Editor’s Pick
NOVEMBER 4, 2010 6:59AM

The GOP Won Big: Media Characterized it More Than It Was

Rate: 11 Flag

In the aftermath of the 2010 election and after digesting the analyses in print and TV, I can only conclude the media, in its zeal to keep our attention, has distorted the results.

Did Democrats lose significant ground by failing to control the House and by suffering a drop of at least six votes in the Senate? Absolutely. However, do they still control the Senate and its committee chairmanships that wield so much power? I think so. Is a Democratic president still in the White House? To the best of my knowledge.

2010-10-29-Election2010.jpg

Yet the media makes it appear all is lost, that the Tea Party is in control with Sarah Palin the supreme winner and 2012 king maker, because it keeps us glued to our seats either with excited delight or rabid fury by those reluctant to even consider such a consequence.

Now, the facts. The big news -- uncontestable -- is Nancy Pelosi will be forced to hand over the gavel of the House of Representatives to John Boehner. However, it was only occasionally alluded to on CNN and other major outlets that many of the Obama House wins in 2008 were from tight districts, meaning it doesn't take an enormous swing to get frightened and misled voters to turn to the opposing party.

Yes, there were exceptions, but many of the losing congressional Democrats elected in 2006 and 2008 were to the right of center and not enormously helpful to Obama. They and their conservative Democratic senate colleagues were wary of appearing too progressive, lest the Republican attack machine target them for voting for such "sickening" stuff as universal health care or for a stimulus package to undo the financial mess into which the Bush alignment with Wall Street had mired us.

Now, Obama is not entirely blameless, because he was so determined to make nice with the Republican leadership instead of gathering his significant Democratic troops and acting a little more like Lyndon Johnson. Simply put, the president hasn't been tough enough and lost the respect of so many who supported him and decided to sit this election out. So, I don't agree he should now smoke a peace pipe with the GOP. He should dare them to block his programs and, in so doing, come up with something better.

But beforehand, and during these next two months, still with a large congressional majority, he should get Pelosi and Senate Leader Harry Reid to ram through as much legislation as possible -- including an end to "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" and as much immigration and environmental reform as possible. What does he have to lose? The programs effected may actually work, and if the public is able to see results there could well be a significant turnaround in 2012.

Let the GOP leadership shout -- like the bullies they have been with their tantrum-like behavior the moment Obama took office. You know, when a bully is faced up to and given a punch in the stomach, he usually keels over. The Republicans are full of hot air. Sarah Palin, too. She tried to resurrect her reduced stature after she resigned as Alaska governor by hitching herself to the Tea Party movement.

She allowed them to do the spade work, fomenting groundless fears of what Obama was trying to accomplish. And as they organized candidates to run against mainstream Republicans in party primaries she supported a number of them who won the nomination. But let's look at the results.

Christine O'Donnell in Delaware lost. Sharron Angle in Nevada lost. The latter two in contests most prognosticators predicted would be easy victories for experienced GOP candidates. Carl Paladino in New York lost. Also, Carly Fiorina and Meg Whitman in California. Likewise Ken Buck in Colorado. And the topper, Palin's own candidate in home state Alaska, Joe Miller, who beat the incumbent senator Lisa Murkowski in the party primary has apparently lost -- and to a write-in campaign.

Yes, there were victories, but where? In conservative South Carolina and Kentucky? In Arkansas, where Blanche Lincoln was a Democrat in name only? In Florida? That's normally a Republican state, even though Obama had won in 2008, and in the gubernatorial race, the Democratic candidate Alex Sink lost by only 1%.

Only Russ Feingold's ousting was extraordinary and he was possibly hurt by his renegade status among Democrats, who were displeased when he sometimes voted against liberal legislation because it didn't go far enough. In fairness, the Illinois senate seat was turned around, but the GOP victor won by only two points and the Democratic governor was re-elected. Yes, Joe Sestak lost in Pennsylvania, but it was a seat long held by Arlen Specter, a Republican who only became a Democrat out of fear he'd lose the Republican primary.

The other turnarounds were due to retiring Democratic Senators in Indiana and North Dakota, not known as progressive states. Yes, Obama miraculously carried Indiana -- the first time a Democrat had done so since 1964, but 2008, with the war and economic tumult, made the results that year unusual.

So, is Palin so invincible, and, if not, why can't Anderson Cooper keep himself honest? He often accentuates things out of realistic proportion. And he's not the only one. Network news is all about drama and "what ifs." I'd really love it if NBC's Brian Williams, CBS' Katie Couric and ABC's Diane Sawyer told it like it really is. But instead they take a legitimate political turnaround and turn it into hysterical overdrive instead of sober analysis that explains politics is not nearly so scientific. That the electorate is fickle, and a large percentage will turn on a dime, because they vote viscerally without studying about the issues.

Indeed, the health care program many people deride and fear hasn't even been given a chance. But even so, the Tea Party zealots and GOP leadership have successfully convinced folks it's already reaped a nightmare, even though most of its components have not been put into play and may well surprise them in a positive manner when the day finally comes.

2012 is two years away and so much awaits. Who would have predicted Bill Clinton's come-back or that George H. W. Bush would be in trouble after he was riding high after the first Iraq invasion? So, Barack Obama may well profit from the same sort of happenstance -- deserved or possibly not so -- when a sadly uninformed electorate goes to the polls and votes in the short run based pretty much on only what's recently been happening or how they're feeling that particular day.

Michael Russnow's website is ramproductionsinternational.com

Your tags:

TIP:

Enter the amount, and click "Tip" to submit!
Recipient's email address:
Personal message (optional):

Your email address:

Comments

Type your comment below:
I liked the medias take on the election. They called it a tsunami, and earthquake and the red tide. All natural forces that leave behind death and destruction. What better way to describe the Republican agenda.
Yes, please let us see a President Obama who does not trade in conciliation and kindness. Republican leaders can't even keep their mouths shut in public about their desire to dance on his political grave. Ramming speed!
To survive, and to see a 2012 victory, the GOP will have to focus on Jobs, Jobs, Jobs. If they start piling on useless bills centered on gays and fetuses, their victory will be short lived. The Tea Party's core message was less spending, less taxes, less government intrusion. However, the xenophobic, homophobic nutjobs might be in for a big disappointment, almost as big as the Left got with Obama.

1 out of 10 Americans are still out of work. Our job is to still remind our government of that.
Definitely, you´re not from this planet.
I would love to see the Democratic majority congress try to cram through as much as possible before the turn-over. Especially no-brainer stuff like DADT. But I am not holding my breath.
Blue: That would require courage and will, which the Dems haven't had in a long while. At least this election flushed out some of the old Dems. Congress is so old! We need younger talent, even it they are GOP.
You mean to say the Corporate Media, with its mouthpieces, whores, and servants of multi-nationals, lied or exaggerated or distorted?!! NOOOOOOOOOOO!!! What a surprise!!
Pitiful - you people just took a "shellacking" to use your savior's own words. Yet you try to spin you own self condolences to feel better.
Obama and your 2nd Camelot is done. Period.
You people seem to been living this dream that the country was permanently changed by Obama's election. He was elects by a few % in the center for various reasons.
He and hos cronies (Pelosi, Reed Frank. etc ) and all you guys thought you could dictate an incredible leftist agenda and that those
few % in the middle were going to buy it. They didn't so they changed there vote. That simple.
Health care will get changed from its current form which is not what Obama wanted anyway. Cap and trade will go nowhere.
Big spending and entitlement state will go away. No more unions are getting bailed out. Your party is over permanently. You will not control all the branches for the foreseeable future. And 2012 could easily give it all over to the GOP. Think about it. The house will stay. If all the senate were up on Tuesday it would be in GOP hands so good chance the next 3rd in 2 years will lose more seats to GOP. And Obama is easily beaten by a GOP. You had a 2 year dictatorship . It is over.
Except, Joseph Cole, that if you were correct about the Senate going entirely Republican if all seats had been up on Tuesday the Democrats wouldn't have lost only six seats, would they? In fact, only two incumbent Democratic senators were tossed out of office on Election Day (Feingold and Lincoln). Arlen Specter, who spent most of his political life as a Republican and had changed parties to avoid a defeat in the Republican primary, was defeated by a more progressive Democrat in the primary, who himself was defeated.

So, to recap, of the nineteen Democratic Senate seats up for grabs, only thirteen incumbents ran for re-election and ten of them succeeded. In addition, three additional Democrats held the seats for their party after the incumbent did not seek re-election (Connecticut, West Virginia and Delaware). Therefore, 13 of the 19 Democratic seats in play stayed with the party. Sorry, but you're factually wrong.
An exceptionally well considered view here...many thanks! rated and enjoyed!
Thank you for this. Keep writing; we all need to get out the truth. Over and over and over.

Rated
We are an empire in the final stages of decline. We as citizens have a decision to make, are we Britain or are we the USSR? I talk about some of these same issues in my own writing. Read and rated.
I think Obama needs to Sew his balls on and stop running from the Republicans, his actions so far have been equal parts pandering and appeasement. Our once great Republic deserves better and the next year or so will determine whether we survive as a nation.