. Nussle Iowa Governor Debate

Update [2006-10-3 18:9:51 by Ross Smith]: Video is now available online.

Update [2006-10-3 0:27:2 by Ross Smith]: I am plunking follow up on blog takes and some of the early press commentary into the comments instead of adding separate threads.

This is a quick take on the debate tonight in what is a close race. MyDD's Governor Forecast has the background:

Democratic Governor Tom Vilsack, who is not running for a third term, has a passable approval rating, but that hasn't abated the anti-incumbent party feeling from hitting Iowa this year as Democratic Secretary of State Chet Culver takes on Republican Congressman Jim Nussle. For a state as closely watched as Iowa, there is a surprising dearth of polling on the gubernatorial race, but the data currently available indicates rather clearly that this race could go either way at this point -- though Culver appears to have some momentum on his side.
Latest polling: Selzer & Co., Culver 44 - Nussle 44, September 17; Research 2000, Culver 48 - Nussle 43, September 13; Rasmussen Reports, Culver 42 - Nussle 40, September 1.

Not being from Iowa and knowing not having followed the politics there, my take is that from a tabula rasa perspective, Culver had the better of it. He did the better debating.

Click "there's more" to see why and to add your comments.

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Absent Candidates, are Debates Debates?

September 21 witness what may be the new generation of debates in the electronic age. Democratic candidate Chet Culver (Secretary of State) and Republican Jim Nussle (Congressman) had a live debate on television. AP in Des Moines, IA reported

Republican gubernatorial candidate Jim Nussle and Democratic rival Chet Culver touted their commitment to health care Thursday night but disagreed on the cigarette tax and stem cell research.

Both candidates appeared live on an Iowa Public Television program --Culver from the network's studios, Nussle via satellite from Washington, where he is in Congress.


The candidates spoke independently, not directly engaging each other as AP recounted