Posted on 11/06/2014 4:17:04 AM PST by Kaslin
Id almost forgotten to write this column. Im sitting here watching election returns, and I am just stunned.
Massachusetts? Maryland? MARYLAND?!?! Forget the Senate for a minute, or the massive Republican majority in the House, and think about the fact that Republicans did so well in the gubernatorial races across the country.
In Michigan, after passing a Right-To-Work law, Gov. Rick Snyder wins handily. Union money and muscle plus President Obama campaigning against him couldnt sink a man with the Twitter handle @OneToughNerd.
Speaking of unions, no one had a bigger target placed on their back by the unions than Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker. For the third time in four years, he beat them. And, since so much of politics is about trends, Walker has beaten the progressive machine in that blue state by a larger margin each time. That phone ringing in the background is 2016 calling…it just wants to talk.
Republican Charlie Baker beat Democrat Martha Coakley in Massachusetts. Outgoing Governor Deval Patrick has been touted as a future player on the national stage, but his leaving the keys to the governors mansion in the hands of a Republican tarnishes that shining future.
Speaking of tarnishing future plans, soon-to-be-ex-Gov. Martin OMalley in Maryland (you have no idea how much I enjoy typing that) will have to hand the keys to the governors mansion there to Republican Larry Hogan. Democrats had a more than 2:1 voter registration advantage over Republicans there are more Democrats in Maryland than Republicans and independents COMBINED. Yet OMalleys record and his machine couldnt help his lieutenant governor, Anthony Brown, across the finish line. The shock here cannot be overstated.
Even in Florida, where Democrats were sure they had a tap-in putt when it came to defeating Republican incumbent Rick Scott, they lost. Not sure what it says about the state of the Florida Democratic Party that the best candidate it could find was Charlie Crist, a former Republican nobody particularly likes. But Im sure its not good.
In Kansas, Democrats were sure to beat Republican Sam Brownback. They didnt.
In Texas…well, come on. The only consolation for Wendy Davis is she got more votes than MSNBC has viewers, so when they finally fire Ronan Farrow she can boast of a larger possible audience than the network currently has.
There were so many victories Tuesday that its hard to pick which football to spike (its currently 2:30 am, so theyre still coming fast and furious).
The Republicans took the Senate and are projected to have up to 250 seats in the House. Thats just jaw dropping.
I was publicly hopeful, but Im a pessimist by nature, so I never like to celebrate before the clock reads :00. Well, it reads :00.
The president undoubtedly will not care about these results. He didnt let the Republican wave in 2010 stand in his way. Why would he care what the people have to say now? But Democrats in general will develop a newfound respect for the word compromise. The prospect of working with people theyve completely shut out for eight years becomes appealing when irrelevancy is staring you in the face.
Whoever Republicans elect to be Senate Majority Leader, and it will probably be Mitch McConnell, should march into Harry Reids soon-to-be-former office, pick up all the bills Republicans sent over from the House and start calling them up for votes.
Every bill that comes out of Congress should have warm and fuzzy names, no matter what they do. The Hug Everyone Act, the Jobs For Americans Act, the Chicken In Every Pot Act whatever. Force the Democrats and the media to report how theyre blocking these wonderful sounding bills, or the president is vetoing them.
In other words, play the game the way Democrats have been playing it.
Not a lot is going to get done in the next two years, and thats just about the best outcome for liberty. Forcing votes and/or vetoes on popular and nice-sounding legislation, coupled with Congressional Budget Office scores showing how they will benefit the country, will be the best ammunition against anything progressives have in store for 2016. And thats the goal.
Tuesday was a great and historic night, but it wasnt a finish line. Righting the ship of state is a marathon, not a sprint. So enjoy the moment, tip an adult beverage, take the weekend to celebrate and breathe a sign of relief…then sharpen your elbows and get back in the fight. Progressives never, ever stop, and neither can we.
Celebrate the polls, ignore the trolls.
There have been 72 Governors of MA (including Charlie Baker, elected the other day.)
31 of them have been republican.
And of 7 of the last 10 have been republican.
Our state is a liberal crazy zone. Our Govs have been left leaning Republicans (tend to be social liberal and fiscal moderates). The Republican Party, in the State, could hold a meeting in a large bus. But we are pretty consistent when it comes to electing R Govs.
Interesting stats.
A good friend of mine’s daughter-in-law, Cindy Gamrat, was just elected state rep over in the 80th district of Plainwell....
Michigan is the same way and most of our governors have been republican.
Nice! I love that cartoon!
Mike shirkey got the tea party vote to the house a few years ago and he won state senate seat for my district and republican Brett Roberts took the house seat.
Trolls were licking their wounds the day after the election - and were very quiet...
Yeah...but my Zeta Sigma frat brother is still in congress...
The crippled duck president says that he is listening to the 2/3 who DIDN’T vote!
I read yesterday that one of the reasons the IRS is blocking release of the Lois Lerner emails is because there is correspondence there between Lerner an Sheheen. Any possibility of taking her down for corruption?
I never thought about that. That's a pretty impressive chart.......
48 GOP senators and another 11 likely from the divided states.
Yesterday I had some progtard following me around on twitter pretending to be a “moderate” republican.
First he tried to tell me that Michigan should have an appointed AG because an attorney general is supposed to “enforce the executive’s agenda” (Just like Holder)
Then he told me that the 17th amendment should have been unneeded because our founders wanted an equally divided senate with each state picking one democrat and one republican senator because they were never supposed to mirror the unbalances in the state legislatures.
Yeah, that’s what I don’t get - if they didn’t vote, how are they voters? As well, why not assume that by not voting for “his policies, every single one of them” can we not infer that they are not worth voting for?
I don't live there yet but I do love him.
Wow that is a nice map!!
They were sleeping, having spent the previous day voting multiple times for Demwit candidates.
Same here.
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