Townhall...
What
Will the 2012 Election Look Like?
By Salena Zito
8/14/2011
Democrats
were remarkably unprepared
for the discontent that dislodged them from running the U.S. House last
year, a
sentiment that began in the summer of 2009.
Pete
Sessions, the Texas congressman
charged with retaining today’s Republican majority, says he will not
repeat
that mistake.
“I
am listening to people,” he said,
bursting into an empty boardroom as if he’d rather be walking onto a
football
field to go over plays with his team.
He’d
better be ready, because he’s
looking at the same numbers the Democrats’ leader, Nancy Pelosi, saw in
early
2010; Gallup’s latest poll shows only 24 percent believe their
congressman
deserves to keep his or her job.
Those
numbers could indicate a country
heading into the same volatile election pattern that swung the House
100-plus
seats in either direction and seated, unseated, then re-seated one U.S.
president in the late 19th century, all in a little over five years.
Most
experts today are not convinced
that Democrats can retake the House, at least not yet.
Not
that voters are enamored with
Republicans; they just have total distaste for one party dominating
Washington.
“It
is a tall order for the Democrats
to take back the House, especially considering the bad economy and a
president
with under 50 percent approval,” said Mark Rozell, a political science
professor at George Mason University.
If
those factors remain in place, look
for Democrats to run away from President Obama’s policies next year,
much as
Republicans did in 1992 after President George H.W. Bush broke his “no
new
taxes” pledge.
A
lot can change in a year, according
to Rozell, but “if economic circumstances don’t start to point in a
positive
direction, the math doesn’t show a way for the Democrats to take back
the gavel
for Pelosi.”
As
chairman of the National Republican
Congressional Committee, Sessions plans to hold the seats that
Republicans won
in 2010 and to add 16 more.
“Sessions’
goal is optimistic,” said
Rozell. “Without a lot of competitive districts, turning 16 or more
seats for
the GOP will be extremely difficult.”
Sessions
is paid well to aim high but,
realistically, a lot of variables will all have to break his way to hit
16.
Yet
he also knows about beating
expectations: When he took the stage a couple of weeks after Obama’s
inauguration, in front of a deflated GOP House membership, he boldly
pledged to
take back the House.
“It
was my job,” he beams, remembering
the collective eye-rolls.
He
may have mood in his favor: Just as
in 2009 and 2010, Gallup’s latest numbers show conservative ideology
predominating in the American electorate – with 41 percent
self-identifying as
conservative, 36 percent as moderate and 21 percent as liberal.
So
while one poll shows voters unhappy
with Congress, another shows their personal values leaning strongly
conservative, favoring Republicans.
Democrats
also will face a more
difficult time from a unity-and-enthusiasm perspective, given
progressives’ dissatisfaction
with the federal debt deal and with Obama’s lack of leadership
following the
nation’s credit downgrade.
And
if last week’s recall elections
for six Wisconsin state senate seats were a harbinger of 2012’s U.S.
House
races, consider this: Wisconsin’s vote was “presidential,” meaning that
Democrats brought out people who usually don’t vote – the poor, blacks,
students – yet independent voters went conservative and voted for
Republican
incumbents, demonstrating that they are just as passionate about
budgets, taxes
and entitlements as are unions.
The
next election could produce a
Democrat House, a Republican Senate and, possibly, a second Obama term,
according to Purdue University political science professor Bert
Rockman, not so
much “because people think Obama’s doing so well than because of the
weakness
of the Republican presidential field.”
Huge
“wave” elections, such as those
in 1994, 2006 or 2010, hinge on trust and blame. What’s unclear today
is
whether voters blame one party or the other for what’s wrong.
“Which
is why I will spend my time out
there on Main Street listening to voters’ concerns,” replies the GOP’s
Sessions. “I may not like everything they say but that is how you
understand
how the country feels about your decisions.”
He
has 15 months to see if Republicans
can earn those voters’ trust.
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