Posted on 11/10/2006 7:24:07 AM PST by Tolerance Sucks Rocks
ELECTION POST-MORTEM
While most Republicans woke up this morning lamenting Armageddon Tuesday, some of us didnt lose any sleep over the election results. Happy at the prospect of two years with Harry Reid and Nancy Pelosi running Congress? Hardly. But there are a lot of silver linings behind these otherwise dark clouds
* The single, most important lesson here: Democrats didnt win; Republicans lost. And they didnt just lose; they were routed. Voters didnt reward Democrats, they punished Republicans. Badly. This wasnt the country saying it wanted to go further Left; it was the country saying Republicans had already taken the country too far Left. This wasnt about taking the country in a new direction; it was about correcting the GOPs course.
* This wasnt swing voters swinging over to the Left. This was conservative voters swinging back to the Right. This was burning the village down to save it. Conservatives didnt necessarily stay home, though certainly many did. But they did find other ways to protest the GOPs leftward tilt. Itll be interesting to see the under-vote in this years congressional races. That would be the number of ballots cast where a vote in the congressional race was left blank.
* Yesterdays election was a repudiation of George W. Bushs brand of compassionate conservatism. It was also a repudiation of waging a politically correct war with one hand self-tied behind your back. No American soldiers life is worth a mosque. And American generals, not American lawyers should be running the war. Youre either all in or get out.
* The Democrats, of course, are taking all the wrong lessons out of yesterdays results, a fact which cant help but help Republicans regain their bearings and regain their majorities two years from now. Democrats will over-reach, as is their nature. The big question is whether or not the GOP will reposition itself to take advantage of the opportunity sure to come in 2008.
* Had yesterdays reckoning with conservatives happened in 2008 instead of 2006, Republicans would have likely lost not only Congress, but the White House, as well. Best that the lesson was taught to Republicans now than later.
* The entire House Republican leadership team should now resign - from Denny Hastert on down. Its time to hand the ball off to Reps. John Shadegg and Mike Pence. Had House GOP members done that last January when they had the chance, they may have avoided the disaster they suffered yesterday.
* Question: Now that Democrats have wrested control of Congress from the Republicans, how long do you think it will be before we see helicopters airlifting the last U.S. service personnel from the roof of the American embassy in Baghdad?
* Do you think the Republican establishment will FINALLY have learned not to put its fate in the hands of a Dole? Bob Dole gave Republicans the embarrassing 1996 presidential defeat, and his wife Liddy, who was put in charge of the National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) this cycle, coached the team to the crushing Senate losses a decade later.
* The biggest victory in losing yesterday? The defeat of liberal Sen. Lincoln Chafee (ACU Lifetime Rating: 37) in Rhode Island. Not only was the Senates most liberal Republican purged from the ranks, but the Republican Partys establishment got a kick right in the shorts, as well. Recall that the NRSC, the RNC and the White House pulled out all the stops to defeat Chafees conservative challenger in the GOP primary just two months ago, saying the party had to sacrifice principle for electoral victory. As it turned out, they got neither. Conservative Republican voters in Rhode Island got their revenge.
* As did conservative Republican voters in Pennsylvania, where Sen. Rick Santorum was upbraided for famously saving liberal Republican Sen. Arlen Specters bacon two years ago in his GOP primary race against conservative Rep. Pat Toomey. Paybacks a
* As did conservative voters in Ohio, where Sen. Mike DeWine (ACU Lifetime Rating: 80) got spanked, at least in part, for his role in the infamous Gang of 14 which stopped the Republican majority from deploying the nuclear option and ending the Democrat blockade of judicial nominations.
* Republican Sen. Conrad Burns out in Montana got hit by conservatives for not only drifting too far left on the Earmark Express, but for getting too tied up in the Jack Abramoff insider scandal. Any Montanan who goes native in Washington, DC is gonna have some big problems.
* When a strong social conservative such as Sen. Jim Talent loses in a bedrock state of social conservatism such as Missouri over the social issue of embryonic stem cell research, its time to rejigger the conservative legislative priorities and get back to the basics of taxes, spending and national defense.
* Perhaps the most devastating loss of the evening will end up being Sen. George Allen in Virginia, a race which will likely be too close to call for quite some time with the balance of power in the Senate on the line. Allen was the toast of the town just two short years ago after riding herd on the extremely successful GOP effort that resulted in a 55-45 Republican majority in the Senate in 2004. And he was fast-tracked to be the conservative choice in the early 2008 GOP presidential contest. Those hopes are now gone, even if he does somehow miraculously hold onto his Senate seat. Oh, how the mighty have fallen.
* Republicans wouldnt have lost the Senate, if in fact they do end up losing the Senate, had Republican Tom Kean Jr. won in New Jersey. Kean, youll recall, is the Republican candidate who called for Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfelds resignation in the campaign. Now the Left might hate Rumsfeld, but conservatives dont. Not a smart political move there.
* One bright light in the Senate contests: conservative Republican Sen. John Ensign whupped Jimmy Carters kids butt in Nevada. Theres nothing quite like beating a Carter for conservatives.
* Oh, and lets not forget that little Democrat dust-up in Connecticut. Remember, Democrats are crowing that yesterdays victories were a victory for the anti-war movement. But former Democrat Sen. Joe Lieberman came back as an Independent to crush the Lefts anti-war candidate yesterday, 50-40 percent.
* You gotta believe there was a serious anti-Republican backlash out in the Colorado gubernatorial race, where outgoing Gov. Bill Owens sold out the Right by supporting efforts to suspend the states government-restraint TABOR law last year. A strong GOP candidate, Rep. Bob Beauprez - who once served as the states Republican Party chairman - went down in flames. Thanks, Gov. Owen.
* Asa Hutchinson was best known as George Bushs drug czar for a time, before doing a stint at the poorly-regarded at least as far as conservatives are concerned Department of Homeland Security. He lost his bid for governor in Arkansas.
* Republican Rep. Jim Nussle lost his bid for the governors office in Iowa. Nussle married a lobbyist a few years back.
* Republican Dick DeVos lost his bid against the job-killing Democrat governor in Michigan. The DeVos family was well-known for their opposition to the Michigan Civil Rights Initiative which would have banned the use of affirmative action in government hiring and college admissions. Voters passed MCRI and abolished affirmative action by an overwhelming margin yesterday. A HUGE victory for my friend Ward Connerly, who I hope to have on this weeks radio show Friday night.
* The best doggone victory yesterday for limited-government conservatives was Gov. Mark Sanford winning re-election in South Carolina. Sanford was under fire for being too libertarian - including supporting school vouchers and vetoing Republican-passed spending bills. In fact, the GOP majority leader did ads for the Democrat candidate because he was ticked off that Sanford showed up one day in the Legislature holding two pigs under his arms - one called Pork and the other called Barrel. Sanford was also criticized roundly for not compromising his principles or cutting deals on core issues. He won with 55 percent of the vote.
* The worst defeat for conservatives yesterday was the loss of Rep. J.D. Hayworth in Arizona. Not only did the GOP lose a true limited-government conservative, but a leader in the fight against illegal immigration as well as an articulate spokesman. Most Republicans are tongue-tied, wishy-washy weenies when on TV. Hayworth was a notable exception. But something tells me J.D. wont be off the stage for long. Gov. Hayworth or Sen. Hayworth has a nice ring to it.
* Whether you call it a house-cleaning or thinning the herd, theres no mistaking the fact that a number of well-know moderate-to-liberal Republicans in the House of Representatives were booted yesterday. Robert Simmons (ACU Lifetime Rating: 54) in Connecticut was trailing this morning, though the race was still too close to call. Fellow Connecticutian (or is it Connecticutite) Nancy Johnson (ACU Lifetime Rating: 47) lost. Charlie Bass (ACU Lifetime Rating: 71) in New Hampshire lost. John Sweeney (ACU Lifetime Rating: 77) in New York lost. Deborah Pryce (ACU Lifetime Rating: 79) in Ohio lost. Curt Weldon (ACU Lifetime Rating 70) in Pennsylvania lost.
Theres much, much more to go over, but Im off to the radio studio for some post-election analysis on NPR. Well pick this back up later. But believe you me, this is not as bad for limited-government conservatives as many folks would have you think. This was a much-needed pruning which will allow the GOP to come back much healthier in the future
This was, indeed, a loss for Republicans. But they asked for it. Serves em right. And in the long run, this may yet prove to be a huge victory for limited government conservatism. Onward and rightward!
>>The worst defeat for conservatives yesterday was the loss of Rep. J.D. Hayworth in Arizona.
It's not clear that he lost- votes are still being counted. The race was called by the media, not by any qualified authority.
* Do you think the Republican establishment will FINALLY have learned not to put its fate in the hands of a Dole? Bob Dole gave Republicans the embarrassing 1996 presidential defeat, and his wife Liddy, who was put in charge of the National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) this cycle, coached the team to the crushing Senate losses a decade later.
(or a BUSH)!
Amen!
I've been doing a lot of thinking these past 2 days. It came to me that my party had gone too far left..(they abandoned me about a 2000 miles to the right) passsing these massive spending bills, playing hot potato with illegal immigration.. etc.. now the Dems hold power.. let's see if they can capture OBL, let's see if they can win the Iraq War, and WOT. too long the did posturing and finger pointing, now they have to get serious and make tough decisions.
YOu forgot to mention Bob Ehrlich as a loss(MD Repub).
He was fiscal conservative, but a social lib.
He lost to a free spending mayor Omally.
WE also had a black candidate (Steele) who got 20% of the black vote. ANd now Dean is criticizing the MD Dem party for
not having enough black candidates. The MD dems will complain about not having blacks represent them and the
dems will promise them that next time it will happen.
MD is a big loser in the election.
And recent ACU rating much, much lower.
Can we please stop this charade that this election was somehow about Repubs being "too far left"?
It was about Iraq. Period.
Why did you post this article by this moron?
Nussle married a lobbyist? So what?
If they love each other, I don't care.
The type of people who wrote this article need to be purged from the party. And for good.
I will take the loss of Kean,Chafe and Dewine.
I will never understand why the GOP supported them
anyway. And supporting Spector cost Santorum his seat.
Did we have the Senate anyway?
Time to clean out our ranks. Let; just hope
there is enough of the country left to save once we do.
Bedroom politics.
Sometimes a good colon cleansing is what we need with the sh@* begins to pile up. We will all feel better as a result.
Making a silk purse out of a sow's ear.
You forgot one huge thing: If there's another Supreme Court vacancy, the only kind of nominee that will get through now will be an O'Connor/Kennedy/Souter type. That's the end of a chance to put a conservative majority on the court for maybe 10 years or more - maybe a lot more. The conservatives who didn't vote will blame Bush for the non-conservative nominee, claiming it proves he's not conservative after all, because frankly they're not very bright.
Not to mention the victory for Al Qaeda, the foreign fighters and the insurgents - they effected regime change within the US.
I'm proud to have had the honor of being able to (a) vote against that carpetbagging son-of-a-peanut farmer, and (b) cast my vote for a real, no-nonsense conservative republican senator, John Ensign.
Everyone's talking about republicans returning to their conservative roots; just look at John Ensign as an example. He walks his talk, and his talk is plain, simple, no-nonsense conservatism. And he won handily.
Whatever the country meant or didn't mean; we're now headed for socialism. Does the writer actually think they care what the people want ?
Until they get the real reasons for the losses into their thick heads, we will never regain any sort of majority status....
It certainly was not spending, and this was his entire reason for failure on Tuesday.
Spending may be a inside baseball issue, but it had no national implications...
What did, was Conservative Hubris....A bunch of it....
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