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Can Republicans Still Win National Elections? After a disastrous 2022 midterm performance, the GOP may be poised for a period of prolonged opposition at the national level.
The Federalist ^ | 01/13/2023 | Michael O' Shea

Posted on 01/13/2023 8:45:40 PM PST by SeekAndFind

The 2022 midterm elections were a catastrophe for Republicans, and a historic one at that.

Every meaningful trend favored GOP candidates: uneasy economic conditions, an unpopular president who seems better suited to a bingo hall, a volatile foreign-policy environment, and a midterm voter pool that has consistently favored Republicans. Democratic candidates won many competitive Senate races, and the nearly inevitable Republican takeover of the House barely materialized. Some candidates, like Kari Lake in Arizona, snatched defeat from the jaws of certain victory. And President Trump vented his frustration at pro-lifers who fueled his 2016 victory. It might be time to ask: Can Republicans still win at the national level?

History shows that American politics is reliably cyclical. So, too, is this kind of catastrophizing. After the 2004 election, some pundits spoke of the end of the Democratic Party; four years later, that same party emphatically won the White House and Congress, including a filibuster-proof Senate supermajority that allowed passage of Obamacare.

Furthermore, both parties are reliably incompetent at governing and, really, anything besides fundraising and generating anger. Once one achieves an edge, as Democrats currently enjoy now, the hourglass starts pouring. Think about it this way: It’s only a matter of time until the party of drag queen story hour becomes embroiled in a major scandal or otherwise wrecks its credibility.

Yet, these observations rely on historical experience and ignore statistical realities that are increasingly unfavorable for conservatives. For all the left’s heartburn over the Electoral College, it’s a system that isn’t all that friendly to Republicans these days. If we consider Donald Trump a generational anomaly, the Republicans haven’t won under this system since George W. Bush did it in 2004, a time when states such as Colorado, Nevada, and Virginia still fell comfortably into the Republican column. Bush even won New Mexico, a state the Republicans don’t contest anymore.

Let’s use Trump’s 2016 victory map as a starting point. A nearly perfect set of circumstances delivered Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin, states that hadn’t voted Republican in decades. The idea that this is easily replicable is an optimistic one. Then, are Arizona and Georgia’s Democratic turns just temporary blips? There is disappointingly little evidence for this theory. Pickups of states like Nevada or New Hampshire wouldn’t be shocking and could offset losses in other places, but they aren’t worth many electoral votes. And there is also the Republican Party’s need to maintain control of states like North Carolina and Texas; the massive migration of people from left-wing states to job-rich locales in the American South is no secret, nor are the Democrats’ ambitions in these places.

Thus, a Republican presidential victory relies on some combination of high performance in the Rust Belt and key holds in the Sun Belt. A candidate like Gov. Ron DeSantis, who seems lab-engineered to be president of the United States, running against an uninspiring Biden-Harris ticket amid poor economic conditions, might run this gamut. The smart money might even be on that outcome. But what about when these critical circumstances aren’t aligned in favor of Republicans? Can they hope to win even 50 percent of the time?

Even in the event of a comfortable DeSantis victory, he is probably looking at a ceiling of something like 315 electoral votes (Trump won 304 in 2016). By comparison, the Democrats start off with almost 200 from just the West Coast, Illinois, New York, and New England, places that would vote Democratic even if the candidate killed someone on camera.

Thus, in the coming years, we could see a departure from the seesaw that has characterized American politics for more than half a century. Democrats might be positioned to win well over half the time. For a glimpse of how this would work, one need only look at how Canada’s Conservative Party, contending with large-scale immigration and population consolidation in major metro areas, has lost three consecutive national elections and seems uncertain about how to achieve a different outcome.

This can play out in one of three ways. Most favorable for Republicans would be the wholesale realignment of voters, specifically the long-awaited migration of Latino voters to the GOP. This sort of process is inevitable in politics — Trump signs outside Pittsburgh union offices, for example, would have been unthinkable not so long ago, but it is slow and unpredictable, and neither politicians nor voters are known for patience.

Next, the Republican Party could endure a prolonged period of opposition, like the Labour Party in the United Kingdom or the Social Democratic Party in Germany during Merkel’s tenure. These parties have been large and influential enough to influence policy, but politics is about winning, and opposition parties by definition do not. It is also unlikely that American politicians of either party would have the discipline to prioritize principles over power.

That leads to the third possibility, in which the Republican Party moves leftward and abandons policy positions that it cynically deems troublesome. We witnessed an element of this recently when 39 Republican congressmen and 12 Republican senators accepted the “resistance is futile” ultimatum of influential societal institutions and supported the ironically named “Respect for Marriage Act.”

You can bet the Republican establishment is not willing to wave goodbye to its precious suburban, white-collar voters who sport pronouns in their LinkedIn profiles and want abortion on demand for a rainy day. Overtures to these voters would consign the more conservative elements of the Republican coalition to supporting a third party that can’t win or a lesser-of-two-evils party that doesn’t reflect their values. This is the worst of the three outcomes; conservatives should take it seriously and fight it uncompromisingly.


Michael O’Shea is an alumnus of the Hungary Foundation and Mathias Corvinus Collegium’s Budapest Fellowship Program, during which time he worked at the Danube Institute in Budapest. His primary areas of research are European family policy, mass migration, and the Visegrád Group.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: bloggers; concerntroll; elections; electionz; electionzzz; elekchunz; fakenews; gop; michaeloshea; notdisastrous; republicans; tds
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To: SeekAndFind
The clear message is that people who think the country is headed in the wrong direction want different Democrats to fix it.

The Republican brand is unsalvageable in large swaths of the country. Trump's success in 2016 was based on stealing blue collar Democrat votes in Rust Belt states - offering them a de facto third party option. Voters saw Trump as that "different Democrat" and disregarded the (R) after his name - a loophole that Democrats have now firmly closed with ballot harvesting and naked fraud in Milwaukee, Detroit, and Philadelphia.

The electoral math looks like this:

There are really only three gold-colored "battleground" states this time - I am optimistically giving GA to the GOP. A DeSantis would have to win both AZ and WI to win in 2024.

61 posted on 01/14/2023 6:55:52 AM PST by Mr. Jeeves ([CTRL]-[GALT]-[DELETE])
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To: SeekAndFind

We don’t have elections anymore.


62 posted on 01/14/2023 6:56:39 AM PST by mewzilla (We will never restore the republic if we don't first secure the ballot box.)
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To: SeekAndFind

It’s Saturday morning. Time for the weekend surrender monkey parade.


63 posted on 01/14/2023 7:22:38 AM PST by sergeantdave (AI is the next iteration of a copy and paste machine.)
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To: SeekAndFind

No.


64 posted on 01/14/2023 9:59:13 AM PST by Ge0ffrey
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To: SeekAndFind

Not as it is currently situated. They are the “Seinfeld Party”, a party about nothing.


65 posted on 01/14/2023 9:59:55 AM PST by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: newzjunkey
Keep Trump muzzled and out of sight and Republicans will regain power

To answer your tag line, "Vote Fraud!"

66 posted on 01/14/2023 1:30:12 PM PST by DiogenesLamp ("of parents owing allegiance to no other sovereignty.")
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To: nwrep

did he run for the senator of GA? did he run in the midterms?

He cannot have “lost” if he wasn’t running.


67 posted on 01/14/2023 1:34:10 PM PST by SPDSHDW (Ya’ll knew he was installed via fraud, and chose to do nothing. Enjoy the roller coaster ride.)
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To: nwrep
2midterms plus 2 Senate special elections in Georgia.

I usually don't say things like this about other freepers, but you are a special class of stupid.

*VOTE FRAUD*. Figure it out.

68 posted on 01/14/2023 1:37:51 PM PST by DiogenesLamp ("of parents owing allegiance to no other sovereignty.")
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To: DiogenesLamp
I usually don't say things like this about other freepers, but you are a special class of stupid.

Come on, grow up. Geesh.

69 posted on 01/14/2023 1:40:01 PM PST by Fury
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To: SeekAndFind

What is this, a joke?


70 posted on 01/14/2023 1:44:01 PM PST by McGruff (Don't underestimate Joe's ability to f*** things up - Barack Obama)
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To: DiogenesLamp

100% agree re: fraud. Thanks.


71 posted on 01/14/2023 1:53:27 PM PST by nwrep
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To: SeekAndFind
Lots of money, notoriety and a kick-ass retirement plan with NO blame or responsibility when things go wrong...

The republicans just love it when plan comes together... (spit)

72 posted on 01/14/2023 1:59:57 PM PST by unread ("It's not enough that we do our best; sometimes we have to do what's required." W. Churchill.)
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To: nwrep
100% agree re: fraud. Thanks.

You are saying you weren't serious about calling Trump a 5 time loser and blaming him for the midterms?

Well played sir. You got me.

And I apologize.

Trouble is, I have argued for several weeks with people who believe exactly what you were trolling me with.

73 posted on 01/14/2023 2:02:09 PM PST by DiogenesLamp ("of parents owing allegiance to no other sovereignty.")
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To: SeekAndFind

The Republican won more seats then the democrats.
4 million more people voted voted Republicans.
Get rid of people like traitor McConnell and the Republicans will win even bigger.


74 posted on 01/14/2023 3:55:13 PM PST by minnesota_bound (Need more money to buy everything now)
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