When you have nothing better to say about your candidacy, you can always tie yourself to the up-ticket and hope they will drag you to victory. Except, it would seem that McCain is more likely to drag down than up. I mean, LA is 55 McCain and 40 Obama. If you offend that 40, then you have to get the rest of your vote from that 55 and not all of that 55 are dumb enough to support Kennedy.
Here's tonight's run-down of the Congressional races: The bailout and the economi crisis continue to dominate the campaigns -- which is never good news for the GOP -- while the Republicans are fending off the attacks by charging that the Dems don't have any solutions, either.Al Franken Opposes Bailout Bill Al Franken has put out a press release strongly opposing the bailout bill, which incumbent GOP Sen. Norm Coleman voted for: "Last night the United States Senate voted to take $700 billion from taxpayers who did nothing wrong and offer it as a sacrifice at the altar of financial mismanagement."Smith And Merkley Joust Over The Bailout Senate candidate Jeff Merkley (D-OR) is criticizing the bailout package, as well: "I have dedicated much of my life to advocating for consumers and I believe it is just wrong to spend $700 billion of taxpayer money to bailout the very Wall Street financiers who created this crisis." Incumbent Sen. Gordon Smith (R) has fired back at Merkley, saying Merkley has "shamefully placed his partisan ambitions ahead of the retirement, financial and economic security of the people he seeks to serve." Poll: McConnell Has Solid Lead In Kentucky A new Rasmussen poll of Kentucky has some good news for Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell, giving him a 51%-42% lead over Democratic businessman Bruce Lunsford. Other recent polls have shown the race to be closer than that, and McConnell's campaign and outside groups have taken to running more negative ads against Lunsford as a result.Southern GOP Senate Candidate's Ad Ties Dem To Obama Senate candidate John Kennedy (R-LA), who is lagging in the polls against incumbent Democratic Sen. Mary Landrieu, has this new ad attacking Landrieu for voting the same way in the Senate as Barack Obama, who is himself on track to lose Louisiana by a pretty big margin:"I'm John Kennedy, and I'm for John McCain -- and I approved this message," Kennedy says. There's also a radio ad covering the same theme, which you can listen to here....