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Home Front: Politix
GOP 'tsunami' predicted for exurbia, South, Mountain States
2010-02-19
Former Rep. Thomas M. Davis III, the architect of previous Republican campaign successes, says outer-suburban voters eager to place a check on President Obama and Democrats are swinging back to the GOP and will power a Republican resurgence in New England, while aiding GOP "tsunamis" in Virginia, Colorado and Iowa.
Just don't get over-confident. The Dem machine hasn't been dismantled.
Mr. Davis, the current president of the Republican Main Street Partnership, a group of the party's more moderate lawmakers, told reporters Wednesday that the GOP has had its best-ever year of recruiting candidates for congressional elections, which has helped put so many seats into play.

He said Democrats are having a tough time reaching a balance of keeping regular voters happy while also appeasing the liberal voters who surged to the polls in the 2008 election.

"Those are the problems Democrats have coming in. The surge voters right now, they're asleep. And the outer suburbs, the South, the mountain states, I think you can look for Republican tsunamis," Mr. Davis said. "You're going to have big years."

A sign of how bad Republican fortunes have been the past two elections is their ouster from New England, where the GOP no longer holds any House seats. But Mr. Davis said Republicans will capture seats there this year, including both New Hampshire districts.

On Wednesday, Mr. Davis' predecessor at the Main Street Partnership, former Rep. Charlie Bass, said he'll run to try to recapture the House seat from New Hampshire that he lost in 2006 to Rep. Paul W. Hodes. Mr. Hodes is vacating the seat to run for the Senate.

Mr. Bass, who must face a bruising primary, drew immediate fire from New Hampshire Democratic Party Chairman Ray Buckley, who said running a repeat candidate was bad news for Republicans.

"The last thing we need right now is to go back to the policies that Bass' record represents. Charlie's call for a U-turn to those failed policies shows how grossly out of touch he is with the need to move our country forward and get our economy back on track," Mr. Buckley said.

Democrats are eagerly watching primary battles such as the one Mr. Bass will fight with candidates born out of the "tea party" movement.

"The GOP civil war is alive and well and it's playing out in House races all over the country," said Ryan Rudominer, a spokesman for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee.
Posted by:Fred

#3  Why do I not believe that a huge majority of Republicans would be any better than a huge majority of Democraps?
It may appear to be more palatable on the surface, but their ideology would surely fail us if left unchecked also.
A new paradigm of political thought is needed here, or at least a major adjustment to all those asshats' thinking.
Posted by: bigjim-CA   2010-02-19 14:57  

#2  I think someone on the Republican side should try to insert a knife or two into Union Solidarity. Comments about Union connections to organized crime are not the American way. Comments about Union Representatives paid out of the check of the workers with a plan to continue agitating to ensure their own jobs and importants. Comments about how that strike fund (and strike) could have been part of everyones paychecks. How the union keeps the worst workers employed which holds the rest back, notably the teachers who have been unable to improve education despite ever increasing spending on education. That sort of thing...

Not everyone in a Union backs the Union or even thinks about it. Someone should start sewing the seeds of doubt so that the Union fold start to think and vote for themselves. Even if you peel off as mall number it would be worth it.

Yes Unions had their importance once. A few select industries might really need them still, but in more and more areas they are a hinderance.
Posted by: rjschwarz   2010-02-19 11:53  

#1  Might be interesting to keep an eye on Washington; our Democratic majority legislature, led by a Dem govonr; have overturned an initiatve that the citizens approved 3 times that requires a 2/3 majority vote to raise taxes. this AFTER the Gov campaigned on a no tax platform. lots of people are royally pissed, and the anti-dem mood might just spill over to the federal office holders.
stay tuned.
Posted by: USN, Ret.   2010-02-19 00:27  

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