It doesn’t happen often, so when key Republican players express deep concerns about the party’s electoral fate, it’s worth paying attention to.
For example, the Boston Globe had a piece today on Republicans targeting Michigan as a state where they hope to make some headway next year, thanks in part to high unemployment and luke-warm approval ratings for Gov. Jennifer Granholm (D). But aside from Michigan, these guys don’t sound very confident.
”Michigan is one of the opportunities — and there’s not a lot of them when overall the numbers don’t look good,” said Matthew Dowd, Bush’s pollster in 2004. […]
”Nationally, there are storm clouds on the horizon as the 2006 elections approach, and anyone who tells you otherwise is either politically deaf and dumb or doesn’t know what they’re talking about,” said Alexander Gage, a Republican pollster who developed Bush’s strategy in 2004 of ”micro-targeting” to identify Republican-leaning voters.
Obviously, there is all kinds of time between now and November 2006, but consider this your morale boost for the day — some of the top GOP strategists in the country are clearly getting nervous.