Politics and Government
An observation that strikes a strong chord with a great many people
these days is that although Democrats in Washington have certainly performed
poorly enough over the past year to deserve being thrown out of power,
congressional Republicans have done virtually nothing to deserve being thrown
back into power. The GOP's eight years in the White House and six years in
control of Congress were certainly inauspicious.
Looking toward Nov. 2, the Democrats' situation in the House isn't quite
bad enough to say that their majority is a goner. But unless something bends
the political curve in their favor, Democrats are headed toward losing more
than the 40 seats that would cost them control.
Pennsylvania is expected to hold a special election on May 18 to fill
the vacancy created by the death of Defense Appropriations Subcommittee
Chairman John Murtha. The Cook Political Report rates the contest a
"toss-up," raising to 51 the number of Democratic House seats now in
competitive situations. Twenty-five are toss-ups or even more vulnerable; 26
are in the "lean Democratic" category.
Murtha's district went for Republican John McCain four years after being
carried by Democrat John Kerry. Even under normal circumstances -- meaning,
even if they weren't under siege -- Democrats would have trouble defending this
district without Murtha.
Just how bad is the Democrats' current situation? In the three statewide
contests since the 2008 presidential election, the Democratic nominee has run
an average of 9 percentage points behind Barack Obama's performance.
In the Senate, a Republican takeover is unlikely -- before 2012. With Democrats
likely to lose five to seven Senate seats this year, the GOP has a very good
chance of reclaiming the majority in 2012, when Democrats will have 23 seats in
play compared with only nine for Republicans, or in 2014, when 20 Democratic
seats come up and Republicans will have to defend only 13.
In short, Republicans' exile to the wilderness, congressionally speaking
at least, could be brief, but do they deserve to reclaim power? The GOP appears
to be on track to winning the midterm elections, so from a crass political
perspective, how can it be faulted? Well, Republicans have cobbled together
some pro forma proposals, but they certainly haven't made many good-faith
efforts at producing public policy in the past year. To be sure, many
Democratic congressional leaders haven't seemed open to GOP or conservative
ideas, but that does not absolve Republicans of responsibility for addressing
the nation's unemployment and health care problems.
If Republicans return to power soon, what will they do? As New York
Times Book Review Editor Sam Tanenhaus wrote in his 2009 book, The Death of
Conservatism, "Today's conservatives resemble the exhumed figures of
Pompeii, trapped in postures of frozen flight, clenched in the rigor mortis of
a defunct ideology." Tanenhaus's characterization of the GOP as long on
obstruction and recrimination and short on constructive efforts to address our
country's mounting problems rings true. Although the GOP's negativity might
help it win the midterm elections, it hardly provides a sound basis on which to
govern. Remember how Karl Rove's divide-and-conquer strategy to re-elect
President Bush worked but failed to give him a foundation on which to govern
for his final four years or the authority to rule. Perhaps during Bush's
presidency Republicans came to place too much value on toeing the party line
and too little on offering new ideas. A party can atrophy intellectually.
When I listened to President Obama deliver his State of the Union
address, I was disappointed not to hear an acknowledgement that he had
squandered the mountain of goodwill he enjoyed when he was sworn into office a
year earlier; that he had misread his mandate and neglected one of his most
basic job requirements -- to help manage the economy. And I still haven't heard
those mea culpas. But Republicans, for their part, need to acknowledge their
own shortcomings. That would be an important first step toward convincing
voters that they grasp why they were thrown out of power and that they deserve
to be entrusted with power once again.
I've been struck by the remarkable ad that Japan's embattled automaker,
Toyota, is now running: "For over 50 years, providing you with safe,
reliable, high-quality vehicles has been our first priority. In recent days,
our company hasn't been living up to the standards that you've come to expect
from us or that we expect from ourselves."
Source: govexec.com