Posted on 11/10/2006 9:51:00 AM PST by SmithL
California's Republican voters stayed home in droves on election day, as preliminary figures show voter turnout falling well below the state average in some of the most reliably GOP parts of the state.
Although the final totals won't be known for weeks, election day turnout in Fresno, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino and SanDiego counties, which all have Republican pluralities, ran as much as 10 percentage points below the state's 44 percent average turnout.
"The turnout in Republican counties was low compared to the turnout in counties where Democrats hold the edge,'' said Patrick Dorinson, a spokesman for the state Republican Party. "The conservative Republican base didn't show up.''
Without that anticipated flood of votes from places such as Orange County and the Inland Empire, Tuesday was a long night for most of the statewide Republican candidates not named Arnold Schwarzenegger.
"It came as a surprise,'' admitted Stan Devereaux, a spokesman for Republican state Sen. Tom McClintock, who lost the lieutenant governor's race to Democratic Insurance Commissioner John Garamendi. "We kept looking at the returns through the night and thought we had a chance, but when the returns (from Republican counties) came in, we didn't get the turnout we expected.''
(Excerpt) Read more at sfgate.com ...
I live in Loretta Sanchez' district. Was I discouraged, yes. Did I vote, Hell yes.
No excuse for passing up a chance to voice your opinion through voting. Those that stayed home need to keep their mouths shut and not complain about the results.
Why would they not at least come out and vote for McClintock? That makes no sense to me whatsoever.
And I'm serious. Those who sat out the elections should not complain about the results. They got what they wanted.
I'd really like to find out :
1) What the turnout was of Republicans compared to Democrats was in 2006. We've been assured by the Rove GOTV machine that it would be as large if not larger than 2004. It didn't seem to look that way.
2) If the turnout as large for both parties ( as it seems so ), how many cross-voters were there ? In other words, how many the Dems voters voted GOP and how many of the GOP voters voted Dem ? I suspect the later was larger than the former.
3) Independents are 26% of the general electorate. How many of these voted Democrat ? THIS IS THE DECIDING AND SIGNIFICANT FACTOR.
And WHAT ISSUES motivated Independents to move towards the Dems ?
By looking at these factors, we can probably better assess what went wrong. You won't know where you're going unless you know where you're coming from.
Dewine in Ohio shoulda took the hint two years when his kid lost the Republican primary to Jean Schmidt.
It's pretty simple.
If you don't work you get fired.....
We saw it '94 when the Dems got the boot.
Or, they got what they deserved. And the rest of us get to live with it.
I suspect they'll be a MASSIVE EPIDEMIC of not only 'voter's remorse', but also 'non-voters' remorse'.
Wait 'til the early pullout in Iraq leads to the reprocussions of limp-wristed tactics against the WOT come to rear their ugly heads. Not to mention the loss of momentum in the whole middle east.
The RATS had better enjoy their tenure of House control. It may be short-lived.
See post 40. I really don't hold it against them. I talk to these smart successful guys at my church or who live on my street and they are like deer in headlights on all things political. I still believe it's up to us (candidates, consultants and activists) to whittle it all down to a simple exciting message and Reaganesque appealing candidates.
How much did McClintock lose by?
Talent lost because he got four percent less of Republican voters than he did before.
You would, wouldn't you.
Well they certainly did not reward failure in allowing the Democrats to strengthen their socialist/homosexualist choke hold on California. The Democrats are definitely not failures in that department.
Motivation? LOL.
They don't have to cave now.
"The California GOP needs to dump Arnold, lose the executive office...."
With a strong state house and senate just what do you think would happen to the budget with a Democrat in the executive office?
A midterm choice between tweedledum and tweedledumber does not an important election make.
Don't you all get it? Even the Republicans in CA are moderately liberal.
The CAGOP was All-Arnold, All-The-Time. With "oh, by the way, vote for the other Republicans too" as an afterthought. Or worse.
The California Republican Assembly did everything possible to get Conservatives into office.
Arnold did everything possible to keep himself in office, at the expense of grabbing all face time he could have helped bring in on his very large coattails, had he so deigned.
Just watch for when Ted Kennedy starts beating the drum again to amend the Constitution to allow foreign-born persons to be president. Arnold is a megalomaniac.
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