Be Prepared For Republicans To Close Gap

Right now, both Democrats and the progressive movement are flying high. Our fifty-state strategy has yielded record candidate recruitment. With a 43% Democratic turnout in Connecticut, evidence continues to mount that Democrats are turning out at higher rates than Republicans (possibly significantly higher rates). We hold commanding, historic, eighteen-point leads in the two most recent generic ballot polls (AP-Ipsos and Fox-Opinion Dynamics) and an NPR shows that lead making an impact where it counts. Our Senate polls aren't bad either. Ned Lamont's victory has given the activist base a huge boost of confidence and energy, among many other things. The Democratic leadership has lined up behind Lamont, unifying the party and improving our message. Bush's approval rating still sucks, and our candidates are more competitive financially than at any time in recent memory (see more here). Committee fundraising looks good too. Our creativity and new infrastructure seem to be growing in leaps and bounds, and now election forecaster after election forecaster after election forecaster after election forecaster says great things are coming our way.

If you have time, read the above paragraph again, and even follow all of the links. Reading all of this, it is difficult not to come to the conclusion that we are on the cusp of a tremendous wave election in 2006. Eighty-eight days before the election, the situation could hardly look better.

However, as good as things look right now, I think it is important to write a post explaining why we should not expect the situation to remain this good for the remainder of the eighty-eight days in the election season. A loss of confidence has often led to both activist and voter retrenchment for Democrats and progressives. In order to prevent that from happening this time around, we need to be aware of why the situation will tighten before it actually does. Hopefully, this will vaccinate us from disappointment and disillusionment this fall, allowing us to stay active and aware of the great potential this election holds for our cause.

This election will tighten up, and here is why:
  • 1. Money. Markos often notes that Republicans close election strong. One of the main reasons for this is that their candidates have a lot more money than our candidates. This translates into a lot more paid media, a lot more direct mailings, a lot more yard sings--a lot more everything. That advantage in the final few weeks of a campaign will almost always cause a candidate to move up in local polls, or a party to move up in national polls. Even this year, where we are much better off financially that we have been in the past, Republicans still hold a sizable edge. Once again, this will give them the ability to close the gap as the election approaches.

  • 2. Noise Machine. As many improvements as we have made in building progressive media, the conservative media empire still towers over us. The same can be said for their think tank apparatus, their ability to get right-wing pundits on news panels, their ability to get quoted in the media, etc. It also still translates into a superior ability to dominate the conventional wisdom narratives of our national political discourse. Our infrastructure work over the past few years has allowed us to make up ground in all of these areas, but the Republican Noise will still give Republicans an edge in driving their message through both local and national media (not to mention that they still have an edge on packaging messages anyway).

  • 3. Conservatives coming home. A not insignificant number of people currently in the "undecided" or "other" columns in polls are conservatives who will never vote for Democrats. Right now, these people are wavering between Republicans, third-parties, and not voting. No matter what decision they end up making (and we need to help them not vote for Republicans), they are not going to vote for Democrats, and a not insignificant amount of them will come home. Once again, this will cause the race to tighten.

  • 4. Gas Prices. Regular poll watchers all know that presidential approval is tied to gas prices. Everyone also knows that the Bush administration is marinated in the oil industry. It does not at all seem inconceivable to me that some combination of the Bush administration and its friends in the oil industry can work to lower gas prices this fall, thus helping Republican and incumbent chances in November. Watch it happen.

  • 5. October Surprise. As we have also seen, terror alerts and other surprise news stories frequently happen when Bush's approval ratings are low, and Republicans do not hesitate to use such alerts for political gain. With Republicans facing their worst poll situation in recent memory, is it any wonder that we are at code red for the first time ever, instead of code orange, after yesterday's major British arrest? Expect more of the same as the election nears.
With these Republican advantages, it is inevitable that Republicans will close the gap between now and November. While right now we are heading toward an election along the lines of 1974, 1994 or whatever, we cannot allow our spirit to waver when these advantages cause our current, almost unbelievable advantages to narrow. Keep your head high and remember everything from the first paragraph in this post. This is a rare opportunity--the sort of opportunity that comes around once every couple of decades. No matter what happens between now and November, we have to throw everything we can muster into making as much of that opportunity manifest into reality as possible.



Display:


Re: Be Prepared For Republicans To Close Gap (none / 0)

In the past, I have been critical of excessively negative forecasts.

This time, however, I say, "Amen!" I think this post is entirely appropriate.

Rove is going to hit us with a ton of bricks. We need to prepare for it.

My diary earlier today was along these lines.


by Thresholder on Fri Aug 11, 2006 at 12:38:23 PM EST

Re: Be Prepared For Republicans To Close Gap (3.00 / 1)

a lot more yard sings

Great typo!!

I had a wonderful image of candidates standing in the suburban backyards of supporters, strumming guitars and singing Kumbaya, Michael Row the Boat Ashore and the campaign's official song.


unfutz
by Ed Fitzgerald on Fri Aug 11, 2006 at 12:41:41 PM EST

Re: Be Prepared For Republicans To Close Gap (none / 0)

Well then, I'll just elave it that way, if its so great. :-)
by Chris Bowers on Fri Aug 11, 2006 at 02:00:56 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Be Prepared For Republicans To Close Gap (none / 0)

and the hits just keep on coming.


by Lucas O'Connor on Fri Aug 11, 2006 at 02:05:09 PM EST
[ Parent ]

100actions.com (3.00 / 2)

This is one way for us little guys to make a difference.  A million of us doing this would change the landscape, but what about 100 of us in NC?

My scorecard here.

Oops, haven't done today's yet!

Day 89 - Learn Your Election Deadlines

Monday, September 18
First day to request absentee ballots by mail
Friday, October 13
Voter registration deadline for November 7 General Election. Forms must be
postmarked or delivered in person by 5:00 p.m. today.
Also, last day to change party affiliation before November 7 General Election.
Wednesday, October 18
Deadline for submitting originals of faxed voter registration forms in order to vote
in November 7 General Election
Thursday, October 19
One-stop absentee voting begins for General Election
Sunday, October 22-Tuesday, November 7
48-Hour Reports due from committees that receive contributions of $1,000 or more
during this timeframe
Monday, October 30
Third Quarter Plus Reports due
Tuesday, October 31
Last day to request absentee ballots in writing (exception due to sickness or
disability)
Thursday, November 2
Observer lists due to county boards of elections
Saturday, November 4
One-stop absentee voting ends.
Monday, November 6
Mailed absentee ballots must be received in BOE office by 5:00 p.m.
Deadline to request absentee ballots for sickness/disability is 5:00 p.m.
Tuesday, November 7
General Election Day


BlueNC - Progressive NC Politics
by Robert P on Fri Aug 11, 2006 at 12:42:08 PM EST

Re: Be Prepared For Republicans To Close Gap (none / 0)

We have won some important victories this year in the primary but none of it means a damn thing if we don't finish the job and win on Nov 7.

Great, great post about what the next couple of months are going to be like.


by John Mills on Fri Aug 11, 2006 at 12:55:56 PM EST

Re: Be Prepared For Republicans To Close Gap (none / 0)

Exactly.  We're flying high right now, but this won't last- the Republican campaign machine is assessing the situation and determining the best course of action.  

Right now it's August, which is when this is all going to begin- August tends to be a lazy month, a month full of slow news days, and it's before the traditional start of the campaign season (which is around Labor Day).  This was when the Swift Boat Veterans aired their commercials and smeared their way into campaign infamy in 2004.

And we've already begun to see the GOP's strategy in the way they're talking about the CT primary and the way they're using the recently-foiled airline plot for their own political gain.  They're going to start firing the guns of August, and we have to be ready.

The GOP will do anything, anything, no matter how immoral, unethical, craven, or unconscionable to hold onto power.  Expect a long a bitter campaign season-- but don't be disheartened.  Every time they hit us, let's hit back.  Every time they try to knock us down, let's get back up.  Every time they try to kill our morale, let's rally around our candidates and help them win.  

Every time they try to destroy the Democratic party, let's stand behind it even more.

Courage, America.  Courage!


by Left Click on Fri Aug 11, 2006 at 12:58:09 PM EST

Re: Be Prepared For Republicans To Close Gap (none / 0)

Thanks for the analysis Chris. These are exactly the points we need to keep in mind so we can keep the faith!
Remind us often!
by dexdah on Fri Aug 11, 2006 at 01:01:26 PM EST

Re: Be Prepared For Republicans To Close Gap (none / 0)

I would add- GOTV. Turn out was great for Laomt, but is there a similar grassroot effort being built over the next few months in every competitive race in the country??? As you and others have commented- Lamont started back in the spring. I understand that the DNC is doing its part among others- but are the campaigns in the various districts and the senate candidates focusing on GOTV as well? Afterall, theya re closest to the ground and represent the frontline - right?


by bruh21 on Fri Aug 11, 2006 at 01:05:59 PM EST

Re: Be Prepared For Republicans To Close Gap (none / 0)

is there a similar grassroot effort being built over the next few months in every competitive race in the country?

50 State Strategy is the name it's been given.


by Lucas O'Connor on Fri Aug 11, 2006 at 01:12:14 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Be Prepared For Republicans To Close Gap (none / 0)

I understood the 50 state strategy to be more long term in its implementation than this election cycle. What I mean is that I understood it to be putting coordintators in states to do the work of rebuilding the party in those states. I also understood- and maybe I am wrong- that the thing with Lamont was that he id'ed his likely voters early on and aggressive pursued them to come to the polls. I suppose my point is that whereas 50 state is something I believe in, I am not sure if it matches up perfectly with what is going on even further down the line at the grass roots of each district race. What sort of coordination is going on between the DNC and the individual candidate efforts using the coordinators?? Thats the kind of thingI think would be good to know. I read elsewhere- for example- that a problem that I faced in 2004, had reared its head this year with a lack of clear coordination between various progressive and Democratic resources which was leading to confusion. I would think the best peo suited to utilize the resources are those who are working with the candidates on a local level??


by bruh21 on Fri Aug 11, 2006 at 01:26:01 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Be Prepared For Republicans To Close Gap (none / 0)

Yes and no.  The 50 State Strategy is a long-term plan to build infrastructure yes, but implicit in that infrastructure is GOTV capacity.  Also, Howard Dean sent out an email about a week ago saying that 50SS and the DNC is wholly devoted to GOTV over the last 100 days.


by Lucas O'Connor on Fri Aug 11, 2006 at 01:39:06 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Be Prepared For Republicans To Close Gap (none / 0)

this is really good to hear. thx


by bruh21 on Fri Aug 11, 2006 at 01:56:34 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Be Prepared For Republicans To Close Gap Some (3.00 / 1)

GOTV is the most important. Some of the others--not so much.

This time around the Dems are financially in the best shape in years.  The R's are the ones having trouble raising money, and as the D's do better in polls, some groups will hedge their bets by contributing to some D's.  The noise machine is losing its effectiveness with the majority, as is the wolf crying.  It is not clear to me that terror-mongering redounds to the benefit of the GOP generally, as opposed to Bush personally.  And as each year goes by, it is that much longer that they have been in power and have to take responsibility.  October surprises are hard to anticipate but again, it isn't clear this will help GOP Senate and House candidates.

We do need to work hard, but the picture is better than it has been in years, due to the work already put in and the incompetence of the
Bush folks.  So we should work with enthusiasm.
But the GOP's GOTV is legendary, and they still have both their datamining operation and their Bushbots to staff the effort.  This is where we need to concentrate.


by Mimikatz on Fri Aug 11, 2006 at 01:55:30 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Be Prepared For Republicans To Close Gap (none / 0)

At Yearly Kos Peter Daou warned of the danger of thinking that the left can do something that the right cannot. This is true now more than ever, and it is important that posts like this keep us grounded in that reality.


"...man is an animal suspended in webs of significance that he himself has spun."
by junkman on Fri Aug 11, 2006 at 01:08:57 PM EST

Re: Be Prepared For Republicans To Close Gap (none / 0)

At the risk of piling on the "Connecticut is everything" stylee, I think it's a great model of what to expect.  We'll pull out to a big lead (currently happening) and then when the other side starts really freaking out, they'll pile on and the gap will start to close gradually but consistently.  As Chris says, this is inevitable.  What we can control is how big a deficit they have to overcome and how effectively we fight the rising counter-tide.


by Lucas O'Connor on Fri Aug 11, 2006 at 01:09:07 PM EST

Re: Be Prepared For Republicans To Close Gap (3.00 / 1)

There is much wisdom in Chris'es post.  It never, ever pays to underestimate your opponent.  I believe there is a premature feeling of triumphialism among some.  Optimism is fine.  We know, however, from long and bitter experience that our opponents have tricks up thier sleeve.    


by howardpark on Fri Aug 11, 2006 at 01:10:24 PM EST

Re: Be Prepared For Republicans To Close Gap (none / 0)

You may be right, but I haven't seen it.  What I've seen is more a sense of "holy crap, we broke through."  Or, put another way, the realization that all this stuff we've been doing, which seems so perfect in principle, is actually starting to pay off in practice as well.  Maybe that's triumphalism, but the bulk of the sentiment I've seen has been "Well now let's do it everywhere else."


by Lucas O'Connor on Fri Aug 11, 2006 at 01:14:18 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Be Prepared For Republicans To Close Gap (3.00 / 1)

One of my political mentors told me always run you like are 10 points behind.  He was right.  It keeps sharp and on your game.  Over confident candidates tend to lose.


by John Mills on Fri Aug 11, 2006 at 01:16:32 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Be Prepared For Republicans To Close Gap (none / 0)

One thing you didn't mention.  There will most certainly be more bad news from Iraq.  I also suspect that the IDF is about to get in over their heads in Lebanon, which will probably have the effect of making things look even worse in Baghdad.  There is also apparently bad news coming on the economy as well.  


by Retired Catholic on Fri Aug 11, 2006 at 01:12:40 PM EST

Re: Be Prepared For Republicans To Close Gap (none / 0)

Israel-Lebanon isn't necessarily a loser for Republicans.  It can go a number of different ways in terms of media and perception.


by Lucas O'Connor on Fri Aug 11, 2006 at 01:15:24 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Be Prepared For Republicans To Close Gap (none / 0)

Regarding #2 Why can't Dems compete in the communications game?  What's holding us back.  Clearly, we don't have a FOX News or talk radio shows to compare with the right, but why can't we craft and coordinate compelling messages?

We have enough think tanks to compete.  Why can't we get progressive pundits on to shows or news shows or quoted?  It's PR 101, something I've been doing for 30 years.  Why do you think it's so hard?

What infrastructure gains have we made?

www.CommonwealthCommonsense.com


by bobgr on Fri Aug 11, 2006 at 01:21:39 PM EST

Re: Be Prepared For Republicans To Close Gap (none / 0)

Progressives aren't getting booking calls.  When the media search for Democrats to talk, they grab a Lieberman or a Biden on the one hand to make Dems look like Republicans minus conviction, or they get someone like Rangel who they know will get riled up and be a character but probably (and unfairly) get judged on personality, not substance.

Can it be changed? Maybe.  But are these news outlets, who apparently have a vested interest in resisting grassroots progressivism, really inclined to give a legitimate soapbox to an eloquent progressive voice?


by Lucas O'Connor on Fri Aug 11, 2006 at 01:42:59 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Be Prepared For Republicans To Close Gap (none / 0)

It most definitely can be changed, but as "Bergs" mentions later on in these comments you have to be aggressive.

I think the problem may also be that the Dems lack senior spokemen who are really good at it.  Emmanuel may be a great strategist, but he's has a deer-in-the-headlights look on TV.  Pelosi is are too cautious.  Reid's too old.  

Feinstein seems pretty articulate on foreign affairs.  Dean is great at staying on message.  Now if someone could get him to stop pursing his lips, as if he's mad...

Why not more of Levin, though he's a bit professorial.  Certainly, if Obama could interview as well as he gives speeches, he'd be great.

Some of this only requires training and rehearsal.  You plan for the questions and learn when to shut up.  

But most of all, do we have someone coordinating the message?  It seems we've had it the last couple of days.  

But if you keep hounding bookers, you can get them to come around.

What more can you tell me?


by bobgr on Fri Aug 11, 2006 at 07:12:10 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Be Prepared For Republicans To Close Gap (none / 0)

I can tell you that I flat don't buy your argument that the only reason progressives don't have a voice in traditional media is because they don't try hard enough.  By that logic, every message that doesn't reach the Today Show is just lacking conviction.


by Lucas O'Connor on Sat Aug 12, 2006 at 03:35:34 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Well (none / 0)

The closest election cycle that this reminds me of is 1986. That was the year that the Democrats won everything that was on the ballot.


by jiacinto on Fri Aug 11, 2006 at 01:26:08 PM EST

Greens just filed for CT Senate. (none / 0)

Wankers!


by Hesiod Theogeny on Fri Aug 11, 2006 at 01:47:26 PM EST

I did my part for today... (3.00 / 2)

...my local paper (Fargo Forum) printed an editorial that was totally parroting the republican line of dems in disarray after Lamont to consign them to the political wilderness.

So I wrote up this letter, what do you think? Yes I did steal the mutually agree upon line from Chris Bowers. But it's a good one.

The Forum claims that Ned Lamont's primary victory has divided Democrats and threatens to consign the party to the political wilderness. This troubles me because these assertions are completely unsupported. I understand editorials are not written at the level of journalistic pieces but I hold the Forum to a higher standard.

Senators Bayh, Boxer, Clinton, Dodd, Fiengold, Kerry, Obama, the chairs of the DCCC, DSCC, DNC, unions, Governor Tom Vilsack, grassroots activists and 2004 VP candidate Edwards are supporting Ned Lamont. These Democrats respect Connecticut voters and the candidate chosen in their primary. Mutually agreed upon, democratic mechanisms to determine what action to take seems like unity to me. I was never taught to quit if things didn't go my way. Lamont understands--he pledged to campaign for the winner of the Democratic primary. This does not sound like division to me.

Remembering 1972, perhaps the Forum's memories are foggy. That year President Nixon announced a peace plan and negotiated with North Vietnam. He decommissioned US Army HQ in Vietnam and the last American combat troops departed Vietnam. At the nominating convention Nixon said, "We have gone the extra mile... trying to seek a negotiated settlement of the war. We have offered a cease-fire, withdrawal of all American forces, an exchange of all prisoners of war, internationally supervised free elections with the Communists participating in the elections and in the supervision." That does not sound like "stay the course" to me.

Ned Lamont's victory remains by and large a Connecticut story. Last time I checked, only Connecticut residents could vote in a Connecticut primary for a Connecticut candidate for Connecticut's Senator. Lamont supporters range from 18-80, have jobs, families and go to church. If they were angry, they dealt with it by filling in a circle or connecting an arrow. If there is a bigger story, it's that they are ordinary Americans who decided to get involved, listen to the candidates and choose the one they thought was appropriate for their state and country.

That sounds like an ideal we should strive for to me.

Any suggestions?


by MNPundit on Fri Aug 11, 2006 at 02:34:00 PM EST

Re: Be Prepared For Republicans To Close Gap (3.00 / 1)

It is EXTREMELY important to keep on the Media's tail.   Do not let them get away with a single lie or distortion.    Call them on it all.

Remember there are those out there who believe everything they read, so it is up to us to set the facts out there.

Let's have our OWN October surprise!   Maybe plan a huge national Anti-War demonstration one more time.      


by Bergs on Fri Aug 11, 2006 at 02:36:00 PM EST

Re: Be Prepared For Republicans To Close Gap (none / 0)

One thing that may help the Democrats this year is the simple fact that people want to be on a winning team.  There will always be the die-hard Cubs fan, but there are quite a bit more fair weather fans.  People see that one party or another may be doing well and may drift from side to side.

I suspect that this is how younger people pick an initial ideology.  That, or you become so disgusted by the behavior of one that you gravitate to the opposite party (as shown by how young people are drifing to the Democrats).


by yam on Fri Aug 11, 2006 at 03:02:59 PM EST

Re: Be Prepared For Republicans (none / 0)

Expect a bunch of GOP websites to suddenly go down during the last days of the campaign.  That smear worked pretty good for Lieberman in closing the gap.


by Jim Treglio on Fri Aug 11, 2006 at 03:19:03 PM EST

Re: Be Prepared For Republicans To Close Gap (none / 0)

i would look for the gap to narrow especially in pennsylvania.  santorum is now at -6% and closing.

casey has exactly zero "fire in the belly" and still reads off index cards.  if you are going to run successful insurgent candidacies against republican incumbents, it would help if we were able to at least see their breath in a mirror!


by epic610 on Fri Aug 11, 2006 at 04:47:33 PM EST

Re: Be Prepared For Republicans To Close Gap (none / 0)

While i agree that the gap in PA will narrow and that vigilance is necessary, the poll you cite, in which Santorum trails Casey 45 to 39, is most likely an outlier- at least in reference to Casey's performance, Santorum's 39% is in line w/ other polls.


by elessar on Fri Aug 11, 2006 at 09:27:24 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Be Prepared For Republicans To Close Gap (none / 0)

Excellent post. I'm not a conspiracy guy so #5 is the only thing I would dismiss. What was the October surprise in 2002 or 2004? I kept reading nonsense on other sites, like Bin Laden was being held and would be unveiled like King Kong a few days before the election. Bin Laden did release the tape but no indication Bush or Rove had anything to do with it, or the timing.

I'll continue to argue neither party really leads by 12 or 18 points, just like no presidential nominee in this polarized era truly has a 6 or 8 point advantage. Even if the polls all insist as such, the November voting won't play out that way. Just give me the national number that Lamont received, roughly 52%, and I'll take my chances.

The danger here is media BS, acceptance of the current phony margins then claims of Republican momentum once the poll numbers naturally tighten.

I agree with jiacinto it's a lot like 1986, more similar there than the typical comparison to 1994. For one thing, that was Reagan's second term midterm, the last time Democrats ran against that scenario. The problem here is fewer vulnerable seats are avaliable than '86. We knocked out 7 senatorial incumbents that year, and an amazing 15 senate races were won with 55% or less.


by jagakid on Fri Aug 11, 2006 at 05:46:35 PM EST

Re: Be Prepared For Republicans To Close Gap (none / 0)

Thanks Chris. That needed saying. No resting on laurels and for god's sake, don't anyone start getting cocky.

But the one bright spot in the mess the Republicans have made of the world is that their policies and positions have been so thoroughly discredited by now, there's no real need to even treat them as serious arguments anymore. And people shouldn't. The point we can keep making over and over in response to pretty much any right wing talking point you care to name is that we've heard them all before and look where it's gotten us.

The point about gas prices is well taken though. Not that I necessarily think this election is going to be about gas prices, but keep in mind that elections in this country happen in the lull between the summer road trip season and the winter heating season. Gasoline prices naturally take a dip in the Fall so look for Republicans to be lining up to take credit for that. (Hey, it's something!)


by CalD on Fri Aug 11, 2006 at 06:13:05 PM EST

Re: Be Prepared For Republicans To Close Gap (none / 0)

Quite right.  And if we really want to win this November, we have to use the weapons that they do, as distasteful as that might be to us.  We have to decide which of the alternatives is more distasteful.  As for me, I want to win.


by Astyanax on Fri Aug 11, 2006 at 08:18:35 PM EST

Re: Be Prepared For Republicans To Close Gap (none / 0)

Don't forget the voter supression tactics: identical name as a felony, confusing polling stations, purging voter rolls, electronic black box voting with hacking, vote spoliage, reduced voting machine in minority areas etc. etc.


by wdmosely on Fri Aug 11, 2006 at 09:36:09 PM EST

Re: Be Prepared For Republicans To Close Gap (none / 0)

Exactly why Corporate Press will report the gap closing whether it does or not. Can't have people questioning election results, after all.


by jen on Sat Aug 12, 2006 at 01:26:08 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Be Prepared For Republicans To Close Gap (3.00 / 1)

I'm a bit older than most of you, and I've seen this movie too many times, starting in the '60s. The bottom line is that the Reps win because they have a phenomenally well coordinated simplistic and relentless attack machine. If we're going to quit getting our jollies by talking only to each other, the Dems need to get lean and mean.

The classic example of GOP tactics is the decades old, successful and continuing, transformation of the word "liberal" into an obscenity which provokes a widely negative response now among a broad spectrum of the electorate without any reference at all to its actual meaning. No Republican candidate or spokesman has opened his mouth for 40 years now without using the phrase "tax and spend liberal." It's ridiculous, but don't kid yourself - IT WORKS.

I suggest that there is a Democratic rejoinder out there just begging to be put into the same kind of reflexive and universal circulation. It is "RADICAL REPUBLICAN."

It takes a lot of repetition to hammer anything into the bored, discouraged, media fogged electorate, but RADICAL REPUBLICAN has the virtue of flowing trippingly from the tongue, and even being essentially true. The Reps are not the conservatives they claim to be, they're radicals who are trashing our values, our lives and our economy. Let's call them on it. Over and over and over and over . . . . . . .  


by ORB on Fri Aug 11, 2006 at 10:28:49 PM EST

Re: Be Prepared For Republicans To Close Gap (none / 0)

I dig this point. It isn't just that Bush isn't going to fix this Iraq debacle, it's that he's declared that it's not his problem and he's not trying to fix it.


by Lucas O'Connor on Sat Aug 12, 2006 at 03:38:06 AM EST

Re: Be Prepared For Republicans To Close Gap (none / 0)

Chris, you raise some good points but I'm guardedly a bit more optimistic.

1)  Money.  Yes, the GOP still has an advantage.  But the advantage is much narrower than in recent election cycles AND they suddenly have a lot more terrain to defend.   The House and Senate campaigns are much more fought on terrain that they're trying to hold than on terrain we're fighting to hold.  In other words, we're on Offense, they're on Defense.  I like it.

2)  Noise machine.  I'll grant you that the traditional media is still parroting without question Republican talking points but the media, in its own stumble-footed way, also seems to like to go with winners and as the Democratic tide becomes apparent there will better coverage emanating from that direction.  

On the flip side, while I despise the pretentious self-importance of the phrase "people powered" politics and I think Kos-like pronouncements about the netroots Revolution being here are vastly overrated, I think that this is one area where the GOP is lagging and lagging badly.  The open architecture of the Democratic/Progressive on-line structures, as opposed to top-down hierarchial approach of the Republicans, is vastly superior.     Sometimes the Maoist "Let a hundred flowers bloom, let a hundred schools of though contend" can really work as ideas, opinions, strategies, etc. are bashed out in public by the many instead of in private by the few.  And I wouldn't underestimate the sheer informational component of the netroots, identifying opportunities for our candidates and vulnerabilities of theirs, pointing out frames that need to be rejected and talking points that need immediate and hard response, etc.  That said, I would want to avoid the sin of hubris.

3) Conservatives coming home.  That's certainly a  point but I want to reframe that as "Bush supporters coming home."   There are a fair slice of Independents and Democrats that voted for Bush that I think are now immune to the fearmongering from the other side.  They've been burned; I think you go back to early last year or so and on the more extensive polls Bush's "trustworthy" rating took a tumble from the low 60's/high 50's down into the low 40's or lower.  (Numbers from the top of my head...I'm sure that 119 people will check and report the degree of my error(s).]  These voters are far less likely to go back to backing Republicans, imo...they either sit out or they vote with us.

4)  Gas prices.  Point conceded, though I'm wondering, given geopolitical flux, how much prices may be within their control.

5)  October surprise.  I think that Democrats need to use the current London plot to hammer away relentlessly at the fact that 140,000 American troops in Iraq does nothing to affect terrorists like these(except perhaps to motivate them even more) and that we've done nothing to strike at the roots of terrorism but have intead opened up a failed-state recruiting zone.  

Bush/Cheney/Rove/Rumsfeld successfully linked 9/11 to Iraq in so many minds; we must actively and aggressively work to decouple the two as much as we can.


by InigoMontoya on Sat Aug 12, 2006 at 04:05:53 PM EST

Re: Be Prepared For Republicans To Close Gap (none / 0)

"This is a rare opportunity--the sort of opportunity that comes around once every couple of decades."

You have to wonder if that's really true. A weak President, corruption and mismanagement galore, an unpopular war. All these things are creating a sunami-sized wave of voter discontent.

But, really the Republicans aren't going to do any better in the future. There's a REASON why Bush is such a failure. They don't have any ideas about how to fix any of the problems America is facing. And there's only so long they can rule on rhetoric.

Such ideas as they do have will only make things worse, which becomes ever more painfully clear the longer they govern. So, their only hope is to terrorize the electorate into voting for them year after year with the un-ending "war on terror".

The problem with this is if they ever lose control, even for a short time, their appeal will deflate.

It will become obvious that we can survive withdrawal from Iraq without the terrorists swarming over Indianapolis, just as we survived the fall of Saigon without a communist domino toppling California.

The problems in the middle-east will even start to subside without our constantly pouring gasoline on the fire - not go away, but they won't be exploding all over the evening news every night.

With some wise management we could even stabilize the situation internationally, cut down on terrorist incidents, secure our ports, start to rebuild our infrastructure and move cautiously towards energy independence, all without the economy collapsing.

What then Republicans?


by Cugel on Mon Aug 14, 2006 at 03:23:35 PM EST


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