At the ballot box, Republicans have swept three state-wide elections. November saw Republicans
take over the governor's mansions in Virginia and New Jersey. In January, a
cataclysmic shock went across the political world as Republican Scott Brown
won the Kennedy Senate seat in Massachusetts. That defeat cost Democrats their supermajority in the Senate, a result
applauded by most Americans. Independent voters in these elections resoundingly supported the Republicans, 66-33 in Virginia, 60-30 in New Jersey and 65-34 in Massachusetts, after supporting Obama in 2008.
As the election calendar turns towards the midterms, most analysts are predicting Republican
gains of
around 25 seats or
higher in the House and as many as
7 or 8 in the
Senate, leading many to speculate that we could be seeing the landslide of 1994 all over again. Indeed, Stan Greenberg, a top Democratic pollster,
acknowledges that his polls are eliciting a feeling of panic as it's beginning to look like that epic election cycle. Indeed, the polling looks
remarkably similar. To regain control of Congress, Republicans must flip 40 seats in the House and 10 in the Senate. Senate control is
not yet
in play. However, top political handicapper Charlie Cook has gone so far as to
say it is "very hard to come up with a scenario where Democrats don't lose the House." He added that you could triple the
Republican Party's problems and they'd be better than those currently facing Dems. He blames the White House for "fundamental, total miscalculations from the very, very beginning" about the direction to take the country.
Even in our political system, in which change is the only constant, the seismic shift in the political landscape we've witnessed over the last year is remarkable. Cook
notes, Democrats dominated Congress for four decades until the Republican Revolution of 1994. Then Republicans held the House for 12 years before being ousted in 2006. That seems like a lifetime compared to the current outlook for Democrats. Says
Cook...
The trajectory of this election looks horrific for Democrats. In this kind of environment, days that go by without some "game-changing" development benefiting the GOP in a state or district are the exception, not the rule...
Whether or not Democrats hold onto their House majority by a sliver -- say, five or six seats -- and hold their Senate losses to five seats or so, the fact is that after just four years in power, congressional Democrats are in trouble.

There seems to be a new
impatience among the electorate as voters sour on DC and the politicians, for the time being Democrats, who run it. Members of Congress earn
the worst honesty and ethics score of any profession tested by Gallup. Voters see
very little "we" in the political process and are sending a
strong message to Washington that they've had enough of the
perpetual dysfunction that grips the city. Eighty-six percent of Americans
believe government is broken and
71% give Congress poor ratings. Some
blame the President, pointing out that the US is
far from ungovernable, while others
blame Republicans. We are seeing a
new populism, some call it a
peasant revolt. In this environment, all
incumbents should
beware of the
widespread sentiment, but Democrats, as the party holding all levers of power, will
bear the brunt of voter backlash, just as they
did in Massachusetts.
Fortunately for the majority, congressional popularity has
little correlation with midterm election results. Unfortunately for Democrats, presidential popularity is of
great import. Despite Obama's attempts to
reassure fellow Democrats that the "big difference" between 2010 and 1994 is "you've got me," history tells us that the President will only drag his party down in November. No president has ever
gained in approval between the beginning of a midterm year and the November elections. While Obama
says the "buzz saw"of opposition won't stop him, it may well end the political careers of his friends, leading
some to keep
their distance.
While the outlook is quite rosy for Republicans, Cook reminds the GOP that, as I wrote in
my last post, the voter discontent and outright anger now aimed at Democrats and elevating Republicans can easily turn on the GOP, particularly if we take control of the House and fail to move the country in a positive direction. If, however, Republicans are faithful stewards of voters' trust, we stand to make many more gains in the years to come. In 2012 and 2014, Democrats
must defend a combined 43 Senate seats as Republicans defend only 22. The recent electoral imbalance which helped Democrats achieve a short-lived supermajority will afford Republicans an advantage in the next two cycles. This makes the odds of Republicans regaining the Senate majority in the not-to-distant future very good.
What we have here are the makings of an epic party disaster. Whether it comes to pass is still uncertain. But it certainly could.
Will November, nine short (long?) months away, bring an epic disaster for the Democratic Party and see previously laughable Republican dreams realized or will these next months prove as tumultuous and unpredictable as the last, allowing Democrats to mitigate their own impending demise? While the GOP has all the momentum, alarms are sounding
much earlier in the cycle than they did in 1994, which gives Democrats time to try a course correction. The smartest analysts in the business
see little hope for such a turnaround, but remember,
change is the only constant when talking about the individual political sentiments of 200 million unique voters and a political world in which new developments happen not by the week but by the minute. Here's to Republicans capitalizing on Democrat's failures, not just for the sake of renewed power but for the sake of the American people and a more prosperous future. Republicans
must stand ready to govern, to bring the real change and progress we so deeply desire.
PG Poll: Put on your political prognosticator hat. Do you thing Republicans will regain control of the House of Representatives this November? How about the Senate by 2012? Vote on the left side of the page and leave your comments below!