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Republican optimism may get scotched by reality

By: Chris Stirewalt
Political Editor
October 19, 2009

Former Maryland Lt. Gov. Michael Steele smiles after being elected the first black Republican National Committee chairman, Friday, Jan. 30, 2009 (AP)

Republicans finally have reason to like the polls after four years of unrelenting bad news.

But like a preseason top-10 football team, the optimism might only last until the first quarterback sack.

In just six months, the GOP has clawed its way back from near irrelevancy. It has closed a 10-point gap in the generic ballot for the 2010 House election and become competitive in contests in previously safe Democratic states like Delaware, Illinois, New Jersey and Connecticut.

Some of that can be credited to pragmatic candidate recruitment. With the exception of misreading the strength of Florida Gov. Charlie Crist, the Republican establishment has made smart bets on which candidates would run well in various jurisdictions.

The candidacy of middle-of-the-road Rep. Mark Kirk in Illinois, for instance, might have ignited a range war in years past. This was a state party that offered up provocateur Alan Keyes against Barack Obama for Senate in 2004 in a cheesy bit of racial profiling. Now, the tantalizing thought of having a Republican -- even a squishy one -- in the president's old seat seems to have suppressed most cannibalistic instincts.

Another reason for the improvement is that in an era of a $1.42 trillion deficit, being labeled as the "Party of No" has turned out to be a great blessing.

Americans saw the Democratic majority begin a string of staggering initiatives this year. But a stimulus that does not hold down unemployment, not to mention huge outlays for a nation-building plan in Afghanistan that is already on the shelf, has made Americans wonder whether unilateral Democratic rule is prudent and wise.

The real cost estimates for the party's health care plan now stretch into the trillions of dollars, and will only grow as special interests put the squeeze on a politically weak Senate majority leader and president. Taxpayers know that higher taxes and inflation will be the price of the Democrats' good intentions.

Rahm Emanuel persuaded his party to paint Republicans as obstructionists at a time of crisis. But if government action is seen as contributing to the crisis, obstructionism is a virtue, not a vice. Had Democrats proved moderate and competent, the "Party of No" rap might have worked. So far, the Republicans have been able to shrug it off.

But it's not that Republicans are winning. It's that Democrats are losing.

Obama has shed more than 20 points in his job-approval rating since inauguration, and the 11-point drop in the approval for his handling of foreign policy since June (now 48 percent in the latest CBS poll) suggests something between panic and anger over his Afghan dithering.

While the president waits for a politically advantageous moment to abandon his "war of necessity" stance on Afghanistan, Democrats must grimly march forward with his health care proposal. They know that 70 percent of voters in the last NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll said the plan would not improve the quality of their care. But it's too late to turn back now.

What really has Republicans fired up, though, is the latest poll from Fox News that found only 43 percent of Americans would vote to re-elect Obama in 2012.

But just as Democrats came to realize with their 2004 flop, "Anybody but ..." isn't an effective strategy, especially against an incumbent who may struggle to govern but who excels at campaigning.

Republicans must remember President Lincoln's rejoinder to Ohio Sen. Benjamin Wade, who said that "anybody" could command the Union army: "Anybody will do for you, but not for me. I must have somebody."

Right now, the leading Republican for 2012 is a talk show host who left the Arkansas governor's mansion almost three years ago and is starting a tour for his first Christmas book.

That doesn't mean that Mike Huckabee will be the nominee, but it does mean that the party is heading for an ugly time. Huckabee makes a good "anybody" to 29 percent of Republicans, but the party will soon have to have "somebody."

Former front-runner Mitt Romney is meddling in the New York gubernatorial primary in an effort to block old foe Rudy Giuliani. Sarah Palin is getting ready for a rebranding with a new book and political action committee. Will she try to be queen or kingmaker? Tim Pawlenty is making all the right moves but hasn't shown whether he can connect viscerally with voters who aren't so "Minnesota nice."

The egos and ambitions of Republican contenders have been inflamed by Obama's vulnerability. But without the kind of heir apparent they had in 1980, Republicans may struggle to capitalize on the second coming of Jimmy Carter.

Chris Stirewalt is the political editor of The Washington Examiner. He can be reached at cstirewalt@washingtonexaminer.com.



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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

Chris

Oct 19, 2009

This is utter garbage. You are a right-wing tool, Chris Stirewalt. Shame on you. You are just parroting right-wing talking points. I can't even finish reading this tripe, it makes me want to vomit.

 

Oct 19, 2009

To the previous poster... do your own homework and stop parroting the left-wing talking points. Once you open your eyes to reality (former left-winger talking here) you'll see what's really going on and thank the people who had the honor, courage and loyalty to stand up for your freedom, even as you were trying to shut them up.

 

Artist

Oct 19, 2009

Good point regarding Charlie Crist. The Florida GOP anointed him as their candidate for US Senate, but he's getting his butt kicked by Marco Rubio in every straw poll out there. Crist is an empty suit, pandering and completely uninspiring. Republicans want to be inspired again after so many years of getting their butts kicked - Charlie Crist is NOT the guy to do that. The Florida GOP screwed up when they pre-selected him as their candidate, doing more damage to the stumbling Republican party in Florida. The best thing that could happen for Florida Republicans is to elect Marco Rubio - it will give them a sense of taking back the party from idiots like Florida GOP chair Jim Greer who have lead us down the wrong path.

 

flacracker

Oct 19, 2009

Artist, I hope you're right. Charlie Crist is one huge disappointment. On the other hand, Chris Stirewalt isn't a disappointment. He's right on.

 

bearlyme

Oct 19, 2009

What a crock! Stirewalt says, "But just as Democrats came to realize with their 2004 flop, "Anybody but ..." isn't an effective strategy,..." After unmercifully pounding Bush for 8 long years (much of it deserved), the "anybody but..." strategy sure worked for Obama and the entire Congress in '08. And nominating "squishy, middle-of-the-road" liberals in disguise is the fastest path to the complete collapse of the Republican party. i've never read such garbage.

 

VanOwen

Oct 19, 2009

Gov Huckabee is clearly following Reagan's game plan. That is smart on his part. However, a candidate who follows The Gipper's plan does not make him the Gipper.

 

greg

Oct 19, 2009

I never get posted here anymore. Am I begin barred for printing the truth?

 

Joe

Oct 19, 2009

The Republicans had better start helping themselves by being more outspoken when on tv about the Republican healthcare plan, for instance. Don't waste time dissing the Dems, talk up what the Republicans believe in.

 

Mark

Oct 19, 2009

I would just like to point that when the 2012 race gets going, Marco Rubio will have as much time in the Senate, and more political experience in general, than Obama did when he began his campaign.

 

George Kocan

Oct 19, 2009

Mark Kirk will lose. The Illinois conservatives will not vote for him. As usual, the GOP leadership in Illinois ignored them, as they passed over Oberweis for Keyes, as they pushed Judy Barr Topinka and lost against the Boy Wonder Rod Blago.

 

Madie

Oct 19, 2009

Republicans need to make sure they don't become the team that loses its first half lead by looking toward the end of the game, and forgettign they still have to play the second half.
Sorry for the football analogy, but in a house full of men, football has become the "order of the day" (at least till the Pro Bowl is over).

 

higgins1990

Oct 19, 2009

#bearlyme

I have to agree with bear. "Anyone but Bush" reaped rewards for the Dems in 2006 and 2008, and electing moderate Republicans is why the GOP lost its way.

The GOP doesn't have to worry about having a leader until Spring of 2012. Leadership, though (or lack thereof)...that's another question.

 

higgins1990

Oct 19, 2009

You mention Kirk and Crist. What about the liberal Scozzafava in NY? That pick certainly doesn't give me much confidence in the GOP leadership.

 

Huckapedia

Oct 19, 2009

Subject: Huckabee Fans surpass 400 County Milestone

The Huckabee network continues to expand at a phenomenal pace. Thousands of Huckabee Fans from coast to coast are rallying for Mike Huckabee President 2012.

They have recently broke the 400 barrier for the number of counties in America with Huckabee Fans that spans 50 States.

Check it out for yourself, just google - Huckabee Fan Club

 

Dennis Kolb Sr.

Oct 19, 2009

Einstein's definition of insanity is;Doing The Same Thing Over And Over Again A Expecting A Different Result!!!!
Voting for dems.or repubs.never really changes anything,except how fast they penalize us for their un-compassionate Laws..
I've been a registered republican for almost 40 years,but I'm going to change that to unaffiliated and will not vote for either party because I believe they are the root of the distruction of the Constitution and America!!!
I will vote for a nonpartisan candidate if they hold my values and convictions...

 

Bill J

Oct 19, 2009

A note of caution:

Never trust a presidential candidate from Hope Arkansas!

We've been there and done that once already!

 

Colorado Snow Day

Oct 21, 2009

Joe writes: "Joe

Oct 19, 2009

The Republicans had better start helping themselves by being more outspoken when on tv about the Republican healthcare plan, for instance. Don't waste time dissing the Dems, talk up what the Republicans believe in."

We already know. They want to replace our Constitutional right to civil trial by jury with "Health Care Tribunals."

 

Colorado Snow Day

Oct 21, 2009

Joe writes: "The Republicans had better start helping themselves by being more outspoken when on tv about the Republican healthcare plan, for instance. Don't waste time dissing the Dems, talk up what the Republicans believe in."

We already know. They want to replace our Constitutional right to civil trial by jury with "Health Care Tribunals."

 

Jan 11, 2010

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