1 posted on
11/07/2002 3:30:26 AM PST by
kattracks
To: kattracks
You gotta like the choice of words - the Democrats "promiscuous opposition to the President's judicial nominees" and the "vulgarity of the politicized memorial service for Paul Wellstone."
2 posted on
11/07/2002 3:43:59 AM PST by
econprof
To: kattracks
Lott has to go, this good cop bad cop crap is for the birds, we need strong leadership in the senate and President Bush has to get out of the appeasement mode. The Rats do not compromise are total extreme partisans and I suspect will go ape shi* as usual as they are not in control.
3 posted on
11/07/2002 3:45:04 AM PST by
boomop1
To: kattracks
re:
"....
The affirmation of the President on Tuesday.....
......
His success gives Republicans protracted control....."
Yada, yada, yada...
I'm always amazed at how quickly a win can go to some people's heads.
The Republicans didn't win, the democraps lost. There's a vast, big difference.
Many, many democrats crossed party lines for this event. But they didn't
so so for the "party platform", or for the uniqueness of the Bush presidency.
They voted Republican because the democrat party has not changed from
their tax and spend course. As they said not too long ago: "it's the economy, stupid".
Both democrat and republican voters are alike in one respect, they don't
want their money spent on other people's useless endeavors.
The democrap party had nothing to offer...... THIS TIME. I wouldn't
let a "win" go to my head quite so easily.....
4 posted on
11/07/2002 3:48:19 AM PST by
Deep_6
To: kattracks
I don't believe that the average voter is as sophisticated as George Will.
They voted Republican because:
1. They are tired of "tax and spend."
2. They support the war against Iraq.
3. With even minimum exposure by the liberal media, Bush has won them over with his honesty.
Think what a TOTAL rout this past election would have been if President Bush had been given as much exposure on TV as XXXClinton was when he was president.
5 posted on
11/07/2002 4:04:46 AM PST by
kitkat
To: kattracks
It was a wholesome rejection of contemporary liberalisms belief that because government should be everything, politics should be everywhere. What a great line. I LOVE George Will!
7 posted on
11/07/2002 4:28:11 AM PST by
mombonn
To: kattracks
Although economic acumen is sorely lacking in this nation, at least most voters do not buy into the notion that a President personally breaks or fixes the economy, as the Democrats claimed.
8 posted on
11/07/2002 5:21:49 AM PST by
randita
To: kattracks
Mid-term elections are more about getting out your base than anything else. The Republican base was totally on fire for the following reasons:
- 9-11
- Affection for GW Bush
- Anger at the Senate Judiciary committee
- Anger at the Senate for stalling homeland security
- Anger at the NJ Dems for the Lautenberg switch
- Anger at the Dem party for the Wellstone Memorial/Rally
- Add your own ...
In contrast the Dems were NOT fired up for this election. The Dems had no coherent message:
- The economy? We hate those tax cuts, but errr no, we're not going to repeal them, um ...
- Iraq? Peace Now! oh wait, no, um, on the other hand let's support the president, just, uh, just check with the UN first, um ...
In the end, the Dems tried to fire up their base using the following issues:
- Win it for Paul Wellstone!!!
- Get revenge for the 2000 election!!!
- Republicans want to kill old people and the blacks!!
Those issues could not overcome the malaise that came with the Dems lack of resolve on the issues. So while you crow about the great Republican victory (as is is a great victory) remember that if the black vote had come out in Missouri, Carnahan would've won and maybe even Max Cleland. If the Dems hadn't screwed the pooch with the Memorial/Rally, Mondale would've won. We could now be looking at the LA run-off, hoping to win in order to get a divided Senate again.
So it was a near thing. The really good news is that the Dems don't have a lot of good options now. If they try to fire up their base by going farther to the left, they are going to get HAMMERED in 2004. The Dems, far more than the Republicans, are a coalition party. Increasingly, they no longer have a true base. Thanks to Clintonism, the only things they stand for now are:
- Abortion
- Gay rights
- Winning Elections
Everything else is negotiable. That's not a great base to build a majority party on.
14 posted on
11/07/2002 9:09:17 AM PST by
PMCarey
To: kattracks
You know...the "strategery" was VERY good. We...the GOP...have been wondering for months why the President did not use his political capital to shut the mouths of the dems. Now we see why. If he would have used it up...or a lot of it...then the outcome of this may (probably) have been different.
However, he used it at the most effective time. Not to soon so the dems "he's a war president and campaigning" rhetoric would stick...but not late enough so as to be of no effect.
Now...he has two things going for him and the conservative agenda. 1) He has the Senate to push it through. 2) All the fence sitting leftists in the GOP and the moderate democrats see that this guy has coattails in an off year election...and if you want his support or you don't want him out there compaigning against you in '04...you better play nice.
Strategery!
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