Is this a "wave" election?

Most of the political commentary I read makes it seem like the Democratic Party is on the brink of a huge swing of fortune in their favor.  They call it a “wave” election, like 1994, when the party in power is swept away by a “wave” of voter discontent.

I’ve argued that the GOP has “gamed” the system to prevent just such a thing.

I believe I see the effects of the gaming of the system coming into play that will prevent this from being a “wave” election.

The “countercurrents”, to extend the metaphor, are GOP money, incumbency, gerrymandering, GOP get out the vote superiority, and technical rigging of the balloting.

For most of us, a New Jersey high court ruling that the state’s marriage laws that give hetero couples certain financial and government services advantages over homosexual couples violates constitutional equal protection notions doesn’t seem like a big deal.  It is a big deal, however, to a small part of the GOP evangelical base that hates the idea of “gay marriage.”

Whatever your opinion may be on gay marriage, GOP turnout specialists are using that ruling to microtarget with mailings and phone calls that splinter of the religious right and especially in New York, Pennsylvania and New Jersey.  The thinking is that the mailings and calls will increase GOP turnout in those three states.

So?  Well, the Dems, hoping to take the House, are in dogfights in upper New York state in three races and three House races in Pennsylvania and in the U.S. Senate race in New Jersey.  The mailings and phone calls fly “under the radar” of polls and the televised media.  The fact that they are un-reported or under reported doesn’t change the dynamics of the election towards the GOP.

The polls themselves are also showing some late campaign turnarounds for the GOP in places like Maryland, where the U.S. Sen. candidate Ben Cardin had been in a comfortable lead, but is now within the margin of error against his black GOP rival, Michael Steele.  Same for House races in places like Fla.-16 and New York 24.  For several weeks, top GOP leader Reynolds, caught up in the Foley scandal for not taking more action to protect pages, has been trailing by 5 or more points, but the last two polls shows him leading 4-5 points.   For months, all the movement in the polls has been from more Republican to less Republican to Toss Up to Leans Democrat.  Now, we’re seeing movement in a very few places in the other direction.

News stories that are too technical for most people to pay attention or understand are also showing up indicating that vote rigging is also in place to help the GOP.  GOP Secretaries of State like Ted Strickland (oops. Ken Blackwell, who’s running AGAINST Ted Strickland.  Thanks to alert new registered reader Aberrant Equation.)  in Ohio in ’04 and katherine Harris in Fla. are taking their marching orders seriously and there are already complaints that urban (Democratic) precincts will have too few voting machines and GOP exurban precincts too many.  New laws requiring voters to show voter IDs and proof of citizenship, etc., are being put into place for rigorous enforcement against blacks and Hispanics, which will mean long lines and long delays in Dem leaning areas.

In case you’re not reading between the lines, there are several current stories in the newspapers about campaign ads crossing the line of decency, civility and even the truth.  GOP ads are getting complaints in Tenn., where Corker is playing the race card against Ford in that Senate race, for example.  The GOP has put $100 million — a staggering sum — into attack ads for the last three weeks of the campaign.  One of them has only a ticking clock behind images of Islamic Jihadists threatening to bring terrorism to America and a tag  line over a fiery explosion at the end that says:  “These are the stakes.  Vote Republican.”  It’s an updated version of LBJ’s “daisy” ad of 1964.  It works.

And, lest we forget, gerrymandering also plays a role.  In 1994, when the GOP swept both houses of Congress, there were more than 100 seats “at play” and they “flipped” 54.  This year, there are only 58 seats at play due to gerrymandering.  Even among the seats that are “open”, the odds are against the Dems.  You would think that the seats left open by the resignations of Rep. Foley and Tom DeLay would be natural Democratic Party wins.  The GOP has a write in candidate in Texas and the Republican in Florida has to get past the Foley name on the ballot.  However, those districts are SO Republican, it’s still a tooth and nail fight.

So, I’m sticking by my guns.  The Democratic Party will pick up the 15 they need to take control of the House, but it’ll be a razor thin majority.  My first predictions were that the Dems would only pick up 13-14, so I’ve become more optimistic over the summer.  Democrats will have four more Senators, but not six, and the GOP will keep the Senate. 

 

One thought on “Is this a "wave" election?

  1. AberrantEquation

    Rant all you want- but get your facts straight: Ted Strickland is a 6 term DEMOCRATIC congressman from Ohio’s 6th District.

    Ken Blackwell is the corrupt, vote-stealing Republican Sec. of State.

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