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A Filibuster Proof Senate In 2006
CT ^

Posted on 04/16/2005 12:19:02 PM PDT by el_doctor2

The 2006 mid-term elections could be pivotal for a number of reasons. First, if Democrats lose those elections, then the selection of Howard Dean will look like a very foolish decision and movement back toward the Democrat Party of Zell Miller and Joe Lieberman will look like a matter of simple survival. Second, Republicans - having lost seats in the first three elections after the 1994 landslide - have gained seats in the last two general elections; winning a third straight election will make it much easier for President Bush to achieve the grand goals he has set for his presidency. Third, Senate losses will ensure that President Bush can transform the federal judiciary, which will have affect an entire generation.

What are the prospects of Republicans winning in 2006? Very good. Democrat tenacity in resisting the mantle of minority status has created the death of a thousand cuts. Redistricting and reapportionment allowed Republicans to gain House seats in the 2002 general election. If Democrats had not connived to perpetuate gerrymandering in our two largest states, then all the damage might have been done in 2002 and Democrats could have claimed victory in 2004 (i.e. gained House seats.)

Instead, the Texas redistricting after the 2002 elections meant that Republicans actually gained House seats in 2004. If the Schwazenegger Plan goes into effect, then the current 34 to 17 Democrat advantage in House seats in California will almost certainly give Republicans 5 or 6 or 7 more House seats, which will mean nationally that Republicans can, again, claim victory by virtue of increasing the number of Republicans in the House of Representatives.

Opportunities in the Senate are even more appealing. Jeffords and Daschle made the stupid mistake of making President Bush mad. As a consequence, Republicans gained an outright majority in the 2002 general elections and added 4 more seats in 2004. Harry Reid has already promised to filibuster, to scrutinize to death and to resist President Bush and he has lots of helpers in the Senate. National Democrats should be careful, because filibustering may lead directly to a filibuster proof Senate in 2006.

Incumbent Republican senators are about five years younger, on average, than Democrat incumbent senators. That does not sound like much, but it is nearly a full Senate term on average. That makes it much less likely that Republicans will have to fill open seats through retirement. This is compounded by the fact that there are significantly more Republican governors than Democrat governors and that advantage will probably increase in November 2005.

The overwhelming majority of states - and each state has exactly two senators - are conservative and Republican. Consider the number of states the two major political parties carried in the last four close presidential elections: Republicans carried 29 states in 1968 to 16 for Democrats and (Wallace carried 5 states; Republicans, in losing, carried 27 states in 1976 to 23 for Democrats; Republicans carried 29 states to 21 in 2000; and President Bush was reelected carrying 30 states, the magic sixty percent needed for cloture.

Compounding problems for Democrats is their minority party status in the Senate. Tim Johnson of South Dakota would almost certainly have lost in 2002, if South Dakotans had know Tom Daschle was not going to be Majority Leader. Daschle, a much stronger candidate, lost to the same Republican largely because he had ceased to be Majority Leader. These fundamental advantages that Republicans have in Senate races is enhanced by the particular races in 2006.

Absent retirements, virtually all Republican seats are safe; Democrats, by contrast, will be defending a lot of vulnerable territory.

Senator Dayton of Minnesota is leaving, having won with less than half the vote six year ago, and Republicans - the majority party in Minnesota now - have already lined up a group of potent contenders, while not a single Democrat has expressed interest in the race.

Two Senators named Nelson come from two conservative Republican states - Nebraska and Florida - and both barely won in 2000. Both could be very vulnerable to serious Republican challenges, another two pickups. North Dakota is a conservative Republican state with liberal Democrat senators - South Dakota and North Carolina both showed how easy those are for Republicans to win.

Senator Strabenow in Michigan barely beat Spence Abraham in 2000, and over the last four years, Abraham has served four years as Secretary of Energy, which should make him a formidable candidate, should he choose to seek his old seat back again. John Engler would also make a formidable candidate against a Democrat freshman who got less than half the vote in 2000.

Those five races alone could give Republicans the five needed for cloture, but there are other races that look very shaky for Democrats because of the sleazy conduct of Democrats in the state. If Dino Rossi is cheated out of the governorship of Washington, then a sympathy vote would make him a formidable challenger to beat Cantwell, who squeaked by with a minority vote in 2000; if Rossi becomes governor, then Republicans will be much stronger in 2006 to challenge her with someone else.

If Jon Corzine is elected governor of New Jersey, then his seat is open in 2006 and after the likely Republican candidate would be the Republican nominee against Corzine, who would have just gotten a great deal of campaign exposure and, if Forrester or Schundler, would be very run a third time statewide in five years. Add the stench of Torrecelli and McGreevey to the mix, and a Republican pickup would be likely. If Corzine loses, then, of course, he becomes more vulnerable when he runs for reelection in 2006.

Vermont presents another tricky situation for Democrats. Jim Jeffords is an independent, and if he seeks the Democrat nomination, his fig leaf of non-alignment is blown away. In a three way race, a moderate Republican could easily get forty percent of the vote and win his seat. If the Republican governor seeks the seat, Democrats would either have to make Jeffords a Democrat lose the seat, all of which would look rather grungy to Vermont voters.

Hawaii and Maryland have popular Republican governors and very old Democrat incumbents, who might not seek reelection. Could one of these Republicans win the senate seat? Sure. Robert Byrd, who is very old and sounds extremely goofy these days, comes from a state that President Bush carried easily twice. Could Republicans win this seat? Sure. Mitt Romney almost bit Ted Kennedy when Kennedy was much younger and Romney was not a popular governor. Could Romney beat Kennedy? Sure. The only “safe” Democrat is Joe Lieberman, who is also taking the same wise course which his party should take: move to the center, offer reasonable alternatives to President Bush’s domestic and foreign policy agenda, and return civility to public debate.

The decision by Dayton not to seek reelection is perhaps a good indicator that Senate Democrats realize the difficulty they face in regaining the majority and the battles brewing within their party over the next two years between the sober thinking of Lieberman and the seething rage of Dean. The result could well be, for the first time in American history, a Republican Senate which can invoke cloture.


TOPICS: Editorial; Extended News; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2006; 2006senate; electionussenate
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To: el_doctor2
A rather optimistic scenario but, hey, it could happen. That is why Hillary has mounted a full court press against DeLay, and by association, all Republicans. She wants to control the lege when she gets there, if she does.
21 posted on 04/16/2005 1:42:33 PM PDT by Mind-numbed Robot (Not all things that need to be done need to be done by the government.)
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To: Aetius
Part of the Montana problem is demographics: the Californication of Missoula, Bozeman, and Kalispell is a big part of it. The fact that the rural areas and small towns that are the GOP stronghold are depopulating and aging is part of it.

Part of it is the fact that the GOP leadership is incompetent. A lot of it is due to the fact that the high-profile Republicans who have won in recent years (Racicot, Burns, Rehberg) concentrate only on their own elections, and not on building the party from the ground up.

Keep in mind that in the old bad old days when Anaconda Copper, Montana Power, and the labor unions ran the state, the Democrat party dominated. Unlike in SD, Democrats in Montana have a corporate memory of when they used to run things, and are willing to do what it takes to get elected. The trial lawyers pony up very big bucks for this, and they finally found a guy to bankroll (Schweitzer) who could figure out how to win the governor's race. Burns is just lucky that he's up this year and not in 2008, or the Schweitzer would run against him and win.

The GOP, by contrast, put up a milque-toast party regular against Schweitzer, and he got justifiably creamed. Rehburg is not in Schweitzer's league either, which means that if Baucus gives up his seat in 2008, Schweitzer will win it. Things don't look good in Montana.

The real failure was Marc Racicot's. He could have made the GOP into a permanent majority in that state, and he didn't have the character and will to make it happen. He really didn't even try. The national GOP needs to pay attention to states like these, as they did with the Daschle race in SD. Not so much money as shaking up the whole attitude toward grooming candidates and running campaigns.

Regarding ND, if Hoeven makes a run, he will lose, but will put a dent in the system there, and that needs to happen. The problem with the GOP in ND is that they have a history of not even trying.

SD's GOP was the same when it came to Daschle until 2004, when they realized that they were really going to look like schmucks to the national GOP if they didn't get their act together. You know, Daschle ran in a lot of races over his 30 years. Hreally only had 3 races in which the GOP put up a fight: his very first House race, his race for the at-large House seat when SD went from two Reps to one, and this very last Senate race. Every other race, including the one where he defeated a sitting GOP sitting US Senator (!) the GOP really didn't even have a strategy to beat him -- let alone try to implement it.

22 posted on 04/16/2005 2:12:59 PM PDT by Agrarian
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To: zbigreddogz

If things are going the way they are now in 2006, we could be in serious trouble. Heck, the Dems could regain the Senate then.

But, there is a lot of time left.


23 posted on 04/16/2005 2:16:08 PM PDT by rwfromkansas (http://www.xanga.com/home.aspx?user=rwfromkansas)
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To: el_doctor2

I hate to say it, but this article is entirely too optimistic. There is no way that Ted Kennedy will lose in Massachusetts. Unless Byrd does something stupider than he's done already (unlikely), Shelley Moore Capito will wait for him to die (and thus leave office) to run, and nobody else stands a chance in WV. Jim Jeffords isn't going anywhere either if he doesn't want to. I think New Jersey still has more dead Dem voters than live voters, so that one isn't likely either.

The truth is though that most of their vulnerable seats are in '06 and our vulnerable seats are in '08. If we don't get 60 in '06, I think it won't be until '10 to make it.


24 posted on 04/16/2005 3:09:32 PM PDT by KillBill
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To: el_doctor2

It is an old article and it's too optimistic, but the optimism is not entirely misplaced. Getting 58 R Senators is not out of the question and getting 56 is quite likely.


25 posted on 04/16/2005 3:21:50 PM PDT by AmishDude (Join the AmishDude fan club: "You're so right, AmishDude" -- beyond the sea)
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To: kingattax

Huge differences. They don't mention retirements that are now sure things, they mention some potential matchups that are already not happening, etc.

2 months is an eternety in politics.


26 posted on 04/17/2005 1:34:27 AM PDT by zbigreddogz
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To: zbigreddogz

The GOP is playing 'safe'...what is the point of electing the GOP if they act like Democrats? If the GOP doesn't get it's act together, they will lose seats in the house and in the Senate because they ticked off the base enough that the base didn't come out and vote. Historically, the presidential party loses seats during a mid-term election. It is so sad that Republicans think they must cater to Democrats in order to remain in power because it is not true. Democrats will never vote for a Republican-not even McCain.


27 posted on 04/17/2005 6:12:43 AM PDT by nyconse
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To: Agrarian

Well Burns already beat Schweitzer once didn't he, in a close reelection victory last time, right? Though of course that doesn't mean he would beat him again, but clearly Schweitzer, with all his money, is beatable.

What about Racicot's standing in the state now? Wouldn't he have a chance if he returned to take on Baucas in 3 yrs? And surely he'd have a good chance if the seat were left open by a Baucas retirement.

As to North Dakota: I can't really argue with you about the state of the GOP there because (a) I've never looked into who controls the state govt and (b) They clearly do have a problem with federal office seeing as how all three of their congressional delegation are Democrats.

But I agree that a Hoeven run would at least show effort, and if the national GOP puts in enough money who knows? Even if he doesn't win, maybe he'd do well enough like John Thune did in 2002 so as to give himself another shot in the future.

I brought up the overwhelming margin of the successful ballot measure to ban gay marriage and civil unions because it was one of the most lop-sided of all. It did better in ND than it did in Utah (though I have my suspicions as to why it didn't do better there) and the also-discussed Montana, and was right there with Southern states like Arkansas, Kentucky, and Georgia. When I see such a margin for a measure that doesn't stop with the nationally-opposed gay marriage, but also bans the allegedly 'moderate' civil unions, then it suggest that there is a strong current of social and cultural conservatism running through the state's electorate.


28 posted on 04/17/2005 1:35:28 PM PDT by Aetius
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