This has been a quiet campaign so far. The media is not covering Congress much, and not much legislation is being passed through both branches anyway. There was that whole
"Republican Civil War" thing, and of course
the latest atrocity from the House that has no chance of passing the Senate, but really there has not been much. Nothing much national is happening in this election, except underlying disgust with Bush and Iraq. The Democratic message has been turned over completely to candidates in individual districts, which doesn't exactly leave the national rank and file with a palpable sense of excitement over what is at stake. Republicans occasionally cough up something about immigration and terrorism, but we really have been down that well before--same old, same old. With the exception of a few scandals in Virginia and Tennessee, there has been basically no real movement among Democratic Senate targets in months. The House and Governor's pictures also remain fairly static, with Democrats holding a very good chance of taking a narrow majority in the House, and a very good chance of taking over a decent majority among Governorships.
Overall, I'm just not sensing much excitement, and I live pretty much in ground zero for midterm action (Philadelphia). We should be excited. The odds are in our favor to take over the House, albeit narrowly, which would be only the second change of power there in fifty years. The odds are heavily in our favor to win a majority of Governorships, since right now we have 24 looking either safe or pretty good, while Republicans can only say that about 18 seats. Even if we don't take the Senate, the picture is incrementally improving pretty much everyday. At worst, we will gain a few seats, be well primed for control in 2008.
Maybe I am misreading the situation. Maybe it isn't a lack of excitement, but rather a cool determination. Maybe it isn't that we don't realize what we can potentially win, but rather than we don't want to get ahead of ourselves before we pull it off. Maybe it isn't even that we don't believe we will make real gains, but that we know the most difficult work is still ahead of us even if we make those gains. It is also possible that we are really excited, but I'm just missing it. Still, this definitely does not feel like the 2003-4 Presidential primary season. This does not feel like the 2004 election. This does not feel like the Senate primary in Connecticut. In the final seven weeks of those elections, almost every minute of every day seemed to brim with real excitement. It felt as though I was breathing, drinking, and eating those elections. I am working just as hard this time, if not far harder, but somehow I am just not getting the same rush yet.
Is it just me? Are other people feeling as though this election is kind of quiet and dull? If so, does anyone know how we can try to snap out of it? How can we get the same energy out of our activists in 2006 that we got in 2004? Or is a mid-term election, even one with a real prospect for changing control of Congress, just not going to be as exciting as a close Presidential election with high turnout in a polarized environment during a war? Please, by all means, let me know in the comments if you are having a similar feeling, or if you think I am off my rocker.