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OPINION

Congressional GOPers Will Drown in Dems Election Tsunami

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
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WASHINGTON -- Democratic majorities in Congress will become a lot bigger in January, as Americans are expected to vote based on their economic fears and frustrations on Nov. 4.

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In a turbulent election that is shaping up to be the political equivalent of a tidal wave, campaign forecasters now say that as many as eight or nine Republican Senate seats will fall to the Democrats -- possibly 10 -- which would give them a filibuster-proof, iron grip on the chamber.

"Voters are blaming the nation's financial crisis on Republicans, causing the (GOP's) candidates' poll numbers to sink noticeably," elections tracker Stuart Rothenberg said last week. "We are raising our current estimate from five-to-eight seats to six-to-nine seats."

Other election analysts are similarly forecasting that a large number of Republicans are going to be washed overboard by a perfect storm driven by a deepening recession, an unpopular president and the belief by 90 percent of the voters that the country is seriously on the wrong track.

Open GOP seats in New Mexico and Virginia are likely takeovers, with five more seats leaning toward a flip -- including Sens. Elizabeth Dole in North Carolina, Gordon Smith in Oregon, Ted Stevens in Alaska, John Sununu in New Hampshire and an open seat in Colorado.

Minnesota Sen. Norm Coleman is a tossup at best in a three-way race that includes former "Saturday Night Live" comedian Al Franken, a dilettante who would be a pushover in any other environment. But even Georgia Sen. Saxby Chambliss and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky are now threatened, and just a few weeks ago both lived in the "safe" column.

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The only Democrat in any trouble is two-term Sen. Mary Landrieu of Louisiana. She has won her two previous races narrowly (52 percent in 2002) and leads in recent polls, but she is clearly vulnerable to an upset from GOP state Treasurer John Kennedy.

When word circulated through Washington last week that Mitch McConnell, seeking a fifth term, was in a tighter-than-expected re-election fight against wealthy businessman Bruce Lunsford, GOP officials knew their party was in deeper trouble than they had expected.

In many races, the banking bailout plan approved by Congress is hurting incumbents who voted for it, and McConnell is being attacked in TV ads by the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee for backing deregulation of the financial services industry.

"McConnell opened the gate and Wall Street ran wild. Now our entire economy is at risk," the ads says. Never mind that a Senate bill to tighten regulatory oversight of the housing mortgage industry, which McConnell supported, was killed by Democrats who said the bill would undermine "affordable housing," i.e. subprime mortgages.

New York Sen. Charles Schumer, who chairs the DSCC, voted with McConnell and most Democrats for the $700 billion bailout bill, but this is war, he says, and if he can knock off a Republican on this issue, well, that's the way the system works, he tells reporters.

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Is Mitch really endangered? "Yes, but the odds are in his favor," said veteran Senate analyst Jennifer Duffy of the Cook Political Report. "He's running a better campaign and has a pretty damaged opponent, but in this environment anything can happen and it's not going to be a big win."

The trouble-plagued economy is the political killer in this campaign cycle. A recession looms, the stock market has tanked, worker 401(k) mutual funds have plunged, consumers aren't spending and it will take months before the economic rescue plan shows real results at the street level.

"The economy is the problem. A Democratic pollster told me the voters' fear is real, it's not amorphous like after the 9/11 attacks. They're looking at their 401(k) plans and seeing they don't have much money left," Duffy told me.

"Every day the stock market drops, Republicans have a terrible night when they conduct their tracking polls," she said.

The House is also shaping up to be a Republican bloodbath. Last month, the GOP was looking at a dozen or so losses. Now its field looks like a devastated war zone in the making. Rothenberg is predicting the GOP's 199-seat caucus could lose up to 30 seats, shrinking its ranks into the 160s.

But it isn't just a major recession and Wall Street's turmoil that is driving the Democratic gains in Congress. It is also John McCain's weakness in some usually dependable red states that Republicans now appear to be losing to Barack Obama.

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It isn't a coincidence that many of the states where the Democrats are now leading in House and Senate races are the states where Obama has the edge: New Mexico, Colorado, Virginia, New Hampshire, Oregon and, possibly, North Carolina.

It's going to take the GOP a long time to recover from this election, but the history of elections suggests that the Republicans will bounce back in the future as defeated political parties always do.

Winston Churchill, who knew something about comebacks, said that in war you can be killed only once, but in politics you can be killed many times.

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