Looking ahead to midterms

Roll Call reported today that National Republican Congressional Committee Chairman Tom Reynolds (N.Y.) is feeling some anxiety about the 2006 election cycle. He’s confident that the Republicans will maintain their majority in the House — there just aren’t enough competitive seats to suggest otherwise — but he “conceded that he’d like to see current GOP poll numbers higher.”

To help bolster his contention that things aren’t too bad for the GOP, Reynolds relied on some polling data that Republicans could find encouraging.

Reynolds, however, points to generic ballot polling showing that neither party has a distinct advantage when respondents are asked whom they would prefer to control Congress.

He cites a Fox News poll taken late last month where 38 percent of respondents said they’d like to see Democrats win next year’s Congressional elections, while 35 percent said they’d rather see the GOP win.

If the generic ballot question is the key to the GOP’s comfort going into next year’s election cycle, then Dems have reason to be optimistic. After all, the Fox News poll Reynolds cited was taken well before Katrina struck, while a Newsweek poll was taken after — and the Newsweek poll wasn’t nearly as close on this question.

Reflecting the tarnished view of the administration, only 38 percent of registered voters say they would vote for a Republican for Congress if the Congressional elections were held today, while 50 say they would vote for a Democrat.

If the three-point gap was a good sign to the NRCC a few weeks ago, what do you suppose they think about a 12-point gap now?

In addition, this poll seems to undercut some of the conventional wisdom about relative parity between the parties.

First, the conventional wisdom tells us that voters are disappointed with everyone equally and that Dems aren’t helped by widespread disappointment with government. The Newsweek data suggests otherwise — with a 12-point lead in a generic ballot match-up, Dems are benefiting from voters’ discontent.

Second, the conventional wisdom also suggests Dems won’t excel unless the public believes they have a credible and specific policy agenda to offer voters as an alternative. I’ve never bought into this idea — when voters see one party leading the government in a direction they don’t like, they’re inclined to pick the other party.

As it happens, this second point is kind of complicated. Dem leaders happen to buy into the idea, which means the party is frequently going to great lengths to prove that it has a “credible and specific policy agenda.” Indeed, just last week, Sens. Harry Reid and Max Baucus unveiled a pretty detailed outline of proposed legislative ideas on responding to Katrina’s devastation.

This does not mean, however, that Dems are up in the poll because people like the Dem relief plan. That’s impossible — no one’s heard anything about the Dem relief plan. The truth is far simpler: voters just aren’t buying what the Republicans are selling.

I may as well work this in here as well as anywhere.

The Republican Party has been engaging in TREASON and SEDITION for the last 25 years. The Iraqi “insurgents” may be more direct about trying to wreck “their” “government”, but the GOP has been aiming at precisely the same goal in the United States of America.

Beginning 25 years ago with Ronald Reagan’s “Republican Revolution”, through David Stockman’s “starve the beast”, to Newt Gingrich’s “Contract with America”, to Grover Norquist’s “drown the government in the bathtub”, to ShrubCo and CheneyCorp’s wholesale slashing of government programs and looting of our treasury and credit — the GOP program has been one long campaign to make most of us HATE OUR GOVERNMENT and wish it ill.

The treasonous and seditious campaign to RUIN OUR GOVERNMENT has pretty much succeeded by now, as demonstrated by the failures before-and-after Katrina.

Back in the ’60s Barry Goldwater wrote a campaign book titled “None Dare Call It Treason”. He believed that government was too bloated and too meddlesome. Given his personal dedication and service to the United States, It would be very hard to call his position treasonous. It was, for his time, a viable political philosophy (if perhaps too rooted in out-dated notions of what was in the 19th century called “liberalism”). But it was not an attempt to make us hate our government at all levels. It was not a scheme to set us at each other’s throats while destroying our only protection against the greedy and the powerful.

What’s been going on lately is different, and I think it’s why neither the Democrats nor anybody else seems to know how to respond. What the Republicans are pushing isn’t a call for leaner, more efficient government – the biggest bang for the smallest buck (Clinton-Gore actually made some progress in that direction). Rather, while letting government continue to grow, they are fomenting wholesale hatred of all government, particularly those parts of which protect the Common Man, the kind of government referred to in

“We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity….” “…government of the people, by the people, for the people….”

Is the Democratic Party ever going to recall its New Deal commitment to the Common Man? Is the only other viable party now, just like the GOP, filled with nothing but fat-assed Mandarins whose fingernails are so long they can’t do any useful work anymore?

I’m beginning to think so. If anything is ever going to pull this country back to a proper sense of itself, it’s going to have to be “from the ground up” – the internet, the bloggers, emails, etc. The older parties, like the dinosaurs, seem oblivious to their fate. Neither party seems to give a shit anymore. Meanwhile, we should all dare to call what the Republicans have been promulgating exactly what it is: TREASON and SEDITION.

  • If I may be so bold, I heartily second what Ed says.

    One caveat, though: I have a faint hope that just as the Terri Schiavo debacle made America open its collective eyes to the real BushCo agenda, so too the horror inflicted by Katrina and Bush’s spectacularly incompetent and cold response will enrage and disgust enough Americans to finally force changes. Even the CCCP (Compliant Complicit Corporate Press) seems to be awakening again.

    This hope that I have is far from a certainty; one that I can’t even take on faith alone, given the Hell visited on America and the world by Bush and his Rethugs. But with the continuing disaster in Iraq, surging gasoline prices, and an economy that spits and sputters at best, maybe that great Pendulum in the Sky will finally swing down like a gigantic guillotine and chop off the (political) heads of all of the Rethugs and American Taliban extremists now in control of OUR country.

    That’s my hope…and I suspect that I have millions and millions of similarly and passionately pissed off Americans with me who share that hope AND will work to make it the NEW reality! The next big step will be the peace march on Washington, D.C. on Saturday, September 24!!

  • Are Americans too sedated to respond to what’s in front of them or can they/we be roused? It won’t be enough to give RepubCo enough rope to hang themselves. We’ve been good at making rope by the mile on demand.

    I don’t trust the Democratic machine to make the case. I think the corruption has permeated both parties and the whole system of governing. I don’t know about the viability of some independent or third “party” but there seems to be a reluctance on the part of entrenched non-Republicans to create a truly coherent, united anti-corruption/pro-“common man” front. I can only surmise that it’s because the slop in the trough is too sweet to give up.

    Treason and sedition just about cover it but how to make the case and have it taste like Ben and Jerry’s ice cream? We want folks to smack their lips at the idea of getting rid of these jokers and their criminal ways. Not out of hatred but because it’s the delicious thing to do.

    Yum-Yum, flush the Shrub. Yum-Yum, flush Turdblossom. Yum-Yum, flush f’n Cheney. Yum-Yum, flush the hell out of Grover. etc. etc. ’til they’re all gone and everybody is fat and happy. How are we going to do that?

    Thanks Ed. Welcome back A.L. And of course, daily thanks to Mr. and Ms. Carpetbagger for our sandbox.

  • Comments are closed.