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Reports

The New Majority

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Posted on Sep 14, 2007

By E.J. Dionne

WASHINGTON—As Virginia goes, so goes the Senate—and the nation?

    The decision of former Virginia Gov. Mark Warner to run for the seat of retiring Republican Sen. John Warner is more than just bad news for the GOP. It reflects fundamental shifts in the balance of political power in the country, the growing force and volatility of suburban voters, and the fact that the old red state-blue state maps are becoming obsolete.

    Republicans have never had much chance to recapture the Senate in 2008, but Mark Warner’s bid and the decision of Sen. Chuck Hagel, R-Neb., to step down combined this week to make the difficult almost impossible.

    If Bob Kerrey, Nebraska’s former Democratic senator, decides to go for Hagel’s seat, Republicans will have to defend two states they only recently regarded as bastions. And in Warner and Kerrey, Democrats would add two ideologically unpredictable voices.

    The Republicans are in danger of being pushed into a Southern redoubt. Their increasingly narrow regional and demographic base bears a remarkable resemblance to the old areas of Democratic strength during the Republican heyday after the Civil War.

    The GOP now controls both Senate seats in 17 states. Nine of these are in the South or border South, and four are in the inner West. (Three of the four states, Idaho, Wyoming and Utah, are about as solidly Republican as any in the country.) There are two states far outside the Republican comfort zone where the party holds both seats, Maine and New Hampshire. And in both, an incumbent faces a serious challenge from the Democrats next year.

    Democrats have both seats in 18 states, including two where independents vote with them. Eight are on the East Coast and four are in the Midwest. But over the last two elections, they have begun an advance into what had been Republican territory, picking up Senate seats in Virginia, Montana, Ohio and Colorado. The map of the U.S. Senate is increasingly divergent from the patterns of those red-blue maps in President Bush’s two elections.

    But trends within the states are as important as national geography. Outside the Deep South, Democrats are on the verge of becoming the dominant party in the suburbs and are pushing into the exurbs. In Virginia, that offensive was central to the Democratic victories of Gov. Tim Kaine in 2005 and Sen. Jim Webb in 2006. But the implications go beyond a single state.

    Rep. Rahm Emanuel of Illinois, who headed the Democrats’ 2006 effort in the House elections, regularly reminds his colleagues that 16 of the 31 Democratic pickups were in suburban or exurban areas. He has been talking about a new “suburban populism” or “metropolitan populism” that he characterizes as “a revolt of the center.” The suburbs are changing demographically as more nonwhites move in, and many suburban voters are turned off by the ideological politics of the right, particularly the Christian Right.

    One politician who shares Emanuel’s suburban obsession is Rep. Tom Davis. He happens to be one of the Republicans expected to seek John Warner’s seat in Virginia.

    The former chairman of the Fairfax County Board of Supervisors in the suburbs outside of Washington, Davis has watched closely as the four big suburban and exurban counties in northern Virginia have drifted toward the Democrats. Davis—he is, with Emanuel, one of the House’s shrewdest electoral tacticians—warned his Republican colleagues before last year’s election that they faced a revolt among suburban moderates. He was right.

    Yet at the very moment when Republicans need unity against Mark Warner, Davis could face an ideological showdown against former Gov. Jim Gilmore or, possibly, former Sen. George Allen, who narrowly lost to Webb last year. Both Gilmore and Allen are down-the-line social conservatives. This would give them an advantage in an internal party fight, but limit their general election appeal in the suburbs.

    The outcome will determine whether Virginia Republicans define themselves as conservatives oriented toward the Deep South, or as middle-state moderate conservatives comfortable with the rise of suburban politics.

    Mark Warner, who combines popularity in the suburbs with unusual strength in rural areas, clearly had his own version of Emanuel’s “revolt of the center” in mind when he announced his candidacy in a Web broadcast on Thursday. He spoke of voters who were “sick to death of the bickering” in Washington and promised a “practical problem-solving approach” and “a bipartisan approach of change.”

    Safe, soothing, and very suburban: These could be the characteristics of the new American majority. For now, Democrats have the better understanding of its rhythms.   

    E.J. Dionne’s e-mail address is postchat(at)aol.com.
   
    © 2007, Washington Post Writers Group

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By Conservative Yankee, September 26, 2007 at 3:38 am #
(Unregistered commenter)

102657 by driving bear on 9/25 at 10:25 pm


“...so to sum up the 08 election is up for grabs.”

You are so right, and if the idiot D party runs Hill-the-business-shill I’ll vote R, even though I hate their war and the attendent corruption.

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By driving bear, September 25, 2007 at 10:25 pm #

A few quick thought the 08 elections

1. the elections are 13+ months in the future, which is an eternity in politics.

2 The dems have one huge problem to overcome they were elected in 06 on an anti war platform and so far have caved to bush on the war and everything else
this will be a big problem for the dems in 08

3 If the GOP gets their act together we could see them keeping the white house and possibly regaining control of the senate and possibly the house

4 the GOP is in the process of kicking bush to the curb

5. voter anger is directed more at bush and not so much at the GOP.

6. bush’s approval rating is in the high 20 low 30 %
congress’s which is controlled by the dems is at 11%

so to sum up the 08 election is up for grabs.

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By farmertx, September 16, 2007 at 12:30 pm #

Boggs
Voter apathy is a huge problem.
I often thought that it should be a law that folks had to vote.
But then again, I look at some of those non voter’s and I’m grateful that they don’t vote.
Too many non voter’s just don’t care because politics has become a game based on money and lies.
Spend a lot of money and tell the best lies and bingo, you are elected.
Assuming we get past the Shrubs’ term of office without martial law being declared, his administration just might be the one thing that wakes some people up to the fact that if you don’t pay attention and vote, bad things can and will happen.
Right now, that is my only consolation for his being there.

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By jumpy, September 15, 2007 at 8:47 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

You guys talking about the rampant voter fraud are talking about the right issue, but you’re kind of on the wrong track.

The paperless machines are bad, yes.  But what does the real damage, what really stole the past two elections from Gore and Kerry were the legitimate voters kept from voting at all.  Caging lists.  Felon lists.  Hours-long lines to wait in just to vote in poor neighborhoods.

Read Greg Palast, he lays it out as clear as it can get:

http://www.crooksandliars.com/2007/09/13/armed-madh ouse-dont-become-a-victim-of-voter-fraud-in-2008/#more-2085 2

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By boggs, September 14, 2007 at 5:37 pm #

FARMERTX, hey, we all know that it took the Supreme Court and Diebold to put Bush in the Whitehouse. How else could a drunk driver, coke snorter, and Texas Guard deserter, ever be elevated to a position so high as Commander in Chief?

Now we find that his best friend, Hunt from Texas, Hunt oil, has gained a contract for oil exploration in N. Iraq for the Kurds.

See guys, it really was american blood for Bushie oil.

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By Conservative Yankee, September 14, 2007 at 4:58 am #
(Unregistered commenter)

“There are two states far outside the Republican comfort zone where the party holds both seats, Maine and New Hampshire. And in both, an incumbent faces a serious challenge from the Democrats next year.”

Every poll I have seen within my state of Maine shows Collins winning in a walk…. One reason for this is that Tom Allen is more ideologically rightist than is Susan Collins.

Kerry and Mark Warner probably will not do much for a “leftist majority” either.  I remember when the D’s had a majority during the Vietnam War with Names like   Lister Hill (D Ala)John Sparkma (D. Ala) Ross Bass (D. Tenn) James O. Eastland (D. Miss) George A. Smathers (D Fla) and Herman Eugene Talmadge(D Ga) among others.  In those days The Democratic party represented racism, “Good-ole-boy justice” and unparalleled corruption.  In those days George Wallace was a Democrat, Lester Maddox was a Democrat, and Bull Connor was a Democrat.

Party labels do not make a “citizens majority” and increasingly US citizens are not identified by party. Maine, Vermont, and New Hampshire are now majority “independent” I suspect other states are as well.

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By Inherit The Wind, September 14, 2007 at 4:16 am #
(Unregistered commenter)

Hello, EJ!

You live in Washington and you are JUST figuring this out?  It was suburban Virginia that elected the first Black governor, Douglas Wilder, back in the ‘80’s.  It was suburban Virginia that held its nose and re-elected Chuck Robb when the whackos, led by Jerry Fallwell, et al, put up Oliver North against him, a man SO bad John Warner stood on principle and said this guy is a convicted felon, whose conviction was overturned on procedure, not because he didn’t do the crimes.

Plus, sooner or later, the 20% in the middle come to their senses, and they have. The GOP has gerry-mandered brilliantly—the Democratic senators represent over 65% of all American, and over 60% in the House, yet slim majorities remain due to the districting—like DeLay’s brilliant, corrupt and totally unConstitutional grabbing of 5 seats in Texas. Naturally, the tame USSC upheld it.

But taking apart the total corruption that the GOP has spread through government since 1994 requires time and hard work, seat by seat.  ACORN has the right idea: In many GOP-held districts (like mine) there are vast numbers of eligible voters (here, they are Hispanic) who, if registered, would EASILY turn out the Re-thuglicans.  In my district the 2:1 majority the GOP congressman has would be reversed OVERNIGHT—and he’s be able to retire.

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By farmertx, September 14, 2007 at 2:37 am #

This assumers that the 80+% that is dissatisfied with Congress won’t express that dissatifaction by voting for an independent candidate.
The Democratic Party has a long row to hoe in convincing voter’s that they will benefit from a Democratic Administration.
I’ll grant you that even Hillary would be better than Shrub.
In fact, most of us know that Al Gore out polled the Shrub, just not in the ‘right’ states. That was before the magic voting machines appeared and was in fact the reason that they appeared.
Shrub couldn’t take another chance on an honest election, Electoral College or not.

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