Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Republicans Have An Even More Serious Problem Than Everyone Thought

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Can the GOP make a come back... ever?

CNN has a serious new poll out-- one that confirms other post-election surveys. It indicates that a healthy majority of Americans are delighted to have the GOP out of government, replaced, at every level, by Democrats. No one fell for the McCain/Limbaugh scare tactic: one party rule will end democracy.
In the CNN/Opinion Research Corp. survey released Tuesday, 59 percent of those questioned said Democratic control of both the executive and legislative branches will be good for the country, compared with 38 percent saying such one-party control will be bad.

"That much good will from the public opens a window of opportunity for the Democrats," said CNN Polling Director Keating Holland. "But the public expects results, and may not listen to excuses for very long if a Democratic Congress and a Democratic White House can't get their act together in time."

The poll also indicates that the public has a positive view of the Democratic Party, with 62 percent saying they have a favorable opinion and 31 percent an unfavorable opinion of the party. For the Republicans, a majority, 54 percent, said they have an unfavorable view of the GOP while 38 percent hold a positive view.

"The public has a positive view of the Democratic Party while the GOP 'brand' is hurting," Holland said. "Overall views of the Democratic Party have gone from 53 percent favorable in October to 62 percent favorable now; the GOP overall has seen a 5-point drop in its favorable rating."

Something tells me that fascistic rantings of extremists from the KKK wing of the GOP or threats to filibuster Obama's reforms by the Republican's #2 in the Senate, or the threats to impeach Obama-- before he's even sworn in-- by deranged GOP media shills, are not going to help the Republican favorability ratings.

In this morning's Washington Post Eugene Robinson argues, convincingly, that virtually the whole Republican Party is on a Bridge to Nowhere.
The essential problem is that changing course will require turning around and marching, if not sprinting, in the opposite direction. At least initially, this doesn't look like something enough Republicans are willing to do.

You think? I thought they were just kidding about all that "center right nation" hogwash they've been puking up since last Tuesday... kind of trying to make themselves feel a little better about losing elected officials who had been pegged as the GOP's future, like John Sununu (NH), Steve Pearce (NM), Tim Walberg (MI), Thelma Drake (VA), Marilyn Musgrave (CO), Bill Sali (ID), Jon Porter (NV), et al. The argument that the GOP wasn't right-wing enough should be put to rest when you look at some of the losers from last week-- far right incumbents and, even more disastrously, far right would-be replacements for mainstream conservatives. New Mexico voters were no more willing to accept a kook like Darren White for Heather Wilson than Virginia voters were going to elect James Gillmore to replace John Warner.

FL-08 (Orlando and well-healed suburbs like Winter Park and Windermere gave Bush a 10 point margin in 2004 and re-elected conservative Congressman Ric Keller with a 7 point margin in 2006. This year not only did they fail to re-elect Keller (6 point spread), they elected one of the most progressive candidates running for office anywhere, Alan Grayson, someone who talked openly about impeaching Bush, jailing war profiteers and making the economic system work for average American working families, not just multimillionaires. Yes... in the middle of Florida!

Sure, plenty of far right-wing Republicans were defeated by worthless conservative Democrats, from Michael McMahon (NY) and admitted Blue Dog Frank Kratovil (MD) to Alabama anti-choice nuts like Bobby Bright and Parker Griffith. But the real future of the Democratic Party-- and of the country-- is in the hands of forward-thinking, innovative progressives like Jeff Merkley (OR), Tom Udall (NM), Jim Himes (CT), Mark Schauer (MI), Gary Peters (MI), Martin Heinrich (NM), Larry Kissell (NC), and Tom Perriello (VA).

Robinson tackled the false postulation of "center right nation." He says that John McCain, who lost states Democrats haven't had a shot at in many years, was essentially a center right politician who was forced further and further right by the GOP's deranged and imbecilic base.
To win the Republican nomination, he had to swerve so far to the right that there was no way he could make his way back within shouting distance of the center. Not that he tried very hard: By the end of the campaign, he was suggesting that progressive taxation-- a concept that most Americans accept, having been convinced of its wisdom by Republican icon Teddy Roosevelt-- represents some sort of creeping socialism.

My guess, in any event, is that this country oscillates pretty freely in the range between center-right and center-left, and that it's clearly taking a leftward swing. My guess is that in stimulating the economy, re-regulating the financial system, making "green" technology a reality and ending the war in Iraq, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and Obama will feel more public pressure to speed up than slow down.

Big-spending, pork-loving Republicans in Congress who suddenly recall that they're actually budget hawks-- at a time when massive spending may be needed to keep a sharp recession from turning into an outright depression-- will find themselves steamrollered by history, I'm afraid.

And then there's the question of trying to knit together the Republican Party's warring factions. Many "movement" conservatives still believe they have found a champion in Sarah Palin. A lot of pragmatists believe Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal represents the future of the party. Jeb Bush may be the party's most skillful and well-rounded politician, but there's the problem of that unfortunate last name.

Most Republicans don't want Jeb Bush or Bobby Jindal or Huckabee or the Mormon or Ron Paul as their 2012 standard bearer. They want Sarah Palin and that, in short, is what's wrong with the Republican Party and why it's going to get a lot worse for them before it gets better. By the end of the campaign 60% of voters felt she was unqualified for the vice-presidency. The majority of newspapers that backed Bush in 2004 and switched to Obama in 2008 mentioned McCain's lack of judgment in picking Palin as a major reason for endorsing Obama. And yet... most Republicans want her to run in 2012. Most Democrats do too-- though for vastly different reasons.
In the national Election Day exit poll, fully 60% of voters said they did not consider her qualified to serve as president if necessary, while only 38% thought she would be ready to step in. Those figures were daunting enough, but new calculations from the exit poll provided by the NBC News political unit show that outside of the Republican base skepticism about Palin’s credentials reached even more imposing heights. While 74% of Republicans thought Palin was qualified, just 35% of independents and 9% of Democrats agreed... [W]hile quite popular among the party base, she faces deep resistance from voters outside of it, including many of the groups (independents, college graduates, residents of the coasts) who turned most sharply away from the GOP in last week’s rout.

Palin, Michael Reagan, Paul Broun, Ted Stevens, that plumber guy, Michele Bachmann, Jon Kyl... that's what's left of the Republican Party-- and they're damn proud of it.

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9 Comments:

At 11:02 PM, Blogger KELSO'S NUTS said...

DWT: Very comprehensive report. I'm not eligible to vote because, obviously, I'm not an American but I was born there and was educated there and follow American politics closely. The "fate of the great United State," as Billy Bragg famously sang, "is entwined with the fate of us all."

I really like some of those results. Jim Himes over Christopher Shays was HUGE. Grayson's a good one.

Of course, I favor Democrats as does everyone else outside the US who lives in a developed, self-governing nation, but I'm not a partisan. So, I'm a little sorry to see some of the more reasonable Republicans like Jon Porter, Gordon Smith and John Sununu go. It just makes the Republicans even more of an extremist party.

But, like with the trade-off of a superior Democrat in Sheldon Whitehouse for a good Republican (now Democrat) in Lincoln Chaffee, the Democrats get the seats and America gets a nice upgrade ideologically with Dana Titus, Jeff Merkeley, and Jeanne Shaheen. Can't hurt to have more women, either.

When I'm big-hearted, I think that I'd hate to see the Republicans LOSE good people like Porter, Smith and Sununu, who represent a different, more tolerant and positive Republican party. And that I'd like to see them be part of the party structure as they await another shot at office.

When I'm feeling anti-Gringo, I'm glad to see a disgusting party so marginalized with the Neanderthals like McCain and Kyl running the show.

 
At 3:46 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Anti-gringo is in. It's trendy to hate whites, successful people and the religious.

We just voted for a Democratic president and Congress (18% approval rating, nice!), so does CNN really need a poll stating 59% of Americans are okay with the Democrats in control?

 
At 6:04 AM, Blogger Charles D said...

It's great to see that at least one MSM commentator is willing to apply the same logic to the Republicans that they all apply to the Democrats - you have to campaign/govern from the center. I doubt they will be able to take his advice, since as you point out, there are no viable national candidates in the party that are anywhere near the center.

If the Repubs want to be led by Sarah Palin, then I say bully for them! As Paul Begala said on Bill Maher's show last week, 100% of Democrats want Palin to lead the Republican Party.

Marginalizing the Republicans to the extreme right could provide room for the Democrats to get back to the center or even center-left from their current center-right position. As much as I applaud the Obama election, I am aware that Obama's policy positions are more like Richard Nixon than JFK.

 
At 6:54 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Republicans lost and deservedly so, because they did not govern as Republicans. Everything the Republicans stood for over the years, small government, individual responsibility, non-interventionist foreign policy, free markets, etc., were all trampled into the dirt by Bush and John McCain promised to continue that legacy. McCain may be a good man, but he was just as clueless as Bush. Most "Main Street" Republicans felt betrayed by Bush policies. Considering that, it was surprising that McCain did as well as he did.

The Republican party can come back, but only if it learns to listen to Republican voters; not just Republican money. If it wants my vote again, it can no longer have the Beltway Lobbyist and Wall Street elite Republicans make policy solely for their benefit and to the detriment of the rest of us. It should be crystal clear by now, that the decision makers in the Republican party have no clue as to what's happening to folks outside the Beltway. Remember the "nation of whiners"? Remember, "the American economy is sound"? I suggest they eat at McDonalds at least once a week and shop at Wal-Mart every now and then if they really want to get an idea of how the rest of us survive – that is, if they even care. Judging by the recent redistribution of wealth from Main Street to Wall Street via the bailout, I suspect they don't care.

 
At 7:20 AM, Blogger KELSO'S NUTS said...

ANON: Where do I fit in the scheme? My skin is White but it's a dark White and my features are Mediterreanean not Nordic. I speak Spanish, so I'm not a gringo, but I'm pretty successful -- as a hedge-fund manager and professional gambler. I'm not exactly one who saves the eco-system or starving children! Ni mucho menos, papi!

I'm Russian and Latino and Jewish and New Yorker. What am I? Where do I fit in to all this American cultural identity stuff?

 
At 9:07 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

No, the poll did not say that Americans are delighted to have the GOP out of power. It said that 59% of Americans thing that having the Democrats controlling the Congress and the White House will be alright. At issue isn't which party in in control but that, contrary to the naysayers, having one party in control - in this case the Democrats - is not a bad thing. Mind you, we did indeed reject the GOP, but not enough to make the biggest impact. Unless the Democrats can pick up the Senate seats in MN, GA, and AK, they won't have enough votes to get a cloture and the Republicans will filibuster anything they don't like. There are several other parliamentary tricks they can used to block legislation and they've become rather adept at them over the last two years. If the Democrats don't get a super-majority, the GOP will block everything they can and then campaign on a "do-nothing Democrats" platform in 2010.

 
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