All the evidence pointing to monster Republican House gains this fallthe Scott Brown upset win in Massachusetts, the scary polling numbers in once-safely Democratic districts, the ever-rising number of Democratic seats thought to be in jeopardywas contradicted Tuesday. In the only House race that really mattered to both partiesthe special election to replace the late Democratic Rep. John Murtha in Pennsylvanias 12th DistrictRepublicans failed spectacularly, losing on a level playing field where, in this favorable environment, they should have run roughshod over the opposition.
Given the resources the GOP poured into the effort to capture the seat and the decisiveness of the defeatas it turned out, it wasnt really that closethe outcome casts serious doubt on the idea that the Democratic House majority is in jeopardy and offers comfort to a Democratic Party that is desperately in search of a glimmer of hope.
The district itself couldnt have been more primed for a Republican victory. According to one recent poll, President Barack Obamas approval rating in the 12th was a dismal 35 percent, compared to 55 percent who disapproved. His health care plan was equally unpopularjust 30 percent of those polled supported it, while 58 percent were in opposition.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi was even more disliked in the blue-collar, western Pennsylvania-based seat: Just 23 percent viewed her favorably, compared to 63 percent who viewed her unfavorably.
Still, Democrat Mark Critz managed to pull off an eight-point victory, 53 percent to 45 percent, over Republican Tim Burns in a district that John McCain narrowly won in 2008the only one in the nation that voted for John Kerry in 2004 and McCain four years later.
The race marked the third highly-contested, fair-fight special House election that the GOP has dropped in the last year.
The seat Murtha held for 36 years is precisely the sort of Rust Belt districteconomically populist and culturally traditionalthat Republicans must win to claim the 40 seats necessary to take back the House.
Yet the way Critz and the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee won the contest offered a reminder that the prospect of a GOP majority remains a mirage. And Tuesdays result has Democrats breathing a sigh of relief, thinking theyve found a formula to mitigate their losses in what will still be a difficult election season.
The playbook from the Pennsylvania special election isnt complicated: Make the election a choice between two local candidates and not a national referendum on the Democratic Party or the state of the nation; savage the Republican from the outset and dont let up; keep the focus on jobs and core economic issues; most important, separate yourself from your national partys policies and politicians as necessary.
The lesson will be define the choice very early, said DCCC Chair Chris Van Hollen in an interview. This is not a referendum on how you feel about the general direction of the country, its a choice about how we move forward. And you have to define the differences on key policy issues.
In the case of Critz, that meant hammering Burns as being in favor of outsourcing jobs overseas and highlighting his willingness to cut Social Security benefits significant liabilities in an economically- beleaguered and aging congressional district.
Meanwhile, Critz, a longtime Murtha aide, talked up what he had done on behalf of the district and pledged to continue in his former bosss tradition of bringing home federal dollars to the region.
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