Random thoughts below the fold.
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(I think that I'm done updating this post for now, as the results show no indication of changing significantly. I'll have more to say about the election tomorrow.)
A Democratic majority in the Senate is all but certain, as Montana and Virginia both appear to have gone to the Democrats. This means…
Some initial reactions to the election results:
Last night's Democratic landslide is complete, 100%, unambiguous good news. P.Z. manages to see the cloud rather than the silver lining. Not me. Even the fact that I was grading papers during much of yesterday evening could not get the smile off…
Here's the rundown on some of the elections I either wrote about or just took an interest in for one reason or another. In Michigan, Dick DeVos, the pro-ID candidate for governor, was voted down by a wide margin. Proposition 4, which puts strict restrictions on eminent domain in the state, passed…
With the election results almost completely finalized, it's time to reflect on what they mean. Make no mistake about it, Tuesday demonstrated a true mandate for the Democrats. The Democrats achieved a majority in both the Senate and the House, picking up 6 seats and 29 seats, respectively. The…
"Once again, it looks like the asshole Green Party siphoned off just enough votes to give the Republicans a victory. I would love nothing more than to take their Free Mumia posters and shove them up their collective backside."
LOL! Don't like the treehuggers, eh? ;)
Tennessee is close, and most of the not-yet-reported precincts are around Nashville and Memphis, which has the usual big-city-Democrat bias.
So... if you make some very simple assumptions (Corker/Ford ratio stays the same in Davidson and Shelby County, ignore everything else), Ford comes out ahead.
But we'll see. It's gonna be close.
Funny that Ford, in general, is to the right of Lincoln Chafee, the Rhode Island Republican who lost out. Of course, this year, it doesn't matter one whit who the individual is. All that matters is whether or not Bush is going to have his party in control of one or two houses of Congress.
"Once again, it looks like the asshole Green Party siphoned off just enough votes to give the Republicans a victory. I would love nothing more than to take their Free Mumia posters and shove them up their collective backside."
So yeah, the Greens shouldn't be able to run any candidates because the Democrats, as we all know, are entitled to everyones vote in a democratic system. Any attempt to give voters more than two choices can only be regarded as regressive and anti-democratic. Shame on them.
I'm just going to love it when the Democrats totally sell out their liberal/progressive base and move to the right. Already Howard Dean and Nancy Pelosi are backpedalling on Iraq and universal health-care, and it won't be long before the +$7.50 minimum-wage hike goes down in flames while their own wages get raised and they capitulate on the next "free" trade deal. We may not be dealing with as egregious a situation as before for the next two years, but this isn't a revolution of any kind. It's Clinton-era Republican-lite in the making.
Tyler -- it would be really nice if we had the freedom to vote for the people we thought were the best choices.
If, somehow, we could put in a "first choice" and "second choice," so that insta-runoffs could be done, it might be reasonable.
But, right now, anything, anything that helps Bush's party retain control of either house of Congress is a vote of confidence in the path Bush has us on. His Republican base has been extremely supportive of him even as it becomes more and more obvious that not only was the war sold to us on false principles, but it was incompetently managed to a mind-boggling degree.
The only plausible way Bush could have any breaks put on him is Democratic control of the House and the Senate, together with the magic of partisan politics.
As I said on my own blog, this time around, the Democrats could have put up Bozo the Clown in the Senate race, and I'd have voted for him-- because that is the only vote that says "restrain Bush." Heck the Republicans could have put up Thomas Jefferson or Abraham Lincoln himself, and I'd still vote for Bozo, simply because of the disaster of the presidency, and the fact that "his" party is gonna back him up.
...could have any breaks put on...
Oops. That sounded more mafia-enforcer-esque than I meant. That should have been "brakes", not "breaks".
-Rob
Hey, have any democratically minded people ever considered forming a shadow/fake ultra-rightwing party (i.e. the Gun-toting-NASCAR-driving Jesus Party) to siphon votes away from the Republicans the way the Greens siphon votes from the Democrats?
Remember the poll that said there were 17% (I can't remember the actual number but it was pretty high) of Republicans thought their party wasn't conversvative enough? I think there's a market for that.
. . . Or not.