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United States News Title: GOP Will Win House and Senate Stanley Greenberg and James Carville claim that the Republican Party has peaked too soon. Incredibly, Greenberg says that when we look back on this, were going to say Massachusetts is when 1994 happened. Stans only claim to expertise in the 1994 elections, of course, is that hes the guy who blew it for the Democrats. Right after that, President Clinton fired both of the flawed consultants and never brought them back again. article-1135603-034A1057000005DC-377_468x286 Their latest pitch is that the highpoint of the GOP advance was the Scott Brown election and that, from here on, things will improve slightly for the Democrats. Once again, Carville and Greenberg are totally misreading the public mood. Each time the Republican activists battle, they become stronger. Their cyber and grass roots grow deeper. The negatives that attach to so-called moderate Democratic incumbents increase. And each time Obama, Reid and Pelosi defy public opinion and use their majorities to ram through unpopular legislation, frustration and anger rise. Were Obamas ambitions to slacken, perhaps a cooling-off might eventuate. But soon the socialist financial takeover bill will come on the agenda, followed by amnesty for illegal immigrants, cap-and-trade and card-check unionization. Each bill will trigger its own mobilization of public opposition and add to the swelling coalition of opposition to Obama and his radical agenda. And, all the while, the deficit will increase, interest rates will rise and unemployment will remain high. Meanwhile, the political process will generate more and more strong Republican challengers. We have yet to see if former Gov. Tommy Thompson of Wisconsin or Dino Rossi of Washington state will emerge to challenge Sens. Russ Feingold (D-Wis.) and Patty Murray (D-Wash.). Better House candidates will decide to capitalize on the momentum and will jump into the race and Republican donors will come out of hiding, their efforts catalyzed by the growing optimism about GOP chances. Presaging the looming Republican sweep is the shift in the party ratings on various issues. Rasmussen has the Republicans ahead by 49-37 on the economy and 53-37 on healthcare. His likely-voter poll shows GOP leads on every major issue area: national security (49-37), Iraq (47-39), education (43-30), immigration (47-34), Social Security (48-36) and taxes (52-34). When Republicans are winning issues like education, healthcare and Social Security normally solidly Democratic issues a sweep of unimaginable proportions is in the offing. Will the rise in economic growth and job creation if they continue offset the Republican gains? Not very likely. Remember Bill Clintons 1994 experience. Even though the recession had officially ended in the quarter before he took office and he proudly pointed to the 5 million new jobs that had been created during the first two years of his presidency, Clinton got no bounce from the jobs issue or the economy. Even in the election of 1996, the economy was only marginally a source of strength for the Democratic president. It wasnt until impeachment that the job growth that had been ongoing since he took office began to work heavily in his favor with the public. The hangover from a recession, and certainly from one as violent as this, lasts a long time. A very long time. And all this assumes that things will, indeed, improve. Worries about inflation loom large and concerns that higher taxes and interest rates will trigger a new downturn also abound. As long as the deficit is as high as it is, there is no solid foundation for a sustained period of economic growth. Finally, Obama is now responsible for healthcare in America. When premiums rise, it will be his fault. When coverage is denied, it will be on his watch. When Medicare cuts kick in, it will be Obama who gets the blame. Carvilles last book touted 40 more years of Democrats. Now he dreams of a loss of only 25 seats in the House and six or seven senators. But these are pipe dreams. Republicans will gain more than 50 House seats and at least 10 in the Senate, enough to take control in both chambers. Thats reality.
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#1. To: no gnu taxes (#0)
Pretty obvious, as things stand today.
my anti groupie can't get through life without me.
Be careful what you wish for. If they do win it all, they'll be demonized by Obama in 2012 as the reason the country is in a mess-just like Clinton did to the Republicans in 1996. Now if the Republicans are just shy of majorities, all the blame for the mess will fall on the Dems and Obama will most likely lose.
Goldi-Lox, War, Fred Mertz: Go back to liberty post where you belong.
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