John Kerry is the "botched joke" of American politics. For
those of you keeping score at home, John Kerry has now called
members of the U.S. military (a) stupid, (b) crazy, (c)
murderers, (d) rapists, (e) terrorizers of Iraqi women and
children. I wonder what he'll call them tomorrow. Whatever Karl
Rove is paying John Kerry to say stupid things, it's worth every
penny.
Now, back to the midterm elections ...
Analysts place the average midterm loss for the party in the
White House at around 15 to 44 seats, depending on which
elections are counted -- only elected presidents, midterm
elections since the Civil War, midterm elections since World War
II, comparable-sized congresses, first and second midterm
elections and so on.
The average first midterm election loss for every elected
president since 1914 is 27 House seats and three Senate seats.
The average sixth-year midterm election, like this year, is much
worse for the president's party, which typically loses 34 seats
in the House and six seats in the Senate.
This makes the average loss in two midterm elections for the
party in the White House: 30 House seats and four or five Senate
seats in each midterm election.
In his first midterm election, George W. Bush picked up six
House seats and two Senate seats -- making him, according to The
New York Times, "the first Republican president to gain House
seats in an off-year election" and only the third president of
either party to pick up House seats in a midterm election since
the Civil War.
This means that for Democrats simply to match the historical
average gain for the party out of the White House during the
first and second midterm, they would have to pick up 67 seats in
the House and 11 seats in the Senate. They're about 30 Mark
Foleys short of having that happen.
It at least seems clear that Democrat gains this year are
going to fall far short of the historical average. No poll has
the Democrats winning even half of their rightful midterm
gains.
Despite the precedent of big wins in midterm elections for the
party out of power -- especially in a sixth-year midterm election
-- something is depressing the Democrats' popularity with
Americans this year. I suspect it's the perception that many of
them are Democrats.
But instead of recognizing that the Democratic Party is a
dying party, falling far short of its due historical gains, any
gain by the Democrats will be hailed as a crowning mandate for
the party that wants to lose the Iraq war, shut down Guantanamo
and stop spying on Islamic terrorists on U.S. soil.
Even a dying party has death throes. If Democrats win a slight
majority in the House or Senate, Americans will get shrill,
insane leadership of the nation in time of war. Continued... |