Wednesday, November 05, 2014

It's just a jump to the left...?

I think I have seen headlines around the net to similar effect:  the claim that that the Republicans succeeded in this mid term election by playing up to "lefty" issues.   William Salatan writes:
Republicans won big in the 2014 elections. They captured the Senate and gained seats in the House. But they didn’t do it by running to the right. They did it, to a surprising extent, by embracing ideas and standards that came from the left. I’m not talking about gay marriage, on which Republicans have caved, or birth control, on which they’ve made over-the-counter access a national talking point. I’m talking about the core of the liberal agenda: economic equality.
I'm not sure that how correct this is, but as I wrote earlier today, I certainly didn't have the impression that it was Tea Party ascendancy that had helped the Republicans this election.   Which means a particularly interesting time for fights within the GOP as to how far they use their congressional control.

And to be snide for a moment:  it's many a year since I can remember a less physically impressive politician than the turtle-like Mitch McConnell.

Update:  Someone in The Atlantic agrees with Salatan, so it must be right:
This year has been different: GOP activists have given their candidates more space to craft the centrist personas they need to win. First, in senate races in North Carolina, South Carolina, Kentucky, Alaska, Tennessee, Georgia, Kansas and Texas, comparatively moderate Republicans triumphed over Tea Party-backed challengers. Then many of those Republicans downplayed their opposition to gay marriage and highlighted their support for greater access to contraception in an effort to win over the young and women voters who in past elections spurned the GOP as too extreme. “On social issues,” wrote Slate’s Will Saletan, “Republicans are mumbling, cringing, and ducking. They don’t want the election to be about these issues, even in red states.”

3 comments:

  1. This was a very low turnout thus Republicans turned out and democrats didn't.
    The result is pretty much as expected.

    I have to say the Yanks have short memories but they have voted for gridlock yet again so they must like it. Just like they love seeing people murdered as they have more gunshops than service stations!

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  2. Anonymous8:19 am

    So what's the go then? Democrats are too stupid to help themselves? Democrats hate themselves? Democrats are malingerers? You shouldn't be so nasty

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  3. It is pretty easy to understand. Democrats are not impressed.
    Obama and his team are pretty poor at selling their policies.

    If most people think the budget is out of control when we have seen the greatest reduction in the deficit since WW2 then we are talking about salesmanship of Wayne Swan proportions!

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