For months, supporters of conservative Republican Senate
candidate Christine O’Donnell
have been hearing the same argument from the Delaware GOP
establishment: “Well, sure, she’s a good conservative, but
Mike Castle can win.”
Castle’s 2007-08 ratings (20 and 28, respectively) by
the American Conservative Union marked him as one of the most
liberal Republicans in Congress. His establishment
backers have argued that the best Republicans can hope for
in Delaware is to elect a RINO whose voting
record makes Charlie Crist look like a raging
right-winger. As one O’Donnell supporter told
me, “Castle is Delaware’s answer to Dede Scozzafava,”
referring to the liberal GOP candidate who
quit last year’s 23rd District special election campaign in
New York and endorsed the Democrat.
Last week, the “Castle can win” argument suffered what may prove
a
fatal blow from a Rasmussen poll: “Congressman Mike Castle’s
support has fallen below 50% for the first time in his race with
Democrat Chris Coons for the U.S. Senate in Delaware.”
Castle, who had previously led Coons by more than 20 points, now
leads the general election matchup 47-36, which is
only marginally better than
O’Donnell’s 41-39 matchup with Coons.
“This shows what we’ve been saying all along — Christine can
win,” said one source close to the O’Donnell campaign.
O’Donnell has important support from conservative New Media,
including endorsements from
Red State’s Erick Erickson and Pamela
Geller of Atlas Shrugs, and was featured last month on
Mark
Levin’s popular radio show. Last week, she picked up the
endorsement of the
pro-life Susan B. Anthony list, which may help O’Donnell
close the fund-raising gap with Castle (according to the
June 30 FEC report, he had more than $2.6 million cash on
hand.)
With the Sept. 14 primary now less than two months away, some
O’Donnell supporters are beginning to ask a question that has
proven crucial in other GOP primaries: “Where’s Sarah
Palin?”