By Patrick Hynes on 8.5.05 @ 12:08AM
Democrats took their best shot and lost in the Ohio special election. They'll do no better in trying to win back the House in 2006.
WASHINGTON -- The results of Tuesday's special election in
Ohio's Second Congressional District provide us with few clues as
to how the 2006 race for control of Congress might shake out.
Republican Jean Schmidt defeated Democrat Paul Hackett to retain
the seat in the Republican column. This should come as no surprise
as this is a heavily Republican part of the world where George W.
Bush received 64% just last year.
On the other hand, the Democrats pulled out all the stops to win
the seat. Hackett is a Marine just back from Iraq who sometimes
sounded like he was running against George W. Bush himself, rather
than Jean Schmidt, so critical of the president was he (he openly
called the president a "chicken hawk" on the stump). Hackett is
tall, good-looking, and smart. Jim Carville and Max Cleland trekked
to Ohio to help him raise money. The leftwing blogosphere, still
chasing the idea that if they just hate George W. Bush enough they
will eventually win something, helped Hackett raise tens
of thousands of dollars.
Moreover, Ohio was the scene of the crime; the state Karl Rove
"stole" in order to maintain his death clutch on America and
deliver putrid Democracy to half-naked savages overseas. Add a
trumped-up rare coins scandal which shrouds the GOP in Ohio and
suddenly the race looked competitive.
And Hackett made it close. Schmidt won with only 52% of the vote
compared to 48% for Hackett. And yet, despite the Democrat
nominee's relatively high vote count in this Republican district,
his loss should come as further discouraging news to national
Democrats who hope beyond all hope to take back the House of
Representatives someday.
A COUPLE OF WEEKS AGO, I posited
on this site that even accounting for an anti-Republican tidal wave
in 2006, the Democrats would be hard pressed to reclaim the U.S.
Senate. A confluence of limited competitive seats, expensive media
markets, and fundraising realities make it nearly impossible for
Harry Reid to win a majority. The challenges are compounded when we
turn to Nancy Pelosi's Democrats in the House.
To refresh, it is my contention that the issues and
personalities at play in 2006, while somewhat predictable, are
actually quite fluid and in many ways irrelevant. All we can rely
on while surveying the 2006 landscape is: (1) The number of, and
political nature, of the seats in play; (2) The financial costs
associated with "playing" in those seats; and (3) The resources
available to the two parties. Based on these objective criteria, I
expect Speaker Denny Hastert to hold onto the gavel for another two
years.
According to political prognosticator extraordinaire Charlie
Cook, only eight congressional seats are "toss ups"; races that
could just as easily swing to the Republican or Democrats
candidates.
Eight.
Understand, the GOP has a 233-201-1 advantage in the House of
Representatives.
Worst still for Democrats, only three of those seats (CO-07,
IA-01, and PA-06) are potential "pickups" for them. The other five
(CO-03, IL-08, LA-03, OH-06, TX-17) are seats Democrats have to
defend.
This very small battleground is disproportionately Republican
territory. President Bush received an average vote share of 53.9%
in these eight districts in 2004; John Kerry received only 45.5%
(though, to be fair, those averages include a Bush blowout in
TX-17. If we extirpate TX-17, Bush still won these eight districts
by a 51.7% to 47.7% margin).
Money will play a factor. Both the Republicans and the Democrats
must defend expensive seats. Democrats have to spend resources in
the wildly expensive Denver and Chicago media markets, as well as
in pricy Pittsburgh and Cleveland to defend CO-03, IL-08, and OH-6,
respectively.
Republicans need to defend an open seat in the Denver media
market (CO-07), as well as a vulnerable incumbent (Rep. Jim Gerlach
in PA-06) in the Philadelphia market, one of the most expensive
markets in the U.S.
Of course, Democrats will do all in their power to make more
seats competitive by recruiting top-flight candidates. Toward that
goal they will target seats that only "Lean Republican." According
to Cook, fifteen seats "Lean Republican" and nine seats "Lean
Democrat." In my experience, however, the seats that "Lean" toward
one party or the other rarely break the other way. For example, in
the last Cook Political Report before the 2004 election,
dated October 29th, 2004, Cook listed ten "Lean Democrat" seats and
thirteen "Lean Republican" seats. There were no surprises; they all
broke the way they leaned.
Moreover, recruiting strong candidates will be difficult for
Democrats. The first question a prospective candidate asks when
approached to run by the party bigs is, "How much money will you
spend on this race if I do?" The answer, if Democrats are to be
honest, will be, "not much."
According to reports filed with the Federal Election Commission
through the month of July, the Democratic Congressional Campaign
Committee (DCCC) has raised a total of $24,070,752.10 so far this
year. The National Republican Congressional Committee has raised
$39,984,494.62. The DCCC has only $8,544,288.27 cash on hand
compared to the NRCC's $16,377, 230.66. The DCCC has $3,666,666.67
in outstanding debts. The NRCC has no debt.
Put simply, Democrats have fewer dollars to defend more seats,
which limits their ability to create a greater number of
competitive races by recruiting rock star candidates.
SO, WHAT ABOUT A tidal wave? A great many Democrats have convinced
themselves that the "Republican corruption" leitmotif will carry
them into power.
Eh.
That's a tough sell, particularly when 19 of the 43 members of
Congress that have acknowledged doing what Majority Leader Tom
DeLay is being witch-hunted for -- allowing lobbyists to pay for
junket travel -- are themselves Democrats.
Harping on corruption may also dampen recruitment. How many
Democrats -- no matter how qualified -- with potential skeletons in
their closets will choose to run in a year when their own party
leaders will make moral piety the threshold for serving in
Congress?
And as one high-level GOP communications operative said to me,
"In 1998 we spent over $20 million in districts all across the
country reminding everyone about Bill Clinton and the blue dress.
We lost seats. Why are voters going to turn Republicans out of
power because some Congressman they think they might have heard of
may have done something that a bunch of other Congressmen did,
too?"
The bottom line is, the Democrats need to win all three
Republican-held "toss up" seats and maintain all five of theirs,
plus hold all their "Lean Democrat" seats and win all but three of
the "Lean Republican" seats to gain a majority.
At a press conference in the heat of the 2004 campaign, Nancy
Pelosi confidently averred she would be Speaker of the House during
the next session of Congress. Members of the press corps contained
their laughter, though they might have had a good chuckle over
drinks later on. If Pelosi were to make the same statement today,
their drinks would come pouring out their noses.
topics:
Nancy Pelosi, Harry Reid, Bill Clinton, Iraq