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Republicans Hold On To The Base
AP ^ | November 9, 2006

Posted on 11/09/2006 4:58:44 AM PST by Leroy S. Mort

WASHINGTON (AP) - The Republican Party ceded the center of American politics and its many groups of swing voters to the Democratic Party in the 2006 midterm elections - with predictable results.

The GOP lost the House and the Senate.

Republicans lost badly among independent voters, suburbanites, white Catholics, the middle class and Hispanics - groups it had been courting successfully in recent years, exit polls found.

``The one thing that is so frustrating is when you hear the Karl Roves and Ken Mehlmans talking about focusing on the base because there are no swing voters,'' said GOP pollster Tony Fabrizio, who says there are still plenty of swing voters.

A fourth of voters this year were independents, according to exit polls, and they voted heavily for Democratic candidates.

Fabrizio was referring to Rove, top White House political strategist, and Mehlman, chairman of the Republican National Committee.

Mehlman's spokeswoman, Tracey Schmitt, countered that the RNC chairman has been working hard for the last couple of years to expand the party ``to expand the number of swing voters who call themselves Republicans.''

Using a playbook that has served them well over the past few elections, the administration and GOP strategists turned out Republicans and conservatives at the usual levels.

``The Republican base turned out and held,'' said Whit Ayres, a GOP strategist. ``To generate a Republican turnout in this climate was remarkable. ... But for the first time in a decade, independents preferred Democratic over Republican House candidates, this time by 18 points.''

Anger at the Bush administration and its war in Iraq drove part of this shift toward Democrats, exit polls found.

The evaporation of the political center had Republican strategists searching for answers. Many acknowledged that the party is not likely to regain ground with swing voters as long as the war in Iraq drags on. The exit polls found heavy opposition to the war from voters who cast their ballots for Democrats.

``Republicans are going to have to look at how to rebuild this coalition,'' said GOP strategist David Winston.

Some Republicans didn't want to acknowledge publicly that the midterm losses and loss of the political center to the Democrats are very large political problems.

``It comes from mistakenly believing you can own an issue forever - terrorism,'' Fabrizio said. ``It's mistaking voters going along with you on a single issue with a political realignment.''

More than two-thirds of voters said terrorism was very important in their vote on Tuesday, and they divided their support between Democrats and Republicans.

Among the swing groups that tilted heavily toward Democrats:

Independents backed Democrats by 57-39 - after voting for the GOP by 48-45 in 2002.

Moderates backed Democrats by 60-38 - after voting Democratic 53-45 in 2002.

Suburbanites backed Democrats by 50-48 - after voting for the GOP 57-40 in 2002.

Those in the middle class - those who make more than $30,000 a year but less than $75,000 a year - backed Democrats 52-45 after more than half supported the GOP in 2002.

Hispanics backed Democrats 69-30 - after backing Democrats 61-37 in 2002.

The 2006 results come from a national exit poll of 13,208 voters conducted for The Associated Press and television networks by Edison Media Research and Mitofsky International.

Results for the full sample were subject to sampling error of plus or minus 1 percentage point, higher for subgroups.

The loss of the swing voters and the political center may be only a temporary setback for the GOP.

``It wouldn't surprise me to see them come back and vote for a Republican for president in 2008,'' said Ayres. ``That depends on who's nominated and whether things change in Iraq.''

AP polling director Mike Mokrzycki, AP manager of news surveys Trevor Tompson and AP news survey specialist Dennis Junius contributed to this story.


TOPICS: Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: elections; swingvoters
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To: Jim Noble
What's happened is that the Liberty voter has been pushed out

I'm not a "liberty" voter. I'm a social conservative. And I've been pushed out. I voted for neither the Republican senatorial candidate (a pro-abortion, gun-grabbing, pro-homo limosine liberal) nor the Republican House candidate (they didn't run one).
101 posted on 11/09/2006 8:28:33 AM PST by Antoninus (Fire Ken Mehlman....)
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To: Leroy S. Mort

Read it and weep.


102 posted on 11/09/2006 8:28:56 AM PST by pollyannaish
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To: lentulusgracchus
Mehlman is gay, too, and I don't think he can be relied on to support DOMA and an amendment to protect marriage from the army of gay lawyers (there are hundreds working on this issue) who are trying to level it.

That's part of the problem. When you're supposed to be the Party of family values, it's a bit of a tough sell when your chairman is a butt-pirate.
103 posted on 11/09/2006 8:30:31 AM PST by Antoninus (Fire Ken Mehlman....)
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To: rhombus
Then you must be young. :-)

Guilty.

I'm really sorry that your govenment over promised you and didn't come clean about it.

We are nearing 70 trillion in debt (including unfunded liabilities). Either taxes need to double or we need to reign in entitlements. Or we can just ignore the problem, win elections and wait for the bill to come due. Whoever is in office at that time goes the way of the Whigs.

For me it's quickly becoming not about Left vs. Right but Truth vs. Lies - and right now, almost everyone is lying.

104 posted on 11/09/2006 8:30:47 AM PST by NeoCaveman (Congratulations to Michelle Bachman, Steve Chabot, Mark Wahlberg, Adrian Smith and other CFGers)
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To: Dane
J.D. Hayowrth is now gone, probably because voters didn't like his incindiary Tom Tancredo like rhetoric.

Actually, his opponent criticized him for not being tough enough on the border issue...
105 posted on 11/09/2006 8:31:33 AM PST by Antoninus (Fire Ken Mehlman....)
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To: rhombus
Agreed. What to do about Iraq? Do we support privatizing Social Security? What will we counter the Dems push for nationalized health care with? When families have to pay hundreds of dollars a week for coverage will we succeed with a message of "tough it out"? When ridiculously priced college tuition costs bankrupt graduates and families, do we give them the "tough it out" message again? What's our identity on these specific middle class pocketbook issues? How do we avoid the Democratic lure of socialism? To quote Bush, "A litany of complaints is not a plan"

Once socialism starts, there is no stopping it. Government shouldn't even be in the healthcare or college tuition business. There's the key. But since some politian at some point chose to make it a government issue, now its thought of as a government problem. Its not! We need to somehow figure out a way to start moving these issues back to the people. First you have to educate the people that getting out of these issues means smaller government and that the prices would drop drastically if you go back to paying for your own healthcare and college tuition. Its the only way but it would be very hard.

106 posted on 11/09/2006 8:34:28 AM PST by beckysueb
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To: NeoCaveman
I'm really sorry that your govenment over promised you and didn't come clean about it.OUR government is We the People and they are lying to you too.

We are nearing 70 trillion in debt (including unfunded liabilities). Either taxes need to double or we need to reign in entitlements. Or we can just ignore the problem, win elections and wait for the bill to come due.

That's exactly what has happened and will continue to happen. You confess to being young, YOU are going to really get stuck with the bill. Do you know what a voting block that baby boomers like me will be? Do you really think you will reign in entitlements? Sorry but that's hard truth. I very much supported privitization for your sake. You guys are going to be screwed with taxes and that's NO LIE.

107 posted on 11/09/2006 8:36:04 AM PST by rhombus
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To: ClaireSolt

You are right.


108 posted on 11/09/2006 8:37:38 AM PST by beckysueb
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To: Leroy S. Mort

We lost because 25 million Republicans and 31 million Rats turned out to vote. Bush got 62 million votes in '04. That's 37 million missing Republican voters. Hell, the base could've stayed home if they had turned out.


109 posted on 11/09/2006 8:37:39 AM PST by LibWhacker
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To: Antoninus

Melhman, and don't even ask about Joann Davison, number 2 at RNC.....


110 posted on 11/09/2006 8:38:31 AM PST by NeoCaveman (Congratulations to Michelle Bachman, Steve Chabot, Mark Wahlberg, Adrian Smith and other CFGers)
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To: ClaireSolt

Point taken.


111 posted on 11/09/2006 8:38:34 AM PST by beckysueb
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To: rhombus

Then the future is a failed welfare state, kind of like France or General Motors, because of bully voting by our most politically active age group.

If I believed that, I wouldn't be here. There would be no point to it.


112 posted on 11/09/2006 8:41:52 AM PST by NeoCaveman (Congratulations to Michelle Bachman, Steve Chabot, Mark Wahlberg, Adrian Smith and other CFGers)
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To: beckysueb
We need to somehow figure out a way to start moving these issues back to the people. First you have to educate the people that getting out of these issues means smaller government and that the prices would drop drastically if you go back to paying for your own healthcare and college tuition. Its the only way but it would be very hard.

Sorry, but returning to the past isn't going to cut it. Who will be the first to give up their check? Sorry I just don't see that as a winning issue. People wouldn't even take the risk of private social security accounts.

113 posted on 11/09/2006 8:43:03 AM PST by rhombus
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To: NeoCaveman

Where would you go?


114 posted on 11/09/2006 8:43:48 AM PST by rhombus
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To: Jim Noble

Here is what people in Washington know, but don't tell us. About 35% of the country is hard core conservative. About 25% is hard core liberal. The Republicans have the upper hand usually in elections because of it. 40% in the middle are mostly idiots.

I will say it again; idiots. It may be too harsh. They are unaware. They do not know who Pelosi is, nor Hastert. They couldn't name the Secretary of State, let alone Transportation. They don't even know who controls the congress. Some here might think I am making this up, I am not. Most people can not name 2 supreme court justices. They can name 6 members of the Brady Bunch though. These are the folks who decide the elections. Period. People who go to work, are decent people, play with their kids, watch sit-coms, go to soccer practice, and pay zero attention to politics other than the political ads every 2 years during breaks from Wheel of Fortune.

These people decide the election. Period. Not our base, not the democratic base. These people.


115 posted on 11/09/2006 8:45:47 AM PST by dogbyte12
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To: rhombus
Finish the thought. Are you recommending a draft or stepped up recruitment? Exactly what?

A draft doesn't make sense, by the time you train the draftees, their time served is almost up. So I have practical and philosophical problems with a draft.

For decades our policy has been that we need to be able to fight two fronts at once if need be, and we aren't - or are in a minimilaist fashion.

My recommendation is to use the 1986 size as a blue print and then adjust from there based on the input of the military. I'm guessing more special ops, etc. And to pay for the recruiting bonuses, extra salaries, higher pay, etc. we'll need a either modest tax hike and spending restraint or both.

116 posted on 11/09/2006 8:47:26 AM PST by NeoCaveman (Congratulations to Michelle Bachman, Steve Chabot, Mark Wahlberg, Adrian Smith and other CFGers)
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To: rhombus
Where would you go?

Nah, by here I meant FR.

Or in politics in general.

117 posted on 11/09/2006 8:48:09 AM PST by NeoCaveman (Congratulations to Michelle Bachman, Steve Chabot, Mark Wahlberg, Adrian Smith and other CFGers)
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To: Leroy S. Mort

IF the GOP wants to be the majority party - they need to appeal to the majority of voters. It is not rocked science. The GOP needs new ideas and decent, honest politicians. They have two years to persuade the country that have listened to the people and changed accordingly.


118 posted on 11/09/2006 8:48:46 AM PST by Sunsong
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To: rhombus

I know. It would be very hard.


119 posted on 11/09/2006 8:50:19 AM PST by beckysueb
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To: NeoCaveman

Well sorry you didn't like my entitlement projection but I saw how massively Social Security reform failed coming off a big political win in 2004. There was no Congressional effort on even finding a compromise or working out anything - this with a Republican Congress? Now with a Democratic Congress and huge numbers of baby boomers retiring what do you think will happen. Social security probably will be means tested but we will also have massive tax increases too. Do you speak French, my friend?


120 posted on 11/09/2006 8:55:37 AM PST by rhombus
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