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It's been a brutal year for Texas Democrats
Corpus Christ Caller-Times ^ | November 8, 2004

Posted on 11/09/2004 11:27:23 AM PST by SwinneySwitch

What with having their presidential candidate beaten by a decisive margin, and having lost seats in both the U.S. House and the Senate, Campaign 2004 was not a heck of a lot of fun for Democrats.

Don't get the wrong idea. The party is in no imminent danger of implosion. After all, a few shifts in a few states - Ohio, especially - could have installed John Kerry in the White House. And the Democrats' power base is very much intact. While virtually all of what you might call mid-America is firmly in the Red Zone, the Northeast, New England, the upper Midwest and the Pacific coast remain resolutely Blue.

Still . . . Democrats and their supporters are going to have to work pretty hard to put a happy face on this year's results. And Texas Democrats in particular see a grim political landscape: Where once cigar-puffing Democratic grandees dominated Austin, there is now smoldering rubble.

That's no accident. With relentless, unwavering determination, Texas Republicans did a job on Democrats - particularly those who held seats in the U.S. House of Representatives. The profoundly cynical, but effective, redistricting plan hand-crafted by U.S. House Majority leader Tom DeLay and executed by the GOP leadership in Austin steamrolled its way through three special legislative sessions. The package shamelessly gerrymandered district boundaries to the end of ousting incumbent Democratic congressmen. The new boundaries zigged, zagged and wiggled into the most bizarre, indefensible configurations, but the GOP leadership showed not even a sign of embarrassment.

In the end, the GOP plan succeeded. On Tuesday, four of the five Democratic congressmen targeted by the Republican redistricting map - Charles Stenholm, Martin Frost, Max Sandlin and Nick Lampson, with a combined total of 68 years in the House - were booted out by voters who cared not a whit for their seniority and their collected wisdom. The only survivor was Democratic U.S. Rep. Chet Edwards, whose GOP opponent, Arlene Wohlgemuth, was so right-wing that even hard-right voters couldn't bring themselves to elect her.

It's a famous victory for Tom DeLay. For the districts that lost all that accumulated seniority, however, some pain awaits. And just as importantly, the Republicans' crude bulldozing of incumbent Democrats will make it that much harder for Texas lawmakers to summon up the mutual trust to fashion an urgently needed consensus on this state's needs.


TOPICS: Editorial; Politics/Elections; US: Texas
KEYWORDS: texasdemocrats
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"It's a famous victory for Tom DeLay."

Finally!

1 posted on 11/09/2004 11:27:23 AM PST by SwinneySwitch
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To: SwinneySwitch
It's been a brutal year for Texas Democrats

They made their bed...let 'em sleep in it.

Oh, and call the waaaaaabulance. ;-)

2 posted on 11/09/2004 11:28:48 AM PST by zlala
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To: SwinneySwitch; All
I should know this, but I don't have the answer... As a result of re-districting, we were expected to pick up about 7 seats in TX alone... We picked up a net of 4. Does this mean that without redistricting, we would have lost seats? Or, does it indicate that the TX re-districting didn't materialize as positively (far less than 7 seats) as we had hoped?

Thanks

3 posted on 11/09/2004 11:29:46 AM PST by NYC Republican
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To: SwinneySwitch
the Northeast, New England, the upper Midwest and the Pacific coast remain resolutely Blue.

I didn't know a <3% margin qualified as "resolutely blue" in NH, PA, MI, WI, MN, and OR.

4 posted on 11/09/2004 11:30:39 AM PST by Hermann the Cherusker
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To: SwinneySwitch

But I thought Republicans were dumb, dumb and dumber...


5 posted on 11/09/2004 11:30:41 AM PST by 2banana (They want to die for Islam and we want to kill them)
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To: NYC Republican

The article indicates that 4 out of 5 dems were booted. Does that make it a net wash elsewhere nation-wide (TX had 4 pick-ups, the rest of the country was flat)?


6 posted on 11/09/2004 11:31:03 AM PST by NYC Republican
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To: SwinneySwitch

The Texas Demonrats deserved far worse than they got.


7 posted on 11/09/2004 11:32:56 AM PST by Malleus Dei ("Communists are just Democrats in a hurry.")
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To: SwinneySwitch

As a Texas Republican, all I can say is HA HA HA!

It's good to be a Republican in Texas!


8 posted on 11/09/2004 11:33:11 AM PST by BP2
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To: Hermann the Cherusker

You hit it on the head. What is truly alarming for the Dems is that the Red states got redder and the blue states lightened up quite a bit. But for Kerry being from neighboring MA, Bush carries NH easily. As for Wisconsin, lets just see how things work out. The two states that should alarm the Republicans are CO and MN. They both experienced Dem gains in the statehouses.


9 posted on 11/09/2004 11:33:14 AM PST by FlipWilson
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To: BP2

Amen, friend!


10 posted on 11/09/2004 11:35:19 AM PST by Tex Pete
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To: zlala
They made their bed...let 'em sleep in it.

It's good to send some of those Texas Dims out of office, so they have to get out and earn a real living.

11 posted on 11/09/2004 11:35:46 AM PST by BP2
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To: BP2

Yeah! Life is GOOD!!! Thank God.


12 posted on 11/09/2004 11:35:56 AM PST by evets (God bless president George W. Bush)
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To: SwinneySwitch

Texas Democrats? Didn't they move somewhere out of state?


13 posted on 11/09/2004 11:36:56 AM PST by Jagdgewehr (How can 55,949,407 people be so (dumb/clueless/insane/deluded/evil)?)
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To: Tex Pete
I live in Kingwood, a suburb north of Houston that voted 80 percent Republican in the election last week. Man, I love it here!
14 posted on 11/09/2004 11:37:28 AM PST by BP2
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To: SwinneySwitch
I agree! The sniveling, left wing democrats, were finaaly winkled out of offices they so badly and arrogantly filled. The ultra-left wing dem losers were all cowardly supporters of the criminal Clinton during the righteous attempt by Republicans of character and good will to eliminate the stincky heap of corruption that so vilely occupied the White House.

Tom DeLay is a true American hero and supporter of truth and justice and democracy. Texas voters are overwhelmingly reasonable Republicans, not light-fearing dems who patrol the sewers of the nation, and, therefore, should control the Congressional delegation. So, this author is correct!

Does anyone know the email addresses of the 2 Texas senators, Cornyn & Hutchison?

15 posted on 11/09/2004 11:37:43 AM PST by Tacis (Kerry - You Can't Make A Silk Purse Out Of A Lazy, Lying, Elitist Scumbag!)
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To: evets

When Dems redistrict, it's a brilliant political move.

I hate the freaking media.

Thanks Tom Delay!


16 posted on 11/09/2004 11:37:57 AM PST by AC in KC
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To: NYC Republican
Actually, we picked up six seats in Texas. Four incumbents (Frost, Sandlin, Lampson and Stenholm) were defeated. One incumbent (Turner) chose not to seek reelection. One incumbent (Hall) switched parties.

Before: 15R 17D

Now: 21R 11D

17 posted on 11/09/2004 11:38:34 AM PST by writmeister
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To: writmeister

Thanks. So, does that mean we were down 2 in the rest of the land?


18 posted on 11/09/2004 11:41:24 AM PST by NYC Republican
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To: SwinneySwitch
The only survivor was Democratic U.S. Rep. Chet Edwards

Unfortunately, not true. Llyod Doggett was targeted also. He used to be my rep, but he couldn't win in his district the way it was redrawn so he ran in one of the new ones that goes from Austin to the Mexico border and won.

19 posted on 11/09/2004 11:42:03 AM PST by green iguana
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To: BP2
"It's good to be a Republican in Texas!"

I'm loving it too.

EVERYONE of my representatives, be it local, state and national are Republicans.

I live in Cedar Park Texas, which is Bush Country. We get to enjoy some of the things in the People's Republic of Austin, like the scenery, but don't have to live there.

In Cedar Park, we have no local affiliation of the ACLU or NAACP. Not bragging, just the facts.

20 posted on 11/09/2004 11:43:04 AM PST by lormand (Dead People Vote DemocRAT)
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