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Bush's great fear: Three little words
Seattle Post-Intelligencer ^ | 9/10/06 | RUPERT CORNWELL

Posted on 09/10/2006 11:18:23 AM PDT by freespirited

For an idea of the upheaval that may be about to overtake Congress, just three words suffice: Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

This is no denigration of the member for California's 8th District in the House of Representatives.

She is as competent, ambitious and driven a politician as they come. But nothing would so perfectly symbolize the twilight of a conservative era as a House led by a woman with a near-perfect liberal voting record from the great city of San Francisco, a place that lives in Republican mythology as Sodom and Gomorrah made flesh.

And the chances right now are that it will happen. America's mid-term elections, in which all 435 House seats and a third of the Senate are at stake, are just two months away. A new poll found the party leading 53 percent to 43 percent in a generic vote for Congress, while Democrats are set to gain several state governorships as well. Rarely have the stars been as favorably aligned -- an unpopular president, an equally unpopular foreign war, a stumbling economy, above all the pervasive mood that the present lot have been in power too long, and that it's time for a change.

America has been here before. The irresistible parallel is with the midterms of 1994, the year of the Republican Revolution led by Newt Gingrich -- exuberant, iconoclastic and ruthless in equal measure -- that stunned Democrats who had taken control of Congress for granted. For the first time in 130 years, a sitting speaker was voted out, and then President Clinton was obliged to declare that despite everything he was still "relevant" to how the country was run.

That year the Republicans gained a net 53 seats and seized control of the House, which they have not relinquished to this day. Then as now, national discontent with Congress was enormous. Then as now, the feeling was strong that power had corrupted the incumbent party. Then as now, an overwhelming majority -- more than 70 percent of Americans -- felt the country was "on the wrong track." In 1994, "angry voters" who turned out en masse decided matters. The same is on the cards in 2006.

There are differences, of course. Sensing the national mood, Gingrich came up 12 years ago with a "Contract With America," a catchy 10-point program that claimed to be a conservative manifesto for government. In 2006, Democrats have produced nothing as ambitious.

The nearest equivalent is "The Plan: Big Ideas for America," written by two former Clinton advisers.

One of them is Rahm Emanuel, arguably the contemporary Democrat who most resembles Gingrich. Opinionated, fast talking and fiercely partisan, Emanuel is now a member of Congress for a Chicago district, and widely tipped as the next majority whip, the ruling party's third-ranking post in Congress, should the Democrats win Nov. 7. But even he would not pretend that the book, more of a treatise than a pamphlet, has all the answers.

Nor could it, given the rifts in Democratic ranks. The party is united above all in its yearning to evict the Republicans from power. The party is split on Iraq, divided on the crucial domestic issue of immigration and torn between a left wing that insists the party has not been liberal enough and centrists who yearn for a return to the Clinton strategy of compromise and moderation, the Third Way.

The other big difference is the widespread re-drawing of congressional districts; gerrymandering by another name. Redistricting is nothing new, but computer technology has refined it to a previously unimaginable degree. Districts are now sculpted to the smallest street, all in the interests of making incumbents safe.

As a result, congressional elections have in some respects become a travesty of democracy. A swing in seats from one party to the other on the 1994 scale is simply inconceivable. Of the 435 House seats, only 40-odd at the very most are genuinely competitive. Nonetheless, Charles Cook and Stuart Rothenberg, two of America's most respected and non-partisan analysts of congressional politics, reckon that the Democrats are on course to make a net gain of 15 to 20 House seats, perhaps a few more -- and, in any case, enough for victory.

The Senate is more problematic. Republicans now control the upper chamber by 55 to 45 (there are 44 Democrats and one independent who invariably votes with them). In the event of a tie, Dick Cheney, the vice president, casts the deciding vote. To capture control, Democrats must gain six seats among the 33 up in 2006.

Five are eminently doable, in Pennsylvania, Montana, Rhode Island, Missouri and Ohio. But a sixth would mean a win in Arizona, Virginia or Tennessee, all three solid Republican territory. And to secure even that narrowest of victories, Democrats would have to hang on to all of their own seats contested this year. A Democratic Senate for the 110th Congress is possible, both Rothenberg and Cook say, but as matters stand, it is distinctly unlikely.

And do not count the Republicans out. The tide, both presidential and congressional, may be running against them. But the Republicans tend to be better financed and better organized than their rivals. And to beat off the Democratic attack, they have already devised a double defense. They plan to beat the terror drum as loudly as possible. Second, and simultaneously, close races will be depicted as contests between two candidates to be judged on their own individual merits, rather than as part of a national referendum on President Bush.

The White House did not even wait for the traditional campaign kick-off on Labor Day to launch Part 1 of the GOP strategy. Iraq might be in chaos and the economy showing signs of foundering, but Americans still give the president a narrow edge in his handling of the terror threat. As the country whiled away the last lazy days of August, Bush, Cheney and Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld were making high-profile speeches, likening the "Islamo-fascist" terrorist menace of today to the Nazi peril of the 1930s and implying that Democrats are appeasers.

Indeed, listeners to Rumsfeld's speech last week to a veterans convention in Salt Lake City could be forgiven for imagining that Neville Chamberlain had risen from the grave to lead the Democrats into battle. As proof of this thesis, Republicans point to the shock defeat of Sen. Joe Lieberman, a staunch supporter of the Iraq war, by an anti-war candidate in last month's Democratic primary in Connecticut. What more evidence was needed that the party of Franklin Roosevelt and John Kennedy had surrendered its soul to bloggers, lefties and peaceniks?

Such tactics worked in 2002 and 2004, but they may not do so again. Bush aides scrambled to claim an administration hand in the foiling of Britain's terror plot last month and the president's approval ratings duly improved.

But they quickly fell back to 40 percent or less. They might bounce back with Monday's fifth anniversary of 9/11, whose immediate aftermath was Bush's finest hour.

But unlike the congressional Democrats in 2002, or John Kerry two years later, this time party leaders will not turn the other cheek to such criticism. "The key on national security is, every time they hit us, strike back strongly and hard," says New York Sen. Charles Schumer, in charge of the party's 2006 Senate campaign.

Most important, Americans no longer buy the White House line that Iraq is the central front in the war on terror. There could yet be an "October Surprise," an out-of-the-blue event -- another terrorist attack, say, or less plausibly a dramatic improvement on the ground in Iraq. But for Republicans, these are slender straws to clutch at.

No less ominously, the economy is turning against the Republicans. After almost five years of solid expansion, growth is slowing and consumer spending is weakening; if the gloomiest forecasts are right, a collapse in the housing market could lead to recession next year.

The Bush tax cuts have overwhelmingly favored the rich. Ordinary "middle-class" Americans are worried about jobs and pay. This, too, spells trouble for the incumbent party. It is no coincidence that many of the most vulnerable Republican-held seats in the House are in old industrial states such as Pennsylvania, Ohio and Illinois, where such economic worries are greatest.

A Democratic capture of the House -- even of the Senate as well -- will not resolve these problems. Rather, the U.S. would be back where it has spent much of the past 40 years, with a divided government, and the certain prospect that this president would veto any controversial measure sent him by a Democratic Congress. The upshot would be more, rather than less, legislative gridlock.

But even partial defeat for Republicans would hasten the end of the Bush era. Almost every president is a lame duck in his final two years, as the battle to succeed him grips the national attention. But this one's abysmal approval ratings mean he would be virtually a dead duck. Finally, too, his policies would come under the scrutiny by Capitol Hill committees that have been shamefully absent since 2002, when the Democrats lost a narrow majority in the Senate. Such, until January 2009 at least, may be Washington's improbable age of Nancy Pelosi.

-----------------------------------

Rupert Cornwell writes for The Independent in Britain.


TOPICS: News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 109th; congress; election2006; idiotorial; nancypelosi; pelosi
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To: Cicero

I was eating while I sat at the computer

until I saw your pictures.

Then all the food I had eaten started to rise back up into my throat.


21 posted on 09/10/2006 11:44:58 AM PDT by sandra_789 (.)
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To: freespirited

The three words that Bush would really fear is:

China invades Taiwan.

Because that is the only three words he need fear.


22 posted on 09/10/2006 11:45:32 AM PDT by Popocatapetl
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To: freespirited
Can't you just tell RUPERT CORNWELL was touching himself while writing this piece of democrat party porn?
23 posted on 09/10/2006 11:46:23 AM PDT by msnimje (What part of-- "DEATH TO AMERICA" --do the Democrats not understand?)
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To: freespirited
Gosh, where to start? I feel like I'm walking away from the counter at a Mexican fast food joint; I got a whole bowl of tripe.

The title of the piece, and the explanation, are a joke. George Bush fears Nancy Pelosi? On what planet is this? He might disagree with her opinions, disappointed in what she says, especially about him, but this author implies that he'll cower away like seeing some deadly vampire. No, what he fears is yet another major terrorist attack on our nation. I'll give them a tidbit of the meat though - he does fear three words, but they're not Speaker Nancy Pelosi. It's 'Children are dead.'

But once again, it is the political games of 9/10 in a 9/11 world. They're going to pull off an upset, ala Gingrich. They even spoke about Gingrich's cornerstone, the Contract With America. And they said that someone's got a plan. And as usual, that was about as far as they bothered before they went on to other things.

They state that people are angry at congress - yup, Republicans (for the first time in a decade) have a lead on Democrats in being disapproved. Should last this news cycle, maybe the next, but that's it. Toss down a sheet of Nancy quotes in front of the average voter, and they'll go running screaming away. Same with Dean's quotes, Teddy's quotes, Kerry's quotes.. Oh, yeah, did I mention that virtually everyone hates their leadership, including the Democrats themselves?

I think the most frightening thing is that all politics are local: the average voter isn't voting in their congresscritter for one party or another, they're usually voting either with their already registered party, or they like the guy. They could come up with the miracle, and actually win back the house. (I don't even want to consider the senate - Dean would go back to his things about guys with flags in their pickups and it'll get really muddled from there.)

What comes next? Nothing. Those dudes with the plan? Well, they didn't consult with any women on that, there's no plan for African Americans in there, and besides, they're a bit busy holding hearings and stuff. Did you hear about the gay pride parade? Nancy's the first floater...
24 posted on 09/10/2006 11:52:04 AM PDT by kingu (No, I don't use sarcasm tags - it confuses people.)
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To: freespirited

The author of this article manages to get wrong every point he makes. What a boob..


25 posted on 09/10/2006 12:00:12 PM PDT by cibco (Xin Loi! Saddam)
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To: freespirited
Fact is, the three words "Speaker Nancy Pelosi" are the three words most likely to drive voters into the Republican column in most congressional districts in the real America.
26 posted on 09/10/2006 12:00:37 PM PDT by EternalVigilance
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To: freespirited
She is as competent, ambitious and driven a politician as they come.

She would be as flat, politically, as a trick flatulant chair pad if it weren't for her livid and uncontrollable hate for Bush!

"Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned"!

27 posted on 09/10/2006 12:02:15 PM PDT by VOYAGER (,)
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To: freespirited

---the twilight of a conservative era---

This is from the same paper that printed a glowing editorial on the Taliban not long before 9/11. Wish I could locate it.


28 posted on 09/10/2006 12:03:10 PM PDT by claudiustg (Iran delenda est.)
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To: freespirited

"Seattle Post-Intelligencer ^ | 9/10/06 | RUPERT CORNWELL"


Dream on, O Seattle!


29 posted on 09/10/2006 12:03:17 PM PDT by GretchenM (What does it profit a man to gain the whole world and lose his soul? Please meet my friend, Jesus.)
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To: freespirited
Gee, the writer of this spew forgot to mention the ABC ( rat media) miniseries that slams the last RAT administration with being totally incompetent in dealing with the Muslim terrorists, set to air 60 days before this "pipe dream" of a RAT takeover in Congress.

I wonder if that will help or hurt their dream?
30 posted on 09/10/2006 12:10:18 PM PDT by Beagle8U (Ronald Reagan didn't turn me into a Republican....Jimmy Carter did that!!)
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To: sandra_789

That picture on the left wasn't even photoshopped. She posed for it right after she was elected minority leader. Strange Cosmos just had to do a little cutting and pasting on the right.


31 posted on 09/10/2006 12:13:10 PM PDT by Cicero (Marcus Tullius)
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To: The Electrician
Obviously she is a competent politician. She is continually re-elected. And obviously she is ambitious and quite obviously she is driven.

So the statement, as written, is not entirely wrong.

Does this mean she is what the country needs? Absolutely not. It would be a disaster. First for the President, but more importantly for the Republic.

32 posted on 09/10/2006 12:15:10 PM PDT by ImpBill ("America ... Where are you now?")
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To: WhiteGuy

1. Jenna
2. Barbara
3. SilverFox


33 posted on 09/10/2006 12:41:25 PM PDT by sine_nomine (American is a great country: 20 million illegals can't be wrong. So build that wall, Mr. Bush.)
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To: EQAndyBuzz
"She is as competent, ambitious and driven a politician as they come."

I wonder if Cornwell understand if the same thing could be said about Satan who, by the way, would easily win her district as long as he had the necessary "D" after his name.

Every blue dog Democrat and any others representing conservative or swing districts needs to be asks if they will support this fifth-columnist as Speaker. If they say yes, then their constituents need to come down on them hard. If they say no, then the George Soros consortium which owns the party needs to throw a hissy fit.

34 posted on 09/10/2006 12:45:23 PM PDT by Vigilanteman (Crime would drop like a sprung trapdoor if we brought back good old-fashioned hangings.)
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To: freespirited
"a stumbling economy,"

???


35 posted on 09/10/2006 12:48:44 PM PDT by JCEccles
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To: freespirited
There are differences, of course. Sensing the national mood, Gingrich came up 12 years ago with a "Contract With America," a catchy 10-point program that claimed to be a conservative manifesto for government. In 2006, Democrats have produced nothing as ambitious.
In 2006, Democrats have produced nothing at all. as ambitious.

There, that's better.

36 posted on 09/10/2006 12:54:36 PM PDT by Bob
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To: EternalVigilance

Except those (here at FR) that want to teach Republicans a lesson.


37 posted on 09/10/2006 12:54:57 PM PDT by svcw
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To: freespirited

This is liberal pornography.


38 posted on 09/10/2006 1:00:52 PM PDT by Jaysun (Idiot Muslims. They're just dying to have sex orgies.)
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To: freespirited

This is just more liberal porn.

LLS


39 posted on 09/10/2006 1:01:14 PM PDT by LibLieSlayer (Preserve America... kill terrorists... destroy dims!)
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To: Jaysun

Great minds think alike!

LLS


40 posted on 09/10/2006 1:02:47 PM PDT by LibLieSlayer (Preserve America... kill terrorists... destroy dims!)
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