Gloom
hangs over Republicans when they think
of next year’s elections — but it
shouldn’t. The sea change in political
fortunes between 2004 and 2006 should
not remind Righties only that the winds
can change quickly — from a supportive
breeze at your back, to a gale-force
wind in your face — they should also be
reminded that the political landscape
can get better fast, too.
Next year could be a surprisingly
good one for the GOP, though it’s
clearly not guaranteed. The party will
need good candidate recruitment, message
discipline, a clear, unifying agenda,
and a bit of good luck. But on a wide
variety of fronts, there are pieces of
good news that are overshadowed by the
mainstream media’s preferred
“Democratic-Tsunami Part Two” narrative.
Presidency
The Democratic party faces a
choice: Their field includes one of the
most charismatic and likeable figures to
come along in politics in a long time,
who attracts thousands at every campaign
stop, and has generated enormous
enthusiasm among young people. It also
includes a smooth-talking populist who
could go to any red-state district and
campaign with the Democrat and help that
candidate, whose wife has the rare
‘two-fer’ appeal of being beloved by the
hardcore antiwar base, and
simultaneously the subject of enormous
public sympathy for her fight against
cancer.
Naturally, the Democrats appear set to
nominate the woman who can’t top
50-percent in a head-to-head
match-up against Ron Paul.
Can Hillary win a red state? In spite of
Howard Dean’s insistence that the party
needs a 50-state strategy, and that
Democrats should contest as many states
as possible, it’s unlikely she’ll put
more than a handful of states that voted
for Bush in
play.
Ohio? She could win, but it will once
again be down to the wire. Pollster
Scott Rasmussen finds that against each
of the four leading Republican hopefuls,
Clinton’s support from Ohio voters is in
the mid-forties, ranging from a low of
42-percent against McCain, to a high of
46-percent against Romney. In the latest
batch, she beats Thompson and Romney,
and loses to Giuliani and McCain.
Forty-eight percent of Ohio voters have
a favorable opinion of Clinton while
50-percent have a negative view. Barring
any sudden changes, the Buckeye state
will be as competitive as 2004.
Florida? It too, will probably be
competitive down to the wire. A Survey
USA poll, released on November 1, has
Hillary leading all of the GOP
contenders, but Giuliani and McCain are
within the margin of error. Quinnipiac’s
late October
poll found essentially the same
results with Giuliani leading her
narrowly, McCain within one percent and
Thompson within five percent.
Maybe Hillary will outperform John Kerry
in a couple of the Southwestern states
that were relatively close last time
around. Though, if most of the map stays
the same, without Ohio or Florida, the
Democratic nominee would have to sweep
New Mexico, Colorado, and Nevada.
(In an
October memo aiming to persuade folks
that Clinton can win the West, Mark Penn
wrote, “Hillary is winning the
general election in New Mexico, a state
which Bush won in 2004, and in
California, Oregon and Washington.
Together with Hawaii, this means Hillary
Clinton is starting with two-thirds of
the electoral votes in the West.” Yes,
but Al Gore won all of those and Bush
won New Mexico’s five electoral votes by
1-percent, so she’s doing about the same
as either losing Democratic candidate of
the past two cycles. The same memo notes
that she leads Rudy Giuliani by two
points in Oregon, and contends “because
of her unique ability to take advantage
of changing demographics, Hillary can
also turn Colorado, Arizona, Nevada, and
Montana from Red to Blue” without citing
any polling numbers.)
There are two upsides to Hillary’s
nomination: First is that she’s
beatable; the second is that a figure so
thoroughly disliked by half the country
is just about incapable of a winning in
a landslide, barring some third-party
faction breaking away from the GOP.
Hitting 270 electoral votes is extremely
achievable for any of the top tier
Republican candidates.
House of
Representatives
The Democrats won back the
majority in the House in 2006 by doing
well in districts that are unfamiliar
territory for them: Two Arizona seats,
which Bush carried by 52.9 and
54-percent in 2004, and Kansas seat that
Bush carried with 59-percent of the
vote. In addition, there was Heath
Shuler’s North Carolina-11 seat that
Bush carried with 57-percent. They had a
couple of right-leaning districts fall
in their laps because of scandals — Mark
Foley’s Florida-16 seat, Tom DeLay’s
Texas-22 seat, Don Sherwood’s
Pennsylvania-10.
There are a couple of House Democrats
who won reelection by the skin of their
teeth in 2006, when they had a
gale-force wind at their back. In
Georgia, John Barrow won the 12th
District race by just 864 votes of more
than 142,000 cast, and Jim Marshall
secured the 8th District seat by only
1,752 votes of nearly 160,000 votes
cast.
A massive chunk of the House Democratic
caucus is running in Bush country,
heartland communities that Hillary
probably won’t sell well in: In 2008, 70
Democrats will be running for reelection
in districts Bush won in 2004. Four
House Republican-held seats are in
districts won by Kerry.
How would you like to be one of these
freshmen House Democrats seeking your
first reelection bid with Hillary
Clinton at the top of the ticket? While
all of the GOP candidates have their
strengths, how would you feel seeing a
southern or western GOP nominee Fred
Thompson, Mike Huckabee, or John McCain
coming in for a rally for your
Republican rival, blasting away the
Democrats as the party of gun control,
taxpayer-funded abortion, driver’s
licenses for illegal immigrants and
activist liberal judges?
(There are also a few
Hillary-vulnerable Democrats in blue
state districts, too.)
You
think the Democrats planned on having an
11-percent approval rating? This is now
way beyond some short-lived swoon. Only
one
poll since May has had Congress’
approval above 30 percent.
The Democrats have thrown away most of
the reform issues that helped them a lot
with independents: lobbying reform,
ethics rules, earmarks, lack of
disclosure, junkets, etc. The “culture
of corruption” narrowly outranked
terrorism on the list of voter concerns
in 2006. Barring any last-minute passage
of rules changes, no Democrat will be
able to run for reelection on the
message, “we cleaned up Washington”
without triggering derisive and
skeptical laughter from voters.
How many independents and soft
Republicans decided to give the
Democrats a shot after a year in which
scandals consumed Duke Cunningham, Bob
Ney, Tom DeLay, etc.? Keep in mind,
Republican challengers will be
running against Washington, and
declaring inside-the-Beltway Republicans
as part of the problem. The NRCC is
telling them to do this.
The Democrats will not enjoy the
advantage of being the party of reform
this cycle; mystifyingly, they’re not
acting like they’re worried.
Senate
Are there big challenges here?
Sure. Keeping the open seat in Virginia
will be supremely tough. Retirements in
New Mexico and Colorado put the GOP on
defense more than they would like.
But if 2008 were shaping up to be the
year of the Second Democratic Tsunami,
why is Colorado — a state in which
Democrats have had success for two
straight cycles — a
dead heat? (Also note the state has
130,000 more registered Republicans than
Democrats.)
In New
Hampshire, John Sununu will have a tough
reelection fight, but challenger Jeanne
Shaheen has gone from a big 15 point
lead to 5 points. Sununu’s a savvy
enough veteran campaigner to keep this
race close.
Democrats blew their shot at Nebraska
when Bob Kerrey declined to run for the
open seat left by Chuck Hagel. In New
Mexico, the Republicans are likely to
have a divided two-candidate primary,
while the Democrats have a three-way
primary.
In Maine, Susan Collins was supposed to
be vulnerable, but an October
poll commissioned by Daily Kos
put her ahead of Democratic challenger
Tom Allen 56 percent to 33 percent.
The
Democrats are likely to nominate a
comedian, Al Franken, in a blue state
seat in Minnesota. With a real candidate
— even with your standard issue
Democratic House member with some
serious legislative accomplishments —
Republican Norm Coleman would be
seriously vulnerable. Instead, the
state’s Democrats appear
hell-bent on nominating a guy known
for being funny with a 27-percent
approval rating. (Coleman’s at 52
percent.)
But there are opportunities for pickups,
too. We’re all happy Sen. Tim Johnson is
on the mend, but the guy has had a
near-fatal health scare and long,
arduous recovery. There’s room for a
gentle, “it’s time for Tim Johnson to
focus on his recovery, and for South
Dakotans to get a senator who can focus
full-time on their needs” campaign in
the state in which Republicans knocked
off Tim Daschle in 2004, and Johnson
squeaked by with 524 votes in 2002.
In Arkansas, Mark Pryor will have
trouble with the Hillary factor, and if
Huckabee’s presidential aspirations fall
short, and he’s not the nominee’s
running mate, he would be an
extraordinarily strong Senate candidate.
In Louisiana, Mary Landrieu is running
in a state with vastly fewer registered
Democrats than it had before Hurricane
Katrina.
In 2006, Democrats got every break they
could in their Senate races, often
coming in states that would ordinarily
be rough territory for them. Jim Webb
just barely beat George Allen in
Virginia by 0.38 percent; Jon Tester
just barely beat Conrad Burns in Montana
by a little over 3,000 votes out of
nearly 400,000; and Claire McCaskill
beat Jim Talent by about 49,000 votes
out of more than 2 million. Maybe the
Democrats will get all of the breaks
next year, too, but everybody’s luck
changes eventually.
IssuES
Iraq: Put aside
the positive results in the surge, even
though the results are so striking that
the Washington Post finally had
to put it on the front page.
How, exactly, is Hillary Clinton
supposed to campaign as the candidate
who will get the U.S. out of Iraq, when
she couldn’t say she would get the
troops out by 2013? Do even Gen. David
Petraeus or John McCain want a U.S.
troop presence five years from now?
A Republican candidate can and should
come out and say,
Do I
want to see U.S. combat troops out
of Iraq by 2013? Yes. I’d like to
get all the duties turned over to
the Iraqis long before that. Is my
aim to do that? Yes. Can I guarantee
it? No, no candidate truly knows
what the future holds. But Hillary
Clinton can’t guarantee it either.
Katrina:
Remember when Democrats were supposed to
use Katrina as a bludgeon against GOP
candidates as the ultimate failure of
Republican government? Tell that to
Louisiana’s new Republican governor
Bobby Jindal. Tell that to Haley
Barbour, who is cruising to reelection
as governor of Mississippi. In the
Democracy Corps poll, when independents
and Democrats were asked separately why
the country was moving in the wrong
direction, "Government failed on
Katrina" came in last among independents
at 13-percent and last among Democrats
at 15-percent. The issue has come and
gone.
Immigration: This is an issue that
has only gotten bigger and more
passionate for the past five years. It
mobilizes the Republican base like
nothing else — witness the grassroots
efforts against the amnesty deal this
year — and the Democrats are absolutely
split on this; Democratic
pollsters/strategists Stan Greenberg, Al
Quinlan, and James Carville
call it “a real wedge issue.” They
found that “even with the reassurance on
[border] control and [denying] benefits,
40 percent of Democrats and a majority
of African Americans favored the tougher
Republican alternative that provided no
path to legalization.”
While Iraq and Katrina are fading as
issues, this one only gets bigger:
Independents rank “the border left
unprotected” their top concern, higher
than “Doing nothing about dependence on
oil/global warming” by nine points,
higher than “losing jobs to China and
India” by thirteen points, higher than
“government is running record budget
deficits” by fourteen points, and higher
than “bogged down and spending billions
in Iraq” by 17 points.
Why did Hillary equivocate and dance so
much when she was asked about New York
Governor Eliot Spitzer’s plan to offer
driver’s licenses to illegal immigrants?
Because she knows the issue is political
nitroglycerin, and she and Spitzer are
on the wrong side of three quarters of
Americans.
As Michael Barone
says, it’s not 2006 anymore. That
doesn’t guarantee that 2008 will be
better, but it’s a possibility.