The big election related news from yesterday had nothing to do with the nothing-burger in West Virginia. Sorry Clinton dead-enders – it’s still over. The big news came from Mississippi where in a special congressional election, Democrat Travis Childers defeated Republican Greg Davis, 53-47. President Bush carried the district with 62% of the vote in 2004. I know this all sounds very grim for what it might mean in the Fall, but worry not. The GOP has a plan. Representative Tom Cole, who has the unenviable task of heading the National Republican Congressional Committee this cycle, assures us the way out is really quite simple:
Bold efforts? A forward looking agenda? Positive change? Phew!! For a fleeting moment, I feared the GOP wouldn’t have a clue as to how it should substantively respond to its impending electoral crisis. Meanwhile, John Boehner, fresh off his bold and forward looking effort to distort Barack Obama’s comments on Israel, bluntly suggests that the GOP should view yesterday’s Mississippi returns as a “wake-up call:”
I don’t mean to kick my party while it’s going down, but the proper time to “wake-up” would have been after the 2006 midterms. Actually, waking up well before the 2006 elections would have been better still, but I’m an easy grader. Even after the 2006 wipeout, the party opted to practice business as usual, returning to leadership positions the same people who had authored the midterm disaster. The concept of bringing in a fresh face with fresh ideas manifested itself in restoring Trent Lott to a leadership role. Shockingly, the Lott Restoration failed to arrest the GOP’s decline. Maybe if he had stuck around instead of going to K Street…well, we can dream, can’t we? Boehner’s statement also shows the GOP does not intend to be outgunned in the vapid rhetoric department this fall. But is this wise? If we’re going to rely on vapid rhetoric, isn’t that playing on Barack Obama’s home court? In case anyone from the McCain campaign is reading, I’ll let you in on a little secret – if the presidential election boils down to who’s the biggest agent of change, John McCain will not win. For GOP candidates up and down the ticket, blathering clichés about change won’t do any good. Neither will reactive messages like “Vote for us so we can stop the Democrats from raising your taxes.” Instead, successful Republican candidates will outline serious and persuasive visions for America’s economy and national security. Doing so won’t be enough to win some races in this particular cycle, but at least there will be a nobility of purpose to the enterprise, something that has been sadly lacking all too often in recent years.

