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United States News Title: Tea Party Costs GOP Senate as Sarah Palin’s Endorsements Fail All the vote counting is Colorado and Washington State is not done yet but one thing is already clear. The push of Tea Party candidates who were not vetted and clearly not ready for prime time, largely thanks to critical endorsements by Sarah Palin, has cost GOP control of the Senate in 2010. Below is a scorecard race by race. Im scoring these contests on two levels, one a strict measure of Senate seats lost or gained, and the other a measure of just how conservative these candidates are compared with the alternate GOP candidate who would have otherwise been nominated. Call this latter measure conservative points. Delaware Christine ODonnell is the most obvious Tea Party failure but that is only the beginning of the Tea Partys Senate disaster in 2010. Turns out that Karl Rove was right. We all know popular GOP governor Mike Castle was a dead cinch lock the Senate. His huge popularity in the state would have carried him to an easy victory in the general election. Yes, he was not a great candidate for talk show conservatives, but as Reagan said you gotta win baby. He would have voted the conservative line perhaps 70% of the time in the Senate. The winner and former Marxist Coons becomes now the most liberal member of the U.S. Senate who will vote with conservatives approximately 0% of the time. So from a conservative perspective, the Tea Party cost conservatives -0.7 conservative points in Delaware. From a Republican perspective, the disaster results in -1 Senate seat. Nevada Harry Reid wins re-election, an outcome considered unfathomable over the summer. Democrat brass at the time were ready to pull the rug out from under him suggesting he should pull out of the race. That bit of electioneering presumed Sue Lowden was the GOP nominee as expected. Alas, we got stuck with Sharron Angle, an incredible money drain that might have benefited better candidates in other states, and a ridiculous loss to an otherwise unelectable incumbent Harry Reid with a 30% approval rating. From a conservative perspective, Reid votes with us only 10% of the time while Lowden could be expected to vote with us 80% of the time, a net loss of -0.7 conservative points in Nevada. From a Republican perspective, this Tea Party disaster results in -1 Senate seat. Florida A bright spot for conservatives to be sure, but not a GOP gain. In a sane election cycle Crist would have won the nomination and the Senate seat and voted with conservatives about 70% of the time. And poor Charlie wouldnt have melted into a mushy doggie doo of a candidate and nobody would have known better. Rubio will vote the conservative line 90% of the time. The Tea Party gets a 0.2 conservative points here, and Republicans get a net 0 Senate seats, a small plus but practically a wash. Colorado Jane Norton would have won the Senate seat that Buck is having to struggle for and been a rising female star in the national GOP picture. If Buck loses, we get Bennett back who was another lost cause for Democrats as of this summer. Bennett votes with conservatives about 30% of the time. We might expect Buck to vote with conservatives about 90% of the time, while Norton would be with us 70% of the time. So a Bennett victory means the Tea Party loses us 0.4 conservative points while a Buck victory gains conservatives 0.6 conservative points. Thats a small net plus, but a Buck loss is one Senate seat the GOP should have won. Kentucky Rand Paul is my candidate. I love Rand Paul but dont kid myself about his negligent impact in the political sphere. Grayson would have won this seat a little more easily. Rand Paul is my kind of libertarian conservative but probably not everyones. His victory is a net 0 for the GOP and a net plus for fiscal conservatives and probably a net minus (compared with Grayson) for social conservatives. Lets call him charitably +0.2 conservative points and +0 Senate points. Pennsylvania Toomeys victory, along with Rubios in Florida, are the most resounding Tea Party achievements on the election. Oh the long storied history of Arlen Specters demise is not for this article, suffice to say Im glad to see him go. Still, he voted the conservative line about 50% after he got driven by conservatives to the dark side. We might expect Toomey to vote conservative 80% of the time, and we also can expect him like good old Rick Santorum to be a one term Senator. Winning by 1% in a huge Republican wave is not very impressive for Toomeys future prospects in the state. Score this a pickup of 0.3 conservative points and 1 Senate seats. Washington Dino Rossi is probably the unluckiest politician alive, having lost two extraordinarily narrow elections previously and possibly a 3rd in 2010. He isnt a Tea Party candidate as he wins his partys nomination regardless. But the hidden story out west is that nominees like ODonnell and Angle cast an appalling shadow on the local elections. It allowed the Democrats to paint a story that GOP extremism needed to be stopped, and I believe that story gave Murray the 1% she needs to get over the top. She may lose in the final vote count but I doubt it. If she does win by less than 1%, hang this one not on Rossi who is a good candidate, but lousy Tea Party candidates elsewhere who tainted his prospects. Alaska Whether Joe Miller or Lisa Murkowski, this is net no change either way for the GOP. And because it looks like Murkowski will win when the write-in votes are counted, this whole exercise was a waste of time. Net 0 conservative points and thanks for sucking the oxygen out of the room. So in the final analysis, I cannot identify a single Senate race that the GOP won because of the Tea Party except PA depending on how you score it retrospectively, but we can identify some they clearly lost. No question Nevada would be in the GOP column as would Delaware. That is +2 Senate seats the GOP should have won. And if either Buck (Colorado) or Rossi (Washington State) lose their close contests, at least one of which is probable, those are the 3rd and possibly 4th Senate seat that the Tea Party cost the GOP. That is Senate control tinkled away, and a ton of money down the drain in the process. Meanwhile we have a net loss of conservative points from Tea Party machinations, meaning that the Senate in total will be less conservative because of Tea Party involvement (and Sarah Palin endorsements) than it would have been without. And this story of the 2010 election is too bad because I like the Tea Party movement. Your thoughts?
Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 4.
#4. To: go65 (#0)
I've seen this in several places: " What is less heartening, of course, is the fact that the American electorate never quite grasps the obvious, glaring, brutal fact that neither of these factions is ever going to change the system one iota if they can help it; they are the system, they are its servants, its enablers, its enactors. Then again, we are dealing with, to borrow Gore Vidals deathless phrase, the United States of Amnesia, where history doesnt exist (except in the form of feverishly distorted self-righteous myths about Americas eternal super-duper specialness), and every election is a tabula rasa . The only flickering historical awareness that seems to exist in the American electorate is a vague sense that the gang they voted in two years ago hasnt changed anything; better try the other gang again
forgetting this is the same gang they threw out the time four years ago, for the same reason." -chris floyd Let's see if the Reps want to get into Foreclosure Fraud. 8D
#6. To: mcgowanjm (#4)
Sad, but true.
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