Knight Ridder had a terrific item last night on one of my favorite subjects: “Republican fatigue.”
Brian Wareing has been a Republican all his life. But ask him how his party has done running the federal government and his complaints pile up: Immigration. Spending. Trade. He’s had enough.
He won’t vote for a Democrat in November’s congressional elections. But he might vote for a third-party candidate – or he might not vote at all. “At this point, I couldn’t vote for the Republican,” the house painter from this Denver suburb said, with regret.
Across the country this spring, many Republicans alternate between anger and ambivalence five years after their party seized power over the federal government and seven months before a pivotal election for control of Congress.
The article included some key warning signs for Republicans, who can’t afford to see GOP voters “sit out” the midterm elections. The downward spiral in the polls is a problem, but the even bigger challenge is the decline in confidence among rank-and-file Republicans about their leaders. As Knight Ridder noted, “Since Bush’s second term started, his approval rating has dropped 16 percentage points among Republicans, 23 points among supporters of the Iraq war and 24 points among those who voted for him in 2004.”
“There’s some fatigue among the average Republican,” Denver Republican consultant Katy Atkinson said. “They’re tired of it all. They’re tired of scandals. They’re tired of the White House. They’re ready for change.”
It complements the analysis Charlie Cook offered the other day, when he wrote that parties suffer “unusually large losses” in midterms when one party’s voters are “complacent or disillusioned,” and the other party’s voters are “hungry or angry.”
If there’s “the average Republican” is fatigued and ready for change this fall, Dems are going to win back Congress.