[Mb-civic] Voter Anger Might Mean an Electoral Shift in '06 - Washington Post

William Swiggard swiggard at comcast.net
Sun Nov 6 07:14:51 PST 2005


Voter Anger Might Mean an Electoral Shift in '06
Public Voices Dissatisfaction Over Iraq War, Economy

By Dan Balz, Shailagh Murray and Peter Slevin
Washington Post Staff Writers
Sunday, November 6, 2005; Page A01

One year before the 2006 midterm elections, Republicans are facing the 
most adverse political conditions of the 11 years since they vaulted to 
power in Congress in 1994. Powerful currents of voter unrest -- 
including unhappiness over the war in Iraq and dissatisfaction with the 
leadership of President Bush -- have undermined confidence in government 
and are stirring fears among GOP candidates of a backlash.

Interviews with voters, politicians and strategists in four battleground 
states, supplemented by a new Washington Post-ABC News poll, found 
significant discontent with the performance of both political parties. 
Frustration has not reached the level that existed before the 1994 
earthquake, but many strategists say that if the public mood further 
darkens, Republican majorities in the House and Senate could be at risk.

One bright spot for the Republicans is the low regard in which many 
Americans hold the Democrats. The public sees the Democrats as 
disorganized, lacking in clear ideas or a positive alternative to the 
GOP agenda, and bereft of appealing leaders. In the Post-ABC News poll, 
voters gave Washington low grades without favor: Just 35 percent said 
they approved of the job Republicans in Congress were doing, while only 
41 percent gave a positive rating to the Democrats.

In shopping malls, town hall meetings and on front porches, Americans 
expressed their concerns about the country's problems. The president 
still has strong supporters, but more common are questions about his and 
the country's priorities. A young mother in the Denver suburbs 
complained about the state of public education. An Ohio retiree 
complained about energy prices and said, "We're getting ripped off left 
and right by the oil companies." Immigration appears to be a volatile 
issue far from the U.S.-Mexico border. And looming over all else is the 
U.S. involvement in Iraq, which continues to gnaw at the country's psyche.

Republican strategists and candidates are bracing for losses next year, 
while hoping that Bush's fortunes and the overall environment improve. 
They take some comfort in the expectation that the worst of times has 
come a year ahead of the elections, and relief in the fact that, by 
historical measures, the number of genuinely competitive contests is 
likely to be small.

But Republicans have expanded their majorities in Congress in each of 
the last two elections, and strategists expect, at a minimum, that 
Democrats will narrow those margins next year. A Democratic takeover of 
either the House or Senate is not out of the question.

Former House speaker Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.), the architect of the 1994 
GOP victory, said Republicans must take the initiative or risk serious 
losses next year. "If we regroup and reclaim the mantle of reform and 
change, we are likely to win '06 and '08," he said. "If we do not 
regroup, we are likely to have a very difficult '06 and '08."

Republicans believe that, given clear choices, voters will continue to 
favor candidates who preach, if not always practice, smaller government 
and who favor lower taxes and the vigorous pursuit of terrorists. But 
the Republican coalition is showing signs of fraying after almost 11 
years of nearly continuous majority status. Conservatives have rebelled 
against some of Bush's priorities, and moderates are voicing increasing 
disaffection with their leaders.

If next year's elections prove to be a referendum on the party in power, 
as is often the case in midterm contests, the image of the Democrats may 
be less important than the broader unrest in the country over Iraq, 
immigration, energy and health care prices and the president's popularity.

The findings in this report are based on interviews in Pennsylvania, 
Minnesota, Ohio and Colorado, as well as on a survey of 1,202 randomly 
selected adults nationwide contacted between Oct. 30 and Nov. 2. The 
margin of error for the poll is plus or minus three percentage points.

More Trust for Democrats

Two-thirds of those surveyed by The Post and ABC News said the country 
is heading in the wrong direction. Asked whom they were likely to 
support in next year's House elections, 52 percent of registered voters 
said the Democratic candidate, while 37 percent said the Republican. 
While this testing of generic preferences is not always a reliable 
indicator of elections, the result suggests that Republicans for now are 
in trouble.

Republicans may find solace in the fact that 60 percent of those 
surveyed approved of the job their own House member is doing -- but 
that, too, was the case one year before the 1994 election. Then the 
percentage declined throughout 1994; if the same happens next year, 
Republicans will be in serious trouble.

(continued)...
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/11/05/AR2005110501514.html?nav=hcmodule
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://www.islandlists.com/pipermail/mb-civic/attachments/20051106/81e3561b/attachment.htm


More information about the Mb-civic mailing list