[Mb-civic] For GOP, 2006 Now Looms Much Larger - Washington Post
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Thu Nov 10 10:52:35 PST 2005
For GOP, 2006 Now Looms Much Larger
By Dan Balz
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, November 10, 2005; Page A01
In a season of discontent for the White House, Tuesday's election
results intensified Republican anxiety that next year's midterm contests
could bring serious losses unless George W. Bush finds a way to turn
around his presidency and shore up support among disaffected, moderate
swing voters.
Off-year gubernatorial contests in Virginia and New Jersey have proved
to be unreliable predictors of elections, as Republican officials were
quick to point out yesterday. But as short-term indicators, Tuesday's
results confirmed that nothing happened to alter a political climate
that now tilts against the GOP and that the president remains in the
midst of a slump.
But Democrats may also have to learn some of the lessons from Tuesday if
they hope to capitalize on Bush's weakness and make themselves
competitive in red states as well as blue states. In Virginia,
victorious candidate Timothy M. Kaine ran a campaign at odds with the
strategy of many traditional Democrats, one that focused on religion and
values and that appealed as much to swing voters as to the party's base.
Democrats captured the two governorships at stake Tuesday, in Virginia
and New Jersey, where Sen. Jon S. Corzine ran away with the race after a
nasty campaign. Democrats also buried four ballot initiatives in
California championed by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger (R) and ousted the
mayor of St. Paul, Minn., Democrat Randy Kelly, who had betrayed his
party by endorsing Bush in last year's presidential election. Democrats
failed in their effort to pass a package of political retooling measures
in Ohio.
Republican hopes for a quick morale boost had centered on conservative
Virginia. Instead, the gubernatorial results there raised concerns among
some Republicans that Bush's favored political strategy of mobilizing
conservative voters by dividing the electorate on cultural and social
issues may have prompted a backlash among voters in inner and outer
suburbs who were vital to Bush's reelection in 2004.
"It's not just that they lost these elections," said Democratic pollster
Geoffrey Garin, "but that none of their old tricks worked that they've
relied on to give them the edge in close contests."
Rep. Thomas M. Davis III (R-Va.) said the GOP's reliance on cultural
issues, popular with rural voters, "are just blowing up" in suburban and
exurban communities. "You play to your rural base, you pay a price," he
said.
Kaine's campaign highlighted tensions within the Democratic Party over
whether to pursue a strategy designed largely to energize its
left-leaning, antiwar, grass-roots base or move to the center, emphasize
cultural issues to neutralize the GOP's advantage there, and talk
bread-and-butter issues such as education and economic growth.
Republican National Committee Chairman Ken Mehlman said that Kaine
adopted a strategy sharply at odds with the approach of leading national
Democrats, including the one that was enunciated by Democratic National
Committee Chairman Howard Dean during his unsuccessful campaign for the
party's 2004 presidential nomination.
Kaine "did not say, 'I represent the Democratic wing of the Democratic
Party,' " Mehlman said, referring to language Dean used in his own
campaign. "He said, 'I represent the Mark Warner wing of the Democratic
Party.' Quite the opposite. . . . The Potomac River divides a Democratic
Party catering to the MoveOn wing versus a Democratic Party centered in
the Mark Warner wing." Indeed, Kaine's success owed less to
dissatisfaction with Bush and more to satisfaction with Warner's tenure
as governor.
Iowa Gov. Tom Vilsack (D) said there is an important lesson for
Democrats in the Virginia results, arguing that Kaine turned the
campaign in his direction by persuasively linking his opposition to the
death penalty to his religious faith.
"If you have the luxury of running in New York or California, you might
run a different campaign," he said. "But if you run in most of the swing
states, for every progressive voter there are probably two swing voters.
You've got to appeal to the moderate voters. Swing voters do not respond
well to partisanship and to negative campaigning. What they're really
looking for are people with integrity and people trying to solve their
problems."
(continued)...
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/11/09/AR2005110902276.html?nav=hcmodule
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