Wall  Street  Journal
 
 OPINION DECEMBER 29, 2011 
Political Predictions for 2012 
Nancy Pelosi, Harry Reid or both will leave the Democratic  leadership by 
year's end.

 
By _KARL  ROVE_ 
(http://online.wsj.com/search/term.html?KEYWORDS=KARL+ROVE&bylinesearch=true)  
As New Year's approaches, here are a baker's dozen predictions for 2012.  
• Republicans will keep the U.S. House, albeit with their 25-seat majority  
slightly reduced. In the 10 presidential re-elections since 1936, the party 
in  control of the White House has added House seats in seven contests and 
lost them  in three. The average gain has been 12 seats. The largest pickup 
was 24 seats in  1944—but President Barack Obama is no FDR, despite what he 
said in his recent  "60 Minutes" interview. 
• Republicans will take the U.S. Senate. Of the 23 Democratic seats up in  
2012, there are at least five vulnerable incumbents (Florida, Michigan,  
Missouri, Montana, Pennsylvania): The GOP takes two or three of these. With the 
 announcement on Tuesday that Nebraska's Ben Nelson will retire, there are 
now  seven open Democratic seats (Connecticut, Hawaii, North Dakota, New 
Mexico,  Virginia, Wisconsin): The GOP takes three or four. Even if Republicans 
lose one  of the 10 seats they have up, they will have a net pickup of four 
to six seats,  for a majority of 51 to 53. 
 
• Rep. Nancy Pelosi, Sen. Harry Reid or both will leave the Democratic  
leadership by the end of 2012. Speaker John Boehner and Senator Mitch McConnell 
 will continue directing the GOP in their respective chambers. 
• This will be the fourth presidential election in a row in which turnout  
increases. This has happened just once since 1828, from 1928 through 1940. 
• In 2008, voters told the Pew Poll that they got more election information 
 from the Internet than from daily newspapers. Next year, that advantage 
will  grow as the Internet closes in on television as America's principal 
source of  campaign news.  
• After failing to win the GOP presidential nomination, Ron Paul will not 
run  as a third-party candidate because that would put his son, Rand Paul, in 
an  untenable position: Does the Republican senator from Kentucky support 
his father  and effectively re-elect Mr. Obama, or back his party and defeat 
him?
 
Mr. Obama's signature health-care overhaul, already deeply unpopular, will  
become even more so by Election Day. Women voters are particularly opposed 
to  ObamaCare, feeling it threatens their family's health.  
• Mr. Obama may propose tax reform, attempting to use it to appeal both to  
his liberal base (a question of fairness) and independents (a reform to 
spur  economic growth). This will fail, but not before boosting Mr. Obama's 
poll  numbers. 
• The Obama campaign won't corral high-profile Republican endorsements—as 
it  did in 2008 with former Secretary of State Colin Powell—with the 
unimportant  possible exception of former Nebraska Sen. Chuck Hagel. It will 
also 
make a  special effort to diminish the GOP's advantage among military 
families, veterans  and evangelicals, with the last a special target if 
Republicans 
nominate Mitt  Romney.
 
Despite an extraordinary amount of presidential time and involvement, Team  
Obama will fall as much as $200 million short of its $1 billion combined  
fund-raising target for the campaign and Democratic National Committee. Even 
so,  Mr. Obama and Democrats will outspend the GOP nominee and Republicans. 
This  won't necessarily translate into victory: John Kerry and Democrats 
outspent  President George W. Bush and Republicans in 2004 by $124 million. 
Groups like  American Crossroads (which I helped found) will narrow the 
Democratic money  advantage.  
• Scandals surrounding the now-bankrupt Solyndra, Fannie and Freddie, MF  
Global and administration insider deals still to emerge will metastasize,  
demolishing the president's image as a political outsider. By the election, 
the  impression will harden that Mr. Obama is a modern Chicago-style patronage 
 politician, using taxpayer dollars to reward political allies (like 
unions) and  contributors (like Obama fund-raiser and Solyndra investor George 
Kaiser). 
• To intimidate critics and provoke higher black turnout, Democrats will 
play  the race card more than in any election since 1948. Witness Attorney 
General  Eric Holder's recent charge that criticism of him and the president 
was "both  due to the nature of our relationship and . . . the fact that we're 
both  African-Americans."  
• The economic recovery will continue to be anemic, leaving both 
unemployment  and concerns about whether the president is up to the job high on 
Election Day.  Because of this, Mr. Obama will lose as his margins drop among 
five 
groups  essential to his 2008 victory—independents, women, Latinos, young 
people and  Jews. While he will win a majority from at least three of these 
groups, he won't  win them by as much as he did last time. 
Predicting the future is always dangerous but conservatives believe in  
accountability, so let's see how well I do a year from now.

-- 
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