Friday, September 28, 2018

How Badly Will Kavanaugh Hurt Republicans At The Polls?

>

GOP: Blood on their... hands by Nancy Ohanian

Even Republicans in Congress were uncomfortable with Grassley's botched hearing yesterday. There seems to be a consensus that Rachel Mitchell was a really bad idea. In the White House, one official called the hearing "a disaster" for Kavanaugh’s confirmation hopes. Worse still, there is speculation that this mess is making the midterms even more perilous for Republican incumbents and Republican candidates trying to hold onto open red seats.
The cascade of sexual misconduct allegations against Kavanaugh from decades ago and President Trump’s aggressive defense of the federal appellate judge he nominated for the bench have consumed the news and captivated the nation, drowning out House Republicans laboring to survive the brewing Democratic storm by running on a growing economy and booming jobs market.

Unfolding weeks before critical midterm elections, the Senate confirmation process was poised to drive a deeper wedge between House Republicans and female voters in key suburban battlegrounds. Fresh public opinion polls showed doubts about Kavanaugh on the rise, a headache for Republicans possibly made worse by Trump’s suggestions that the alleged victims are lying.

“It’s very unhelpful. The noise never ends. It’s almost like we refuse to talk about the economy,” a Washington-based Republican strategist intimately involved in the party’s campaign to defend its 23-seat House majority said.

“Living in the suburbs, I don’t know a woman that doesn’t have a story of an attempted sexual assault, groping, something that made them feel uncomfortable or threatened,” added a Republican operative in the Midwest.

The Washington Examiner interviewed more than a half-dozen senior Republican strategists participating in operations to protect the party’s House and Senate majorities. All requested anonymity in order to speak candidly... The president compared the situation to personal experience; he has long maintained that the more than a dozen women that have accused him of sexual misconduct were lying.

From The Trump Code


But the polling shows that Kavanaugh is losing the public relations battle.

Nationally, just 27 percent of women back his confirmation to the Supreme Court in a new survey from Morning Consult survey, a pollster than tends to give Trump higher marks than others. This has some Republican insiders fretting that the Kavanaugh episode could be disastrous for a House majority in jeopardy largely because disaffected women voters are driving traditionally conservative, suburban districts toward the Democrats.

"It's definitely not good, although we don't have much further to fall with suburban women anyhow," a veteran Republican strategist said.

“This is yet another instance where the main topic of conversation and coverage is favorable to the Democrats, and that doesn't help House Republicans with six weeks to go,” a Republican operative running a campaign in a targeted district added.

Labels: ,

5 Comments:

At 5:41 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

if he hurts republicans, how badly will he hurt all the democraps who will be voting to confirm?

 
At 6:53 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Not bad enough, 5:41.

There remains plenty of time for the GOP to play with voter minds and return them to mental captivity. The "democrats" should be paying attention to how the GOP does it, but they won't learn a thing. They have already convinced themselves that the KKKochsucker KKKavanaugh is too much of an albatros for the GOP to retain dominance on Capitol Hill. It amazes me that they think they have won a great victory when they have yet to strike a killing blow.

 
At 8:20 AM, Blogger edmondo said...

The people who will vote in the mid-terms aren't going to change their minds based on the Kavanaugh shitshow. The ones who were going to vote Republicans still will. The ones who weren't still won't.

The jerk off Democrats need to sit back and wonder why the Republicans do more with 51 senators than Obama and the Democrats could do with 60 votes.

 
At 12:51 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

coupla things:
1) Nazi voters want kkkavanaugh. they'll not punish their side, except for the two possible distaffs who might vote nay, if possible due to democraps.
2) lefty voters do NOT want kkkavanaugh and may punish their own for confirming. OTOH, they never punished obamanation for betrayals and incompetence. They did punish senate and house members, but not obamanation. interesting.

3) obamanation never tried to do shit with 60 and +65 in the house. what he TRIED to do was pose so that voters were fooled into thinking he WAS trying. I honestly don't know why so many were fooled by the sophomoric play acting of reid and Pelosi... but they were. 15 million were not fooled and it cost them the big senate number (which was their goal so they didn't have to pretend to fail any more, they could let the Nazis thwart them). Had 2010 been a presidential year, obamanation would have lost too.

 
At 3:52 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

As pathetic as the "democrats" have been throughout the KKKochsucker KKKavanaugh KKKonfirmation hearings, this is the most fight they have shown since Watergate. Like Watergate, it took a few Republicans to force the issue being pushed for by the current crop of feckless "democrats", but the delay could be beneficial if the "democrats" had their act together and knew what to do next. I doubt they do.

I still expect that the KKKochsucker KKKavanaugh wins KKKonfirmation once the politically-pressured FBI completes its Keystone Kops approach to an investigation. But just maybe, a few progressives will see that there just might be a way to score victories if they stand together and incessantly demand what is right, and keep the public on their side with frequent communiques. Not even the GOP can withstand angry public pressure.

 

Post a Comment

<< Home