7 Wishes wrote:Only you could think that a party that has an eighteen seat defecit in the Senate and does nothing else except make the rich richer whilst never once attempting to work with the current Administration is in a position of power.
If you don't think Democrats will make a point of noting this in the fall elections, you're even more out of touch than I suppose. The just-say-no policy is working right now because people are frustrated and have been misinformed by the Right. Once it becomes apparent that all progress was stalwarted because of the GOP's sardonic approach, it will come back to haunt them.
Obama's had two problems.
Obama's first problem has been with moderate Democrats, not with Republicans. Democrats in the Senate -- like Ben Nelson of Nebraska, Blanche Lincoln of Arkansas, Mary Landrieu of Louisiana, and Max Baucus of Montana, in particular -- have been loathe to jump on the ObamaCare bandwagon (and reluctant to support other initiatives and policies as well, such as Obama's EPA designating carbon dioxide as a dangerous pollutant). Republicans (as you say in first paragraph) have been in no position of power, other than rhetorical. This is entirely the Democrats' show.
Obama's second problem is with himself. Obama-the-Candidate is at odds with Obama-with-the-President. Like it or not, that's how moderates and independents see it. And as Gallup pointed out, Obama is the most polarizing first-year president ever.
If you don't think Democrats are "running for the hills" (to use Obama's own apt words), you haven't been paying attention to current events. Senate Democrats in trouble (meaning: running barely ahead, or actually behind presumed challengers) now include "safe" seats like Russ Feingold (WI), Evan Bayh (IN), Patty Murray (WA), and even Barbara Boxer (CA). (Add to that these Democrat seats: IL, DE, NV, PA, AR, and CO). Only one Republican Senate seat could even be possibly thought a real toss-up: Ohio, where George Voinovich is retiring. And even here, Rob Portman is running ahead of both his possible Democrat challengers.
In the so-called generic congressional ballot, Republicans are running (depending on the poll) between 5 and 9 points ahead of the Democrats (and historically Republicans exceed that poll on election day). This is unprecedented, even in 1994.
If Americans don't want to hear that "progress has been stalwarted" (I think you mean thwarted), then why are they solidly choosing Republican candidates, even those deep in blue-state territory??
I'll stick with my original prediction from a month ago. Republicans pick up 7 seats in the Senate (bringing them to 48 ), and they pick up net 35 seats in the House (bringing them to 213). November 2, 2010 will be a bad night for Democrats, as things stand right now.