New polls show tight race between NAT incumbent, CNS challenger
STARKSMIN, Wellington--Just eight days before the midterm elections, the Conservative Governors' Association (CGA) is investing major resources in a race it once counted out.
The CGA is targeting the Wellington governor's race between incumbent Nationalist Pierre Carten and CNS challenger Craig Thoyer.
First elected in 2008 in a special election, Carten (pronounced "Car-tain"), 32, was widely popular. A moderate, the youthful Carten was viewed as one of the few Nationalists in the state that could bring compromise and civility to the often divisive political climate in Wellington.
Carten easily defeated Conservative businessman Bill Santoya in the 2008 election. Now the governor, and his lieutenant, former Rep. Joe Carlin, are facing an unexpectedly close race for re-election.
Thoyer (pronounced "Toy-er"), and his running mate Liz McKinn (C-Hollam) were not expected to present a strong challenge to the once-popular Carten/Carlin ticket. But recent polls suggest the businessman and state senator team are edging closer.
A Prairie Stats poll released last Thursday shows Thoyer and McKinn with 45% to 47% for Carten and Carlin. A NationVoice poll released Monday shows Thoyer trailing Carten by three points.
Those close poll numbers have emboldened Conservative Party leaders, who previously brushed off a Thoyer victory as impossible. The party is now taking a second look and has already dropped $300,000 of additional money into the race, with an another money bomb of $450,000 to $500,000 possible.
It's all apart of the party's strategy to maintain its majority of governors' seats.
"The race in Wellington is crucial to us and we need to do everything we can to ensure that a victory comes out of the prairie state," Gov. Donna Almone (C-POG), head of the CGA, told the National Press Federation (NPF).
But Nationalists are scrambling to defend Carten, whose popularity has plummeted largely due to Wellington's poor economy and high unemployment rate.
The party has allocated an extra $480,000 to help defend Carten, and has dispatched East Deschire Gov. Lynn DeMont and Trinton Gov. Mark De Auonne to campaign for the beleaguered incumbent in the final week of the election.
The two candidates themselves seem confident.
Last week at a press conference at a sandwich bistro in Lunden Plains, Carten told supporters Conservatives "cannot take away the progress we've made," and warned of a possible over-confidence within the Thoyer campaign.
"These guys are so desperate to be elected, I think they're really over-selling themselves and maybe a little too confident," Carten said.
Unsurprisingly, Thoyer's campaign sees it differently.
"All the polls show this race tightening, with Pierre Carten falling out of the lead and Craig Thoyer headed to victory," campaign spokesman Jay Donahue said. "Election day will tell the final chapter in this race."
Both candidates are tirelessly hitting the campaign trail, with the governor targeting the western and southern parts of the state in the final days. Thoyer will be focusing his attention on the suburbs of Starksmin, the state's largest city, and in the eastern part of the state.
STARKSMIN, Wellington--Just eight days before the midterm elections, the Conservative Governors' Association (CGA) is investing major resources in a race it once counted out.
The CGA is targeting the Wellington governor's race between incumbent Nationalist Pierre Carten and CNS challenger Craig Thoyer.
First elected in 2008 in a special election, Carten (pronounced "Car-tain"), 32, was widely popular. A moderate, the youthful Carten was viewed as one of the few Nationalists in the state that could bring compromise and civility to the often divisive political climate in Wellington.
Carten easily defeated Conservative businessman Bill Santoya in the 2008 election. Now the governor, and his lieutenant, former Rep. Joe Carlin, are facing an unexpectedly close race for re-election.
Thoyer (pronounced "Toy-er"), and his running mate Liz McKinn (C-Hollam) were not expected to present a strong challenge to the once-popular Carten/Carlin ticket. But recent polls suggest the businessman and state senator team are edging closer.
A Prairie Stats poll released last Thursday shows Thoyer and McKinn with 45% to 47% for Carten and Carlin. A NationVoice poll released Monday shows Thoyer trailing Carten by three points.
Those close poll numbers have emboldened Conservative Party leaders, who previously brushed off a Thoyer victory as impossible. The party is now taking a second look and has already dropped $300,000 of additional money into the race, with an another money bomb of $450,000 to $500,000 possible.
It's all apart of the party's strategy to maintain its majority of governors' seats.
"The race in Wellington is crucial to us and we need to do everything we can to ensure that a victory comes out of the prairie state," Gov. Donna Almone (C-POG), head of the CGA, told the National Press Federation (NPF).
But Nationalists are scrambling to defend Carten, whose popularity has plummeted largely due to Wellington's poor economy and high unemployment rate.
The party has allocated an extra $480,000 to help defend Carten, and has dispatched East Deschire Gov. Lynn DeMont and Trinton Gov. Mark De Auonne to campaign for the beleaguered incumbent in the final week of the election.
The two candidates themselves seem confident.
Last week at a press conference at a sandwich bistro in Lunden Plains, Carten told supporters Conservatives "cannot take away the progress we've made," and warned of a possible over-confidence within the Thoyer campaign.
"These guys are so desperate to be elected, I think they're really over-selling themselves and maybe a little too confident," Carten said.
Unsurprisingly, Thoyer's campaign sees it differently.
"All the polls show this race tightening, with Pierre Carten falling out of the lead and Craig Thoyer headed to victory," campaign spokesman Jay Donahue said. "Election day will tell the final chapter in this race."
Both candidates are tirelessly hitting the campaign trail, with the governor targeting the western and southern parts of the state in the final days. Thoyer will be focusing his attention on the suburbs of Starksmin, the state's largest city, and in the eastern part of the state.