Barack Obama and Mitt Romney are both on pins and needles today, no matter what either one of them says. Today is the poll that counts— today is judgment day.
My first campaign in 2006, I knew I was going to win. Yes, my head reminded me how I was going against a popular incumbent US Congressman who outspent me by more than $3 million, but we beat the odds by .6%—winning by just 1518 votes out of the more than quarter million that were cast. In 2008, I knew again that I’d win , this time I won by 15 points.
By 2010, I knew in my heart that victory would be tough. I kept looking at Nate Silver’s damn polls that showed I was one of the walking dead—a Democrat in a Republican-leaning district.
Nate was right and I lost by four points—becoming one of the 64 members of congress who sacrificed their seats in order to pass the stimulus bill, healthcare reform, and eventually the repeal of Don’t Ask Don’t Tell.









