Living in Scott Rasmussen's world, as we do, it's not every day that we get to see polls that don't drip with utter doom 'n' gloom for Democrats. With that in mind, let's take a look at PPP's latest hit from North Carolina.
Public Policy Polling (1/9-11, likely voters):
Larry Kissell (D-inc): 54
Tim D'Annunzio (R): 38
Larry Kissell (D-inc): 55
Lou Huddleston (R): 37
Larry Kissell (D-inc): 53
Harold Johnson (R): 39
Larry Kissell (D-inc): 55
Hal Jordan (R): 39
Larry Kissell (D-inc): 53
Generic R: 39
(MoE: ±3.6%)
This is a district that has, more often than not in recent history, leaned Republican. Al Gore lost it by 46-54 in 2000, and Kerry by 45-54 in 2004. Obama finally changed that in 2008, winning the CD by 53-47. In a year with a GOP tilt, you'd expect there to be some significant Democratic drop-off from that margin, and PPP does indeed find a more GOP-friendly electorate: this sample split their votes by a 48-48 margin in the '08 presidential race. Given the environment, I'd say that's a level of decline that Kissell would be willing to deal with.
Granted, Kissell is up against some opponents with pretty scant name recognition, but his margin against "Generic R" and his 45-30 approval rating should give him some comfort. If the Republicans are going to take back the House, they'll probably have to prioritize districts other than this one in order to get the job done.
http://www.swingstateproject.com/diary/6186/nc08-kissell-in-good-shape