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Thursday, December 13, 2007

Nice time to be a Republican?

Seems that the GOP isn’t doing as bad some said they were, or maybe people don't hate Republicans as much as the left claims.

Remember the left wingers saying that they GOP is in decline and on the run and will really get shellacked in the 2008 election. Well it can’t be that bad if they actually are still winning elections The GOP won two special elections on Tuesday night.


Status-Quo on Tuesday Is Good News for GOP

By Stuart Rothenberg

Republicans got some good news Tuesday when they won special elections in Ohio and Virginia to retain two Congressional seats that became open upon the death of sitting GOP U.S. House members.

The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee didn’t seriously contest Virginia’s open 1st District, but the DCCC and the National Republican Congressional Committee ended up pouring considerable resources into Ohio’s 5th C.D.

Republicans have reason to feel good about holding both seats, particularly given the nasty GOP primary in Ohio 5 and the party’s continued problems in the Buckeye State.

Ohio Democrat Robin Weirauch didn’t do any better than she did last year even though the seat was open, she was running for the third time, and Democrats tried to tie Republican nominee Bob Latta to discredited former Ohio Republican officeholders.

GOP strategists were successful in turning out Republican voters, some of whom are less than enthusiastic about the President. In other words, the NRCC still knows how to motivate the party faithful.

Democrats can take pleasure that they forced Republicans to spend heavily to defend a solidly Republican district. Part of the Democrats’ 2008 House strategy obviously is to force the NRCC to play in as many districts as possible, bleeding the under-financed GOP dry and, possibly, sneaking off with a few extra seats next fall.

The NRCC was able to hold the Ohio district, in part, by outspending the DCCC. It will not be able to do that very often next year. But before you give the DCCC a trophy for forcing the NRCC to spend money on the race, remember that the Democrats just tossed away $250,000 in Ohio 5 and have nothing to show for it.


In reading this clip I wonder how Stuart Rothenberg can claim to be a non-partisan political newsletter covering U.S. House, Senate and gubernatorial campaigns…
Unfortunately, the NRCC’s post-election press release once again reads far too much into the results in Virginia and Ohio.

“The results of the special elections…are further confirmation of a shifting political environment, an electorate desperate for change in Washington, and a wide-open congressional playing field,” asserts the NRCC in its release.

First, let’s deal with - and dismiss - the easiest point, that the results demonstrate that voters want change. If anything, the results argue against change, since both districts are reliably Republican and the GOP nominees held the seats.

National polls certainly show that voters want change, and voters in Ohio’s 5th District and Virginia’s 1st C.D. may want change, as well. But the election results don’t show that.

Does the NRCC want people to believe that Democratic victories would have been a sign that voters don’t want change? That would not be a credible argument.

The other two NRCC points are more reasonable, but that isn’t saying a lot since the first one was so absurd.

In arguing that there is “a wide open congressional playing field,” the NRCC may mean that there are lots of seats in play this cycle. There may, in fact, be more competitive seats this cycle than last, but Tuesday’s two special elections don’t prove that.

Given that GOP special election nominees held reliably Republican seats, all the results prove is that Democrats will have a hard time winning solidly Republican districts next year. That suggests that Democrats aren’t likely to gain another 30 or 40 seats in 2008, hardly an earth-shattering conclusion.


This post makes him sound like he is a cheer leader for the Democrats. If you look at the approval numbers of the house and senate they are abysmal, I can’t see how anyone is in favor of the Democrats. The house and senate are run by the Democrats and have an approval rating that is lower than George W. Bushes.

Comments

Given that GOP special election nominees held reliably Republican seats, all the results prove is that Democrats will have a hard time winning solidly Republican districts next year. That suggests that Democrats aren’t likely to gain another 30 or 40 seats in 2008, hardly an earth-shattering conclusion.

Seriously--the Dems won at least 30-40 races by margins of under 5000 votes.  In almost every single seat that was decided by under 5000 votes, they broke the Dem’s way.  And the Dem candidates ran as “moderates”.  Then they get there and follow Pelosi and Reid.

Every Congressman has to stand re-election every two years.  Most of the Republican candidates that lost were somehow tied to either Abramoff, Foley, Delay, etc.  I would argue that if the GOP can field good candidates this election cycle, the little two year housecleaning was actually good for the party.  The GOP needs to gain back a net of 16 seats to regain control of the House.  The Dems in swing districts have followed the lead of some people that are out of the mainstream of the moderate suburbs that cost the Repubs the last election.

Justin B. on December 13, 2007 at 03:50 pm

That would mean that the Dems have a razor thing majority in my opinion. It has been said that dems are scared of getting their clocks cleaned by GOP if Hillary is on the ballot.


Check out:
Goon’s North Dakota Red Neck
Goon’s World

goon on December 13, 2007 at 03:57 pm

I would be very happy to help the GOP clean the Dems clocks!
Goon… As bad as Hillary is. Obama & the rest of the Dem candidates are just as bad. I don’t know why they don’t just go ahead and call themselves commie socialists?

Zsa Zsa on December 14, 2007 at 04:53 am
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