The BlogMorning Jay: Gallup's Bouncing Ball, "Wasted" GOP Votes, Jindal, Daniels, and more ...6:30 AM, Sep 8, 2010
• By JAY COST
3. Is 218 enough? Woe betide the party that "wins" a House "majority" of 218 votes, just enough to control the lower chamber. If the best thing in the world is power without responsibility, the worst thing is responsibility without power. That's exactly what a 218-217 majority is. Responsibility without power. And yet the Democrats say that is "all that matters." From Roll Call:
This is either spin or insanity. A Democratic majority of one vote would surely make a representative like Gene Taylor, Walt Minnick, or Bobby Bright the pivotal member. These three conservative Democrats have consistently voted against the Pelosi agenda. Imagine how peculiar a 218-217 Democratic majority would be: liberal committee chairmen like Henry Waxman would have to draft bills that could win over conservatives like Gene Taylor. Easier said than done! If the Democrats have a 218-217 majority, the chamber will effectively be deadlocked, yet Democrats would still take all the responsibility, as they would be "in charge." 4. How Wilsonian of you! Smart political observers in 1911 could tell very early that Woodrow Wilson, just elected the governor of New Jersey, had ambitions for the White House. Wilson had won the state's Democratic nomination in 1910 in large part because he had the backing of the party machine. And when James Smith, the machine boss, tried to get himself named to the vacant Senate seat from New Jersey, Wilson threw in against him. That was the kind of thing you had to do in 1911 if you wanted to be president -- you had to run against the machines. That's an instance of a general rule that says presidential contenders have to play beyond their party's narrower interests. Bill Clinton did something similar with his so-called "Sister Souljah Moment." Yesterday, I noticed two potential Republican candidates making those kinds of moves. First was Louisiana's governor Bobby Jindal:
Second was Indiana's governor Mitch Daniels:
Remember, even though we are in the midst of the 2010 midterm, the 2012 campaign is actually not very far off. In fact, Obama announced his exploratory committee in January, 2007. That would put us just 5 months away from similar declarations for 2012. 5. Rothenberg makes it 3 for 3. The three big race rankers are Charlie Cook, Larry Sabato, and Stuart Rothenberg. Both Cook and Sabato are already out suggesting the GOP will control the House. Yesterday, Rothenberg all but predicted the same. The Weekly Standard ArchivesBrowse 15 Years of the Weekly Standard
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