Please Support the MyDD 2008 Fundraiser
I have been following the numbers on Republican retirements fairly closely in recent months (check out the "retirements" tag). But some information conveyed in the 15th and 16th paragraphs of an otherwise not particularly insightful New York Times piece was somewhat surprising and rather interesting to me.
Four of the 28 Republicans who are so far leaving the House quit before their terms ended. They will be replaced in special elections before November, giving the winners of those races at least the technical mantle of incumbency in the general election.That leaves 24 open Republican seats, though leaders of both parties expect at least a few more Republican retirements as state filing deadlines arrive. The high point for end-of-session Republican retirements is 27 in 1952, according to Congressional records.
The thrust of the piece is that all of these retirements "[threaten] to cripple" Republican efforts to retake the House. Talk about an understatement. This burgeoning number of open seats "threatens to cripple" efforts by the party to not lose more than a dozen seats this fall -- and it simply destroys efforts to end up with a net gain of seats, let alone coming anywhere close to retaking the House.
But for as much as the lede and the thrust of the article misses the real story -- that the Republicans' chances of retaking the House are less than zero (as they might have said back in the '80s) -- the factoid about the Republicans' current number of retirements quickly approaching the more than 55 year old record set in 1952 nevertheless stands out. True, the Republicans actually picked up seats in the 1952 House elections -- but they had to ride the coattails of Dwight Eisenhower's 55 percent of the popular vote and enjoy the drag of Harry Truman's sub-40 percent approval rating on the Democrats in order to eke out a tiny 221-seat majority. Suffice it to say that it's not particularly likely that the Republican presidential nominee is going to get northward of 55 percent in the general election, as did Eisenhower, or that the head of the Democratic Party will have an approval rating in the 30s come November.
Nevertheless, I will make one prediction (one in which I don't think I'm going too far out on the ledge for): House Republicans will set their all-time record for retirements this cycle as more and more of them seek to flee from the sinking ship that is their party and their caucus in the House of Representatives.
|
|
|
Permalink :: 7 Comments :: Post a Comment
|
In order to post a comment, you must be logged in. If you have a member account, please log in to comment.
If not, you can make an account right here. It's quick and free.