Melancholy
Americans are shrugging a collective shoulder about Republicans
retaking the majority in the House, a striking contrast from 1994 and
2006, when large majorities were "happy" the chamber changed hands.
People are also pessimistic about the likelihood of bipartisanship and
skeptical about GOP plans for the country.
According to a new
poll from Pew, just 48 percent of Americans are "happy" about the GOP's
congressional success, while 34 percent are "unhappy." In 1994, the
split was 60 percent happy and 24 percent unhappy about Republican
gains; in 2006, feelings on the Democrats' success ran 57 percent happy
31 percent unhappy. Only 22 percent think bipartisanship is now more
likely. Just 41 percent approve of Republican policies, and 37 percent
disapprove (in 2006, people approved of Democratic plans 50 percent to
21 percent). The Washington Post's
Chris Cillizza
looks at the dreary data and writes, "The Republicans' victory then is
best understood as a rejection of Democratic policies by voters rather
than a warm embrace of the policies put forward by the GOP. The election
changed little in the overall outlook of most Americans who continue to
struggle in their relationship with government -- what it should do,
when and how much."
- Lame Duck Session Offers First Test, Gwen Ifill
writes at PBS. "Lawmakers - many of them still limping - will return to
Washington next week for an inordinately consequential lame duck
session. On the agenda: nuclear treaties, gays in the military, budget
resolutions and tax cuts. In other words, there will be plenty of
opportunities for the victors and the vanquished to ... put up or shut
up."
- It's Still About the Economy, Steve Benen
says at The Washington Monthly. "For two weeks, GOP leaders have been
claiming to speak for the country," Benen writes, with Republicans
claiming Americans want taxes cut and health care repealed. "Reality
check: the 'American people' think the economy stinks so they punished
the incumbent majority. Republicans made gains because they were the
alternative, not because they were right. We're talking about the first
time in recent memory in which an unpopular party was replaced with an
even more unpopular party. That should be a weight on GOP shoulders, not
a chip on GOP shoulders."
- GOP on a Short Leash, NBC News's Domenico Montanaro
writes. The polls numbers "could reflect what many of us heard on the
trail and is reflected in polling -- that few are satisfied with either
party. In the latest NBC/Wall Street Journal poll and the exit polls
across the country, both parties' fav/unfav ratings were upside down --
and Republicans were even worse than Democrats. The Tea Party has been
skeptical of the GOP establishmen, and it's a reason why
Speaker-in-Waiting Boehner has tried to bring them into the fold
creating two new leadership positions, largely tailored to the Tea
Party."
- Compromise Unlikely, Jack Stuef
writes. "They want you to compromise. But if you compromise, they’ll
think you’re a pussy. Hmm, which one of those sounds more pleasing to
Republican politicians?"
- Gap in Expectations, Greg Sargent
notices at the Washington Post. "Some interesting findings buried in
the new Pew poll suggest Republicans and Democrats have starkly
different expectations of their leaders: Republicans want their leaders
to be less moderate and less compromising, while Dems want precisely the
opposite." Sargent notices that 66 percent of Republicans want
lawmakers to "stand up to Obama," but 46 percent (the plurality) of
Democrats say the president should work with the GOP. "Maybe this just
reflects Dem demoralization in the wake of last week's shellacking. But
whatever the cause, GOP leaders know they have no reason to blink in the
coming showdowns."
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