Prometheus Posted October 29, 2010 According to all recent polls, the Democrats are going to get pummeled on Tuesday night. Will they loose both Houses? Even if the Democrats manage to hang on the Senate, the House will probably fall into GOP hands. This will be a huge setback for the skinny african and the party of FDR and Kennedy. A newly galvanized Republican party has only one goal: "to make sure Obama is a one-term president". Prepare for political paralysis, drama, endless investigations and hearings, repeals, and threats of impeachment. Here come the Republicans, or as Bill Maher describes them "the party of religious lunatics, flat-earthers, and civil war re-enactors". For both parties, midterm tunnel vision By Matt Miller "If only we'd let the banks and Detroit totally collapse, and blamed Bush for the whole thing, we'd be sitting pretty." Somewhere in the corner of a calculating Democratic political heart this thought must have occurred. Like Lenin's sly adage, "the worse, the better." The politics seem inexplicable otherwise. FDR and the Democrats scored healthy gains in the 1934 midterm election, after all - though unemployment had inched down only from a catastrophic 23.6 percent in 1932 to a still-catastrophic 21.7 percent. Seen this way, President Obama's big political mistake was stopping the recession from turning into a depression. The economy Obama inherited and has tried imperfectly to fix is now not so deep a calamity that everyone feels impelled to rally around their president. Instead, it's just awful enough for everyone to feel Obama has failed. A shellacking is coming. The only question is how big. Yet if this is certain, there's nonsense galore being peddled about the election's meaning. The American people in their wisdom are about to punish a party they're furious with by giving more power to a party they can't stand. Talk about a pathetic set of options. Economic anxiety that fuels disgust with both parties is the seminal political fact of our time, but it will be ignored by Washington in the orgies of ecstasy and despair we'll soon witness. Republicans will be blind in victory, Democrats blind in defeat. For the next two years we'll thus be ruled by the blind fighting the blind. Psychologists talk about a phenomenon called "confirmation bias" to describe our tendency to process information or interpret events in ways that confirm what we already think. While the Darwinian survival value of this instinct may not be obvious, it explains virtually everything we're hearing from both parties. ad_icon Take the GOP. So long as they ignore their own approval ratings, Republicans feel they're on the threshold of a satisfying vindication as the public revolts against Obama's socialist overreach. How this indictment can be offered with a straight face is a mystery, when Obama's chief lefty sins seem to be (1) a stimulus on a scale that former Reagan adviser Martin Feldstein and other Republican economists thought was necessary, and (2) enacting Romneycare for the masses. But who can fathom the Republican mind? If Republicans are happily deluded, however, Democrats are fatally condescending. In the Democrats' eyes, their coming setback is proof of little more than the public's plodding failure to understand all that's been done for them. To be sure, there's truth in their complaint that the White House didn't fight the PR wars well (Exhibit A is Romneycare being successfully and ludicrously branded as socialism). But far bigger than the Democrats' communications problem is their reality problem. You want to shake Democrats and scream: "No, no, it's not that - it's that unemployment is still near 10 percent, trillions are being added to the debt with no plan to stem the tide, plus you designed health reform so that no one would feel any real benefits for years." Oh, and, by the way: "Not a single banker who walked away rich while destroying his or her firm, wrecking the economy and leaving taxpayers with the bill has gone to jail or been forced to give back the ill-gotten gains. And despite 'reform,' Wall Street is still free to operate like a casino." In this context, "Hey, but it could've been a depression," was never going to be a winner. So now what? Republicans will over-interpret; Democrats will overdramatize. The GOP will proclaim that its big victory means it is on the right track, not that most Americans think the country is on the wrong one. Democrats will take up arms for their traditional circular firing squad. Then both parties will turn on each other with new levels of venom. I had hoped President Obama could move us past these dynamics. It's hardly all his fault that we haven't. But our politics remain shockingly unequal to our challenges. Everyone knows the 2012 presidential election starts Nov. 3. But the race to build a new movement to free America from Democratic and Republican blindness starts then, too. There's a missing chair, a missing microphone, a missing podium, in every public debate today. More on this after next Tuesday. Washington Post Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Prometheus Posted October 29, 2010 Obama and the mid-terms: How did it come to this? The Economist Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
N.O.R.F Posted October 29, 2010 More like US madness. Amazing the level of blatant racism disguised as politics. The Repulicans' winning formula is to play on people's prejudice and ignorance. John Stewart's rally this weekend should be interesting. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
xiinfaniin Posted October 29, 2010 In the long term (i.e. 2012), it is in Obama's interest to lose the control of congress to Republicans. That is how Clinton survived, after the unsightly exposure of Republican farce in 1994-95. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Taleexi Posted October 29, 2010 Tea party is hurting more on republicans than it is on democrats. If you don't see that trend now, come back after November and share with us what you find. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Che -Guevara Posted October 29, 2010 This doom and gloom will not materialize.Certainly dems will lose seats but not to the point Nancy Pelosi will be unseated as the speaker. Here comes the terrorist threat-nice timing Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Rain Posted October 29, 2010 Originally posted by xiinfaniin: In the long term (i.e. 2012), it is in Obama's interest to lose the control of congress to Republicans. That is how Clinton survived, after the unsightly exposure of Republican farce in 1994-95. agreed. I'm particularly waiting to witness the republican* primary in 2012. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Jacpher Posted October 30, 2010 Too many costly negative attack ads played in the airwaves this particular midterm election. I think this is one of the most powerful ads yet run ah that exposes the republicans more than anything. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Haatu Posted October 30, 2010 ^ Powerful ad indeed. Question, are Americans as ****** as the British in the sense that they vote right wing only to start complaining after a couple of years when things go wrong; they then vote left wing which means most of the problems get resolved but hey, guess what, the people get bored so they use lame excuses to vote the right wing back into power? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites