hrothgar, on Nov 8 2006, 03:31 PM, said:
keylime, on Nov 8 2006, 05:49 AM, said:
Mike, where's that blue wave they were hyping up in the media?
All I see is a very calm ripple instead.
What would look like a wave to you?
The Democratic Party has taken control of the House. The have picked up a minimum of four seats in the Senate. The last two seats are too close to call, however, there is a very real chance that the Republicans are going to lose in both Virginia and Montana. (As of 2:00 AM, Allen was down by 8,000 seats in Virginia. Tester is ahead by 2,000 votes in Montana)
This isn't the victory that I dreamed of. Lieberman winning re-election really soured the night for me. More significant, I'm have mixed feelings whether a pro-life, anti-gay rights "Democrat" is really all that much of an improvement over a moderate Republican. From what I can tell, this election boiled down to over-sight on the White House rather than any real political realignment. However, I consider that over-sight absolutely essential. Also, capturing the Governorship in Ohio is going to be very significant for the 2008 election cycle.
Finally, I hope that the extremely poor showing by the electronic voting machines demonstrates that a we need to invest some significant resources in overhauling this part of our electoral system.
It is certainly a blue wave, but is it a victory? If it is a victory, a victory for what (as opposed to a victory for whom)?
In a political climate where
- McCain is considered a moderate,
- liberals have to hope Harold Ford wins a senate seat,
- "liberals" can be used as a pejorative term, but there is no similar term for conservatives, despite 6 years of the country being run by a bunch of ideologically guided Neocons whose perception of reality has been remarkably decoupled from reality several times,
- pretty much any leading Democrat is careful not to out himself as supporting gay rights too much,
- the GOP is still confident (probably correctly so) that adding an anti-gay marriage referendum to a ballot will increase the turnout in their favor,
- Democrats can't stand up against going to a misguided war in the first place, can only do hindsight-criticism of the way a war was handled,
- an outraging law circumventing the Geneva convention is called a "compromise", because "moderates" stood up against it, only because the president started with an even more radical position,
- etc.,
I sort of agree with keylime: this seems more like an exchange of red vs blue than a reversal of the process in the last decade or so of America becoming more conservative.
The easiest way to count losers is to line up the people who talk about loser count, and count them. -Kieran Dyke