Del Ali, the president of the polling firm Research 2000, brings up one of my favorite subjects today, arguing that we should look out for a few Senate Republicans who may cross the aisle if Dems have a good night on Nov. 7.
There is a realistic possibility that if the Democrats pick up at least five Senate seats on Election Night, several current Republican Senators could switch to the Democratic side of the aisle. Remember, Shelby [tag]switch[/tag]ed because he felt Democrats were incapable of moving away from liberalism and Campbell switched because he felt Democrats were beholden to cronyism and did not respect other views among colleagues on issues important to Campbell. In 2006, cronyism is alive and well in the GOP ranks: Arlen Specter is shunned by the GOP leadership and White House for his views on domestic surveillance while Olympia Snowe, John Warner and Chuck Hagel are shunned for their views on Iraq.
Kevin Drum says this “seems like a pipe dream.” I couldn’t agree more. [tag]John Warner[/tag] (R-Va.) and [tag]Chuck Hagel[/tag] (R-Neb.) may be willing to occasionally say a mildly discouraging word about the president and/or the war in Iraq, but both of them are conservative Republicans who don’t agree with Dems on much of anything. Indeed, Hagel is planning to run for president in 2008 as an anti-Bush conservative. There’s no way on earth he’d jump ship now, even if Dems gained 10 seats in November.
[tag]Arlen Specter[/tag] (R-Pa.) is what passes for a Republican moderate these days, but he’s been a Republican senator now for 26 years and has never expressed so much as a hint of interest in switching sides. If anything, over the last two years, he’s clashed more with Senate Dems (particularly Sen. Russ Feingold) than ever before, on route to caving on every demand Bush has made on everything.
Olympia Snowe is perhaps the only one I’d consider even a remote possibility, but a) she’s running for re-election right now as a Republican; and b) no matter how much the right hates her (and they hate her quite a bit), she’s never shown any desire to jump ship. And they’re have been plenty of opportunities for her, all of which she’s declined. (I would add, however, that Snowe was a Democrat when she was younger, but switched [tag]parties[/tag] when she married a prominent Republican politician in Maine.)
Frankly, the trend that’s worth watching isn’t Republicans in the Senate who might bail, but rather, the House.
Indeed, as The Hill reported a month ago, depending on how the elections shake out, there could be some horse-trading going on.
With House Democrats expecting to narrow their 15-seat gap with Republicans in November, members of both parties are considering the uncomfortable but all-too-plausible reality that control of the House could hinge on the party affiliation of just a few members — or perhaps only one.
Such a scenario puts additional pressure on the moderates on each side of the aisle — many of whom could face pressure to jump across and join the other team.
The Hill didn’t point to any specific members who are rumored to be on the move to the other side of the aisle, but just raised the prospect and said “pressure could mount after the election. In a House divided 218 to 217, just a single disgruntled member of the majority could deal the ultimate blow to his or her colleagues.”
In the Senate, it seems far-fetched. In the House, it’s a scary thought.