The Atlantic
 
 
Why the GOP Blowout Is So Scary for  Democrats
It's not just that the GOP won key  races across the board. It's that the 
party showed a new hunger to cross over to  moderates and win. 
 
_Peter  Beinart_ (http://www.theatlantic.com/peter-beinart/)  Nov 5  2014

 
 
 
 
AP 

Does Tuesday night’s GOP blowout presage anything for the presidential  
election that starts in earnest on Wednesday? The conventional answer is  
probably still no. First, as a million pundits have correctly noted, midterm  
voters are older, whiter and thus more Republican-leaning than voters in  
presidential races. Second, the key 2014 Senate races were disproportionately  
located in red states (although Democrats fared poorly in purple ones too).  
Third, the GOP trained its fire on President Obama, who won’t be on the 
ballot  in two years. 
 
 



But despite all this, there is one big takeaway from tonight’s Republican  
landslide that should worry Democrats a lot: The GOP is growing hungrier to  
win.
 
It’s about time. As a general rule, the longer a party goes without holding 
 the White House, the hungrier it becomes. And the hungrier it becomes, the 
more  able it is to discard damaging elements of party orthodoxy while 
still rousing  its political base. Between 1932 and 1952, it took Republicans 
five election  defeats to convince their partisans to rally behind Dwight 
Eisenhower, who  accepted the New Deal. Between 1980 and 1992, it took 
Democrats 
three defeats to  convince their base to get behind Bill Clinton, a former 
head of the centrist  Democratic Leadership Council who supported cutting 
taxes and executing  murderers. 
In 2008 and 2012, Republicans couldn’t pull this off. Party elites backed  
John McCain and Mitt Romney, both of whom had records of bipartisan 
achievement  and ideological independence that might have made them attractive 
to 
swing  voters. But McCain and Romney faced so much hostility from the GOP’s  
conservative base that in order to win the nomination, and then ensure a 
decent  base turnout in November, they had to repudiate the very aspects of 
their  political identity that might have impressed independents. McCain, who 
had once  called Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson “agents of intolerance,” 
made another  such agent, Sarah Palin, his running mate. Romney, who given his 
druthers would  likely have supported comprehensive immigration reform, 
instead demonized  illegal immigrants to curry favor with the GOP base.
 
This year has been different: GOP activists have given their candidates 
more  space to craft the centrist personas they need to win. First, in senate 
races in  North Carolina, South Carolina, Kentucky, Alaska, Tennessee, 
Georgia, Kansas and  Texas, comparatively moderate Republicans triumphed over 
Tea 
Party-backed  challengers. Then many of those Republicans downplayed their 
opposition to gay  marriage and highlighted their support for greater access 
to contraception in an  effort to win over the young and women voters who in 
past elections spurned the  GOP as too extreme. “On social issues,” _wrote 
 Slate’s Will Saletan_ (file:///wrote%20Slate) , “Republicans are 
mumbling, cringing, and  ducking. They don’t want the election to be about 
these 
issues, even in red  states.” 
Sincere or not, these efforts to not appear retrograde and extreme helped  
Republicans say close among women voters. And yet conservatives turned out 
for  them in huge numbers nonetheless. Thus, Republicans in 2014 combined 
candidate  impurity with grassroots passion, which is what they’ll need to do 
to win in  2016. 
Achieving this combination is tougher in presidential elections. It’s hard 
to  deviate from Limbaughesque orthodoxy when you’re competing for the hard 
right  voters who dominate the Iowa caucuses and the South Carolina primary. 
Still,  it’s striking that Rand Paul, the Republican who has been most 
willing to buck  ideological convention on race, crime and foreign policy, has 
so far not paid a  political price. A lot may depend on Ted Cruz: The more 
successful he becomes,  the more pressure other Republican contenders will 
feel to ape his ultra-right  stances. But if the 2010 midterms revealed a GOP 
fixated on ideological purity,  2014 has showcased the party’s new tolerance, 
and even enthusiasm, for  pragmatism. 
_The  GOP brand remains terrible_ 
(http://www.people-press.org/files/2014/10/10-23-14-Political-release.pdf) , 
and the party still faces huge 
challenges in  winning the younger, Hispanic and female voters it needs to 
reclaim 
the White  House. But if Republicans remain in a political hole, tonight’s 
midterms suggest  that they have at least stopped digging. That’s 2014’s most 
important lesson for  the presidential race that’s about to  begin.

-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.
  • [RC] Th... BILROJ via Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community

Reply via email to