Dick Morris: GOP will get hammered - and in 2008 too

New York Post - November 6, 2006

A GOP MASSACRE: A BLOODY TUESDAY By DICK MORRIS & EILEEN MCGANN

THE latest polls portend disaster for the Republican Party tomorrow.
The House appears to be gone; the Senate is teetering on the brink.

John Zogby’s polling is tracking 15 swing House districts, and he
finds Democratic leads in 13. Since Dems need only 15 to take control
- and will doubtless pick up several not on Zogby’s list - it seems
we’re in for several years of Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

In the Senate, only Tennessee seems to be holding for the
Republicans. (There’s no justice: Rep. Harold Ford Jr., the Democrat
now losing to Republican Bob Corker, is the best of the crop of
Democratic challengers).

Other Senate races? Ohio, Pennsylvania and Rhode Island are gone for
the GOP. Republican fantasies of a rebound in Montana are falling
short. It’s down to Missouri and Virginia: Democrats need to win both
to take control. In these states, pollster Scott Rasmussen has GOP
incumbents Jim Talent and George Allen below the 50 percent mark -
usually a sign of doom. Rasmussen has Allen tied with Democrat Jim
Webb at 49 percent and Democrat Claire McCaskill ahead of Talent 49-48.

Even with those nail-biters too close to call, 2006 will go down in
history as one of the worst years for the Republicans.

Why the rout? President Bush let Iraq be the major issue of the
election. He could have raised worries about North Korea and homeland
security to the same level, but he insisted on focusing on Iraq,
making changes in tactics and trying to sell them to a cynical
America. Thus, he was left defending a failure rather than trumpeting
his key successes.

Plus, the war in Iraq has divided the Republicans - the isolationist
Pat Buchanans are abandoning an internationalist president.

But the GOP majority itself has to shoulder a lot of the blame for a
session of total inaction on tax reform and Social Security, and just
small steps on immigration and Medicare reform. With Republicans
controlling Congress and the White House, voters were entitled to
expect a whole lot more.

In the end, though, it was corruption that did the GOP in. In the
’90s, Republican legislators were lean, ascetic and ideological -
Reagan Republicans. Now they’ve grown self-indulgent and pecuniary.

Speaker Dennis Hastert’s son left his music store in Illinois to move
to Washington to become the lobbyist for Google. Hastert himself used
his position to fund a highway project that had a lot to do with a
big profit on a land deal nearby. Then-Majority Leader Tom Delay put
his wife was on his PAC’s payroll; she made $300,000. Voters may
expect this kind of corruption from Democrats (Senate Democratic
leader Harry Reid has four lobbyist sons) but not from Republicans.

First the Republicans lost their virtue; now they’ll lose their
majority, at least in the House. What’s ahead for the next two years?
Not new legislation so much as investigations, subpoenas, hearings
etc. Washington will be as effectively paralyzed as it was during
President Clinton’s impeachment trial. And, let us remember that it
was in that incubator that Osama bin Laden was able to plan the 9/11
attacks.

We needed a president who could act firmly back then, and we’ll need
one in the next two years. But we’re not going to have one. President
Bush will be dodging document requests, defending his
administration’s integrity and battling each day’s sensational
headlines supposedly uncovering scandal after scandal.

The Democrats will use their majorities to conduct a two-year
campaign for the presidency. Most likely, it will work.

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