The Shrinkage of the Obama Majority
By _Michael Barone_ 
(http://www.realclearpolitics.com/authors/michael_barone/)  - November 7, 2014 


_realclearpolitics.com_ (http://realclearpolitics.comSome) 
 
 
Some  observations on the election:

 
 
1) This was a wave, folks. It will be a benchmark for judging waves, for  
either party, for years.



 
2) In seriously contested races, Republican candidates were generally  
younger, more vigorous, more sunny and optimistic than Democrats. The contrast  
was sharpest in Colorado and Iowa, which voted twice for President Obama. 
Cory  Gardner and Joni Ernst seemed to be looking forward to the future. Their 
 opponents grimly championed the stale causes of feminists and trial 
lawyers of  the past.  
Democrats see themselves as the party of the future. But their policies are 
 antique. The federal minimum wage dates to 1938, equal pay for women to 
1963,  access to contraceptives to 1965. Raising these issues now is campaign  
gimmickry, not serious policymaking. 
Democratic leading lights have been around a long time. The party’s two  
congressional leaders are in their 70s. The governors of the two largest  
Democratic states are sons of former governors who won their first statewide  
elections in 1950 and 1978. 
This has implications for 2016. Hillary Clinton, the likely Democratic  
nominee, worked in her first campaign in 1970. She has been a national figure  
since 1991. The Clintons’ theme song, “Don’t Stop Thinking About Tomorrow,”
 was  released in 1977. That will be 39 years ago in 2016. 
3) The combination of Obama’s low job approval and Harry Reid’s virtual  
shutdown of the Senate ensured a Republican Senate majority. Reid prevented  
amendments — Mark Begich of Alaska never got to introduce one — that could 
have  helped them in campaigns. 
Votes were blocked on issues with clear Senate majorities — such as the  
Keystone XL pipeline, medical-device tax repeal, and the bipartisan  
patent-reform bill backed by Judiciary chairman Patrick Leahy (D., Vt.0. 
That left Democrats running for reelection stuck with 95-plus percent Obama 
 voting records. It left them with no independent votes or initiatives to 
point  to. Reid kept Democratic candidates well stocked with money. But not 
with  winning issues. 
4) Democratic territory has been reduced to the bastions of two core groups 
—  black voters and gentry liberals. Democrats win New York City and the 
San  Francisco Bay area by overwhelming margins but are outvoted in almost all 
the  territory in between — including, this year, Obama’s Illinois. 
Governor Jerry  Brown ran well behind in California’s Central Valley, and 
Governor 
Andrew Cuomo  lost most of upstate New York. 
Democratic margins have shrunk among Hispanics and, almost to the vanishing 
 point, among young voters. Liberal Democrats raised money to “turn Texas 
blue.”  But it voted Republican by wider-than-usual margins this year. 
Under Obama, the Democratic base has shrunk numerically and 
demographically.  With superior organization, he was able to stitch together a 
51 percent 
majority  in 2012. But like other Democratic majority coalitions — Woodrow 
Wilson’s,  Lyndon Johnson’s, even Franklin Roosevelt’s — it has proved to be 
fragile and  subject to fragmentation. 
5) In many states — including many carried twice by Obama — Republicans 
have  been governing successfully, at least in the estimation of their voters. 
 Governor Scott Walker has won his third victory in four years in Wisconsin 
 against the frantic efforts of public-employee unions. 
Governor John Kasich won a landslide victory against a flawed opponent in  
Ohio, and Governor Rick Snyder won solidly in Michigan after signing a  
right-to-work law hated by private-sector unions. In Florida, Governor Rick  
Scott’s second consecutive one-point victory means that Republicans will be in  
control for 20 years in what is now the nation’s third-largest state. 
Democratic governance, in contrast, was rebuked by the voters in  
Massachusetts, in Maryland (with the nation’s fourth-highest black population 
in  
percentage terms), and in Obama’s home state of Illinois. 
(6) The Obama Democrats labor under the illusion that a beleaguered people  
hunger for an ever-bigger government. The polls and the election results  
suggest, not so gently, otherwise. 
The fiasco of HealthCare.gov, the misdeeds of the IRS, the improvisatory  
warnings of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention — all undermine  
confidence in the capacity of big government. Looking back over the last  
half-century, we can see that the highest levels of trust in government came,  
interestingly, during the administration of Ronald Reagan. 
7) This election was a repudiation of the big-government policies of the  
Obama Democrats. It was not so much an endorsement of Republicans as it was 
an  invitation to them to come up with better alternative policies. 
In the states, some Republicans have. At the national level, they are  just 
getting started. We’ll see how they  do. 



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