Nine days ago, on Jan. 10, The Boston Globe carried a rather heartening headline for Democrats: “Senate Poll: Coakley Up 15 Points.” Now, on the morning of the Massachusetts special election pitting State Sen. Scott Brown (R) against Bay State Attorney General Martha Coakley (D), the tables have not so much turned as spun wildly out of control, crashed through the windows, burst into flames and exploded, leaving nothing behind but a smoldering heap of post-apocalyptic rubble.
Since last Thursday, eight polls have been released in Massachusetts. One, by Research 2000, shows a tied race. The rest show Brown clobbering Coakley by anywhere from 3 to 15 percentage points. Which means that as voters begin to trickle into the polls this morning, it's looking increasingly likely that Brown will win the seat that liberal icon Teddy Kennedy had occupied since 1962—the bluest seat in one of the bluest states in the Union—and become the first Republican senator from Massachusetts in nearly 40 years. As one veteran political observer put it yesterday, "If Brown wins, and he may, it will be the biggest political upset of my adult life.”
Despite all the Democratic hand-wringing, garment-rending, and finger-pointing already on display in the press, the answer, I think, is actually pretty simple: the Coakley campaign took the voters of Massachusetts for granted. Usually, this wouldn't have been much of a problem; the state is so overwhelmingly Democratic that any candidate with a "D" attached to his or her name is virtually guaranteed victory. Clearly, Coakley was counting on Massachusetts's liberal history to carry her effortlessly across the finish line. But this year, in this political environment, that wasn't enough—and the assumption that it was has turned out to be the very thing that may do her in.
Let's review, shall we? On Dec. 8, 2009, Coakley won the Democratic Senate primary by a whopping 19 percentage points. A normal candidate would've hit the streets, shaken some hands, given some speeches, and taken the fight to her opponent. But Coakley, who was leading Brown in the polls by 31 percent at that point, decided to "go dark" instead. Her logic was simple and seemingly safe: during the holidays, voters aren't paying attention to politics, so why give them an opportunity to turn against me when I can just quietly back into the job? As Globe columnist Brian McGrory wrote earlier this month, she "isn’t doing anything in public—no meetings with voters, no debates, no public appearances. For all we know, she's spending much of her time at home with the shades drawn waiting for Jan. 19, Election Day, to come and go."
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Yeah, but what happens if she does lose? She goes back to her CURRENT job! No big deal for her!
ReplyDeleteI think if someone wants to run for political office they should quit their present job. SO, if you are a govenor and want to run for a senate office...you have to step down FIRST, then run. If you don't win, you have to find another job! The way it is now anyone can throw their hat in the ring and still have a political office to fall back on. If they had to quit their present job first, you would have less people running and they would be better candidates.
This will be good for all elections to come this year. The country is sick of the liberal crap that is taking this country down. Everyone is sick and tired of being in the dark and wandering what is next, atleast with republicans there is a plan that makes sense and is value based, not partisan based on personal benefit from the postions they are elected to.
ReplyDeleteThe elites want us to think we still have the power to affect our political system and the laws it passes. They give us a false 2 party political option that is best described as thesis-antithesis. The 2 parties claim to be at opposite ends of a vast American spectrum of political viewpoints.
ReplyDeleteHowever neither party adequately represents its constitituents. They claim to represent certain polarizing political views, but then in the end, we get collusion and control. The real power brokers behind the scenes (the hidden government - Ollie North) sincerely believe they have the duty to rule over the rest of us. The elites decide who runs from each party and speechwriters tell the candidate what to say. Everything is staged. It is literally a drama played out on television to give us the "dream" of political activism. We must make a choice, they tell us. No matter what we choose we get a terrible outcome. The government does not work for us. We work for it and support it through forced taxation of our wages and our purchases.
We are being driven into debt collectively and individually by a ruthless power hungry group of self appointed elites. They are the international bankers.
They print our money.
Arrogance, absolute arrogance!
ReplyDeleteBROWN SAID IT BEST=-=its the peoples seat.
ReplyDelete