Michael Kelley

October 19, 2008 - 4:44pm

KY-4: Davis' second spot focuses on manufacturing jobs

The campaign of U.S. Rep. Geoff Davis (R-Ft. Mitchell) hit district-wide television in recent days with an ad in Kentucky's 4th Congressional District race.

The ad focuses on a testimonial from Rick Jordan, the Vice President of Erlanger's LSI Graphic Solutions company and a board member for the Kentucky Association of Manufacturers.

"When I sat down and I talked to Geoff Davis, He was the first person I talked to that really understood the manufacturing issues," says Jordan in the spot.

"Without having Geoff's help, we would lose thousands of jobs to foreign competitors," adds Jordan.

Federal Election Commission records  show Jordan also earlier provided financial support to Davis, making a $1,000 contribution to the Republican's campaign last year.

The new ad solely focuses on promoting Davis, who faces Democratic Lagrange physician Michael Kelley in the 4th District race. Davis' camp recently launched a website denouncing Kelley's "credibility" as a candidate, but no reference to the Democrat is made in either this ad or Davis' earlier spot.

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October 2, 2008 - 10:37am

Davis hits the air in KY-4

The campaign of U.S. Rep. Geoff Davis (R-Ft. Mitchell) says it is hitting "district-wide cable" with a new ad, amid efforts to get Davis re-elected to a third-term.

The ad, which comes from the relatively quiet 4th Congressional District race, tries to paint Davis as unique among Washington politicians.

"In a city filled with career politicians, Geoff Davis is different," says the narrator of the thirty-second spot.

The narrator then refers to Davis' military history and background in manufacturing.

"Geoff Davis took that experience to Congress and delivered new job training opportunities to Kentucky," continues the narrator.

The ad, which hit the air on Tuesday, is Davis' first of the campaign in which he is pitted against Lagrange physician Michael Kelley.

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August 26, 2008 - 4:22pm

Dean fancies Dem chances in KY; sees Lunsford 'in striking distance'

DNC Chair Howard Dean speaks to Kentucky's delegates today: Politicker photo

DENVER -- As the surprise opening speaker at this morning's Kentucky delegation breakfast, Democratic National Committee chair Howard Dean spoke with familiarity about Kentucky politics, referencing races up and down the ballot and laying out strategic suggestions for the assembled delegates.

At the beginning of his remarks, Dean referenced the campaign of Democratic Senate candidate Bruce Lunsford as a priority for the state.

"He's in striking distance. How about that?" Dean asked about the challenger to incumbent U.S. Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-Louisville).

Lunsford was last shown 12 points behind McConnell in a mid-August poll, though his ability to self-finance his campaign has led many analysts to predict an ultimately competitive race.

Beyond that, Dean said another top priority for Kentucky Democrats was more local in scope.

"The first thing that people need - in addition to electing Bruce - is we really want to take back the state Senate," said Dean, referencing the state legislative body currently in Republican hands.

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July 23, 2008 - 11:05am

Yarmuth remains the only Kentucky Democrat on DCCC's ad list

U.S. Rep. John Yarmuth's (D-Louisville) race for the 3rd Congressional District is still the only U.S. House campaign in Kentucky on the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee's list for targeted television ad buys, even after the list was expanded by 20 in recent days.

Yarmuth's re-election effort against former U.S. Rep Anne Northup (R-Louisville) was included in the DCCC's initial target list of 31 races, for which the organization aims to buy ad time in September and October. The DCCC reportedly allocated $659,000 for ad buys in the 3rd District.

The liberal news outlet Talking Points Memo reported yesterday that the DCCC had expanded their list to include 20 more races, but none of the additions are in Kentucky.

According to reports, the DCCC has now allocated a total of $53 million towards ad buys for the 51 targeted races.

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July 18, 2008 - 4:02pm

Kelley sees positive side of KY-4 poll, while Davis 'will take nothing for granted'

A recent poll conducted on Kentucky's 4th Congressional District race showed numbers very similar to the results from election night in 2006. In a late-June SurveyUSA poll, incumbent U.S. Rep. Geoff Davis (R-Ft. Mitchell) was shown leading his Democratic opponent, physician Michael Kelley of Lagrange, 54 to 41 percent among 550 likely voters.

Similarly, Davis was re-elected to the 4th District seat in 2006 by only a slightly slimmer margin, 52 to 43 percent.

The difference this year is that Davis faces a much lower-profile candidate than in 2006, when he beat former 4th District U.S. Rep. Ken Lucas (D-Richwood) in a campaign that cost the two candidates over $5 million.

For Kelley and his supporters, the new poll numbers are encouraging given their similarities to 2006 - and the fact that Kelley has spent almost nothing in the race.

"It's a lot smaller gap than most people would have believed possible," Kelley told PolitickerKY.com.

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July 15, 2008 - 4:38pm

2nd quarter fundraising at a glance

As today's filing deadline for the second fundraising quarter passes, PolitickerKY.com has provided updates as numbers from candidates across the state become available. Below are links to our complete coverage, arranged by races.

US Senate:

Lunsford brings in $600K; $1.3M on hand

$3 million quarter and $9 million on hand for McConnell 

KY-1:

Whitfield stays over $1 million into 3Q

KY-2:

Drastically different financial pictures in KY-2 as Guthrie holds large cash-on-hand advantage 

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July 15, 2008 - 3:58pm

Two Bluegrass State Congressmen give big to NRCC

While many of Kentucky's candidates for Congress are scrambling to impress with their fundraising numbers as today's second quarter filing deadline passes, two members of the Commonwealth's Congressional delegation are evidently comfortable enough to share the wealth from their campaign warchests.

U.S. Reps Geoff Davis (R-Ft. Mitchell) and Hal Rogers (R-Somerset) have each made sizeable contributions to the National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC) according to an article by Politico, cited by the blog Blue Grass, Red State.

Davis outlayed $200,000 to the NRCC in a fundraising drive intended to help "minimize expected losses in November," according to Politico.

Rogers contributed $150,000.

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