Scott Brown claimed it as Massachusetts voters reminded Washington and Beacon Hill who's boss.
BOSTON -- The last time Massachusetts sent a Republican to the U.S. Senate, the year was 1972. Richard Nixon was in the White House. Sonny and Cher were still together. "All in the Family" was still only in its second season. The Chevy Chevelle was one of the country's top-selling cars. And Massachusetts was the only state in the country that voted to elect George McGovern president.
That last trivia item illustrates the significance of state Sen. Scott Brown's accomplishment. A Republican who started the race down 30 points was elected to the Senate seat the late Ted Kennedy held for 47 years, winning 52 percent of the vote with 99 percent of precincts reporting. He won with a simple argument: "This Senate seat belongs to no one person and no one political party -- it belongs to the people of Massachusetts."
Nobody expected the special election to fill the remainder of Kennedy's term to even be close. Certainly, Attorney General Martha Coakley didn't. She cruised to victory in the Democratic primary based on name recognition and then hoped the "D" after her name on the ballot would take care of the rest. Her only goal in the campaign was to make sure that Massachusetts voters knew libertarian-leaning independent candidate Joseph Kennedy wasn't man from Citizens Energy and descendant of Camelot.
Barack Obama didn't expect to have to fly to Boston for a last-minute get-out-the-vote rally on Coakley's behalf. He won Massachusetts by 26 points in 2008. His bill expanding the federal government's role over the American health care system was supposed to be the culmination of Ted Kennedy's life work. This was, as he put it, a simple choice "whether we're going forwards or backwards" -- between Obama's change we can believe in or the bad old days that came before.
Well, it took George W. Bush five years to bring his party to the brink of electoral disaster. It has taken Obama one year. That's change, all right.
The political establishment in Washington didn't anticipate having to make any changes to the way it does business. When the first polls suggested that Scott Brown might be a serious candidate, they began to dream up ways to ram through their legislative agenda as if nothing had ever happened.
Simmering beneath the surface, however, there was a group of voters who were tired of corrupt one-party rule on both Beacon Hill and Capitol Hill. They had patiently paid the bills while one "change agent" after another pledged progress, without seeing any benefit to their own families.
They had the highest hopes for the Barack Obamas and Deval Patricks and the Michael Dukakises who knew better how to spend their money than they did. In Massachusetts, these folks were already paying for universal health care, only to face the prospect of Uncle Sam asking them to pony up again.
Now they were finally fed up. By Christmas, the lawn signs alone suggested an enthusiasm gap between Brown and Coakley. By the time your humble servant returned to Massachusetts earlier this week, it was evident that the angry independent was ready to make his voice heard. Another shot heard 'round the world? Perhaps not, but at the very least the most dramatic repudiation of the commonwealth's Democratic hierarchy since 1990.
Once the Democrats realized they were in trouble, virtually everything they did reinforced the disgruntlement of voters drawn toward Brown. Already concerned about giving one political party absolute power, these angry independents were treated to news reports that the Democrats were willing to contemplate delaying Brown's certification in the event that he won. Already worried about an onerous health care bill, they heard about the national Democrats' plans to pass a bill no matter who Massachusetts elected senator.
With many voters already tired of being treated with contempt by a politician who clearly felt entitled to be senator, Coakley became a parody of herself when she belittled mingling with the hoi polloi outside Fenway Park -- "This is a special election" -- and ignorantly mocked former Boston Red Sox star pitcher Curt Schilling as a "Yankee fan." Faced with voters disgusted by a political party that seemed to believe it was destined to rule, the best Coakley could do was drag a virtual politburo of Democratic hacks into the state to campaign for her, doing everything short of disinterring Senator Kennedy himself.
In the end, the "D" next to Coakley's name was still worth about 47 percent of the vote. Although Scott Brown did nearly everything right during this short campaign while running against a candidate who did nearly everything wrong, he still needed last-minute help from friends and donors across the country to help him across the finish line. Bay State Democrats are probably already thinking of ways to unseat him in 2012.
But watching the revelers at Park Plaza -- who never at any point in the night seemed to doubt the outcome of this election -- chant "the people's seat" at the top of their lungs, a thought occurred. Once the people get used to exercising their power, there is no telling where they will stop.
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drudge ette obama| 1.20.10 @ 6:11AM
There are no kings in Massachusetts. Scott Brown just proved that.
Welcome to the movement, Massachusetts.
Alan Brooks| 1.20.10 @ 9:41AM
You all make it sound as if this is November 1980 and Reagan just won.
Massachusetts is going conservative?? who do you think you are fooling? Yourselves?
Conservative? Aye. Naive conservative? Nyet, um, er, that is to say... NO.
MTB| 1.20.10 @ 12:18PM
You're right, Alan, it's naive to believe that Massachusetts is going conservative, but it is nice to know that with the dead of their prince, Ted Kennedy, that the people of Massachusetts can actually break from their near 40 year tradition of putting liberals in the Senate. Now THAT is what I call HOPE and CHANGE! "Yes, We Can!"
Alan Brooks| 1.20.10 @ 5:28PM
Fine, MTB. Good for Mass.
But if even Gingrich couldn't do much IN FIVE YEARS, then how can one guy named Brown?
He's not a magician, he isn't a Singaporan free marketer drastically downsizing govt.
Helen Donnelly| 1.20.10 @ 3:40PM
Dear Alan,
You are sounding a little shook up there, pal.
Alan Brooks| 1.20.10 @ 5:24PM
No, not shook up, Helen; living out West it doesn't mean anything to me, though good for Mass.
But we've been through this:
in '88, '94, 2000.
It's getting very old.
John E. Vande Woude| 1.20.10 @ 6:25PM
I surely hope that this is the beginning of [the end of] business-as-usual politics in Washington.
Whereas I like Brown's comments that he is not beholden to anyone excluding the people who elected him (a major Brown campaign theme) I am cautious knowing that the self-centered, back-room-dealing, inner-workings of Washington pervert many who arrive with honest intentions.
Democratic Senator Claire McCaskill’s comments to reporters today are characteristic of what is more likely to happen in the wake of Scott Brown’s victory. McCaskill stated that “If there's anybody in this building that doesn't tell you they are more worried about elections today, you should absolutely slap them". He added “Of course everybody is more worried about elections. Are you kidding? It's what this place thrives on." His comments are a synonym for the term “business as usual” — a concise example of the sole diversion that keeps our politicians from accomplishing anything. Simply put, most politicians will “do anything”, “say anything” and “promise anything” to get elected. Following, with little exception, their actions are based on what they believe will help them get re-elected down the road — not what is good or just.
Brown’s win should serve a “wake-up-call” for our elected representatives — a reminder that they are in Washington to do a job. Sadly, the Massachusetts upset is more likely to result in “finger pointing”; “wag tailing” and “political posturing” with politicians distancing themselves from issues that they feel may harm them in the next election. Most certainly, House Representatives and Senators will start to proclaim that “they voted for the healthcare bill before they were against it”. They will retreat to their corners or, worse yet, abandon their principals and move to the middle, left or right depending on what the electoral barometer tells them to do. They will garner votes by jumping on bandwagons; bashing those they rubbed elbows with on the Senate floor just weeks ago and choose words carefully so as not to unclothe their true position on issues.
The real problem lies with the American voter who allows this to happen without consequence — by not voting these self indulgent, mendacious, degenerate individuals out of office for broken campaign promises, ineffectiveness and for abandoning their stated principals as soon as the political wind changes.
That said, I think Massachusetts just did that.
AlpacaAirship| 1.21.10 @ 9:13PM
I'm a Virginia for some 30 years now. Beware of Jim Webb. He was elected by the people's commissars, dupes and useful idiots of Northern VA and similar people's Republics near Charlottesville and others. Virginia is tricky, a representation within the state of right thinking people and liberal lefty big government Quislings. Webb must appear to be "independent". Watch what he does (votes) and disregard what he says.
Bill Hussien O'Stalin| 1.20.10 @ 6:23AM
Most Americans do no perceive a bright future. In effect, Obama has now been rejected along with Plastic Pelosi and I never met a light skinned black guy I never liked Harry Reid. The Democrats have become the party of No.
No jobs
No house
No future
Nobama
MTB| 1.20.10 @ 12:19PM
Great Comment, Bill.
Blackwatch| 1.22.10 @ 10:10PM
Bill I love your Redneck-Islamo-Irish-Bolshevik sensibilities and direct way of talking. Keep it coming bro!
Stephanie| 1.20.10 @ 6:52AM
WASHINGTON, DO YOU HEAR US NOW?!!!!
And thanks go to Jim Webb-D fromVA for calling for a halt to any more votes on healthcare until Brown is seated.
where's toddard this morning, licking his wounds?
Son Of Sam| 1.20.10 @ 8:15AM
Hi Stephanie,
Considering that Toddard and the rest of the stuck up ObamaNazi trolls have been torn a new asshole, I'd have to say that yes, they are "licking their wounds" as you put it. But then again, that's pretty much where their heads have ALWAYS been, if their posts here are anything to judge by.
I, for one, am glad to see that American citizens everywhere no longer take their freedom for granted, and that they are simply not going to be led by the nose anymore. Not even in that bluest of blue states, Massachusetts. Maybe now, we can actually hit that "reset" button, and start working together towards common sense solutions that don't involve envy coddling tax-fattened big government parasites running every aspect of our lives. In that spirit, I am calling on all rank and file Democrats everywhere to start setting up primary challenges to the clowns and criminals currently running their party into the ground. You can guys can do a LOT better than that, and America will be a better place if there are two major parties both run by patriotic American citizens.
stand strong until freedom dawns
Son Of Sam
http://www.samadamssos.bravehost.com
ncatty| 1.20.10 @ 9:32AM
Webb is a phony. It is "moderate" or "blue dog" Democrats like him that wave the bloody shirt at home then vote with Pelosi and Reid in DC. He deserves blame, not credit.
Stephanie| 1.20.10 @ 10:55AM
You're right ncatty, Webb is only doing this because he sees his political future flashing before his eyes. I know he has been bararaged with calls and email from his constituants asking him NOT to vote with Pelosi and Reid, but he did anyway.
I suspect he will loose his seat in the next election.
I still appreciate him saying what he said.
And see, I was right. Toddard is licking those suprise wounds :-)
S.L. Toddard| 1.20.10 @ 10:11AM
"where's toddard this morning, licking his wounds?"
Yes. I am absolutely devastated that Joe Kennedy did not win. I thought he was a lock (Libertarians usually do very well on election day) but apparently the 1% he pulled in wasn't enough to win it all. It was truly shocking, really. Lick, lick, lick.
Melvin| 1.20.10 @ 7:24AM
If we truly want to have any type of political reform, we must as some of those have posted, vote all those rascals out of office who have spent the majority of their natural born lives there.
I call it, " Old money vs New money." Both sides of the political isle need to get rid of their homesteaders. Take Sen. Robert Byrd for example, this man is barely alive due to his age of course and there is absolutely no reason that he can effectively have the energy and vitality to serve his constituents.
The political baton needs to be passed to a younger generation that has new ideas and new solutions and the election of Scott Brown is only the beginning.
I thought I would never say this to the citizen's of Massachusetts. "Thank You."
WRTolkas| 1.20.10 @ 7:33AM
Dear Good People,
Mr. Brown's victory is a fitting ending sentence to Swimmer's epitaph -"and the successor to his senate seat was a Republican."
Isn't the messiah 0-3?
To Miss Stephanie, is what you wrote above concerning Senator Jim Webb true?
This will be a great day,
WRTolkas
ncatty| 1.20.10 @ 9:33AM
0-4. New Jersey, Virginia, Copenhagen and Massachussetts.
WRTolkas| 1.20.10 @ 11:07AM
Bravo ncatty (or should I say Brava?). I forgot Copenhagen: 0-4. You are on the ball.
Regards,
WRTolkas
Gatoray57| 1.20.10 @ 4:24PM
Both y'all are short on the score. Remember the 2016 Olympics? (makes him Oh for 2 in Copenhagen). B.O. is Oh for 5, right up to the 1st anniversary of his immaculation. Yet anoth day of infamy for America. Pres, Lame Duck, please, please PLEASE campaign for DemoCrap candidates nationwide.
WRTolkas| 1.20.10 @ 9:46PM
Dear Gatoray57,
You too are correct: 0-5.
I'm loosing faith in the messiah.
Regards,
WRTolkas
Anthony| 1.20.10 @ 11:15AM
I have secretly harbored the notion that the people of MA simply put up with Ted Kennedy for almost 50 years, partly due the the Kennedy mystique and mainly because, like a stubborn wart, there was just no way he was going away, short of death. Of course, the hapless MA Rs helped.
Now I have no doubt, in addition to all that has been said about Obama and the radical Ds, that more than a few MA patriots entered the voting booth to give Ted Kennedy his final due.
When David Rodham Gergen offered up his officious, leftist tripe about the Kennedy seat and Brown knocked it out of Fenway Park, I cheered. When Patrick Kennedy, like dear ole dad, called Martha, Marcia, I dared hope he'd take one for the sclerotic Kennedys and get slapped upside the head, for old times sake.
Poor Teddy, just when you thought Hell couldn't get any worse....... Who says God doesn't have a sense of humor?
MTB| 1.20.10 @ 12:40PM
Sorry, but I just had this thought and had to comment. I don't mean any disrespect to Ted Kennedy or his family, and as much as I despised the man, I'm truly sorry for their loss, but your comment about how Teddy thought Hell couldn't get any worse got me to thinking. When Kennedy died and showed up at the gates of heaven, he was met by Peter. Peter welcomed him and said, "You'll have to spend some time in Purgatory to atone for the sins you committed while on earth." Well, of course Kennedy was incensed. Why should he, Ted Kennedy, spend any time in Purgatory? So he exclaimed, but I was a United States Senator for nearly 50 years, surely that has to mean something!" Peter said, "Oh, well, that's different. You don't have to spend any time in Purgatory, after all." Kennedy retorted, "That's more like it." Peter said, "You can go straight to hell."
BREDNG10| 1.20.10 @ 6:28PM
We are pretty lucky.Some one at Am Thinker said something like,I`m surprised someone couldn`t sober up one of the kennedy`s long enuff to run.One of the real kennedy clan anyway.
Torquemeda| 1.20.10 @ 7:41AM
Thank you to the Massachusetts voters who did the right thing and recognized the insidious, subversive nature of the Democrats in power. Shame on the 47% who blindly voted for politics as usual. Let's see if the voters can continue to display they aren't braindead fools by getting rid of the Arrogant Barney Frank, the clueless John Kerry, the sleazey Marty Meehan, need I go on?
Darren | 1.20.10 @ 7:49AM
I'm very proud of Massachusetts! Shades of revolution still in the air up there. And as a resident of Virginia (another newly Republican governorship), I'm proud of Webb for standing up for due process and calling for immediate swearing in of Brown. What a great day!
Louis Jenkins| 1.20.10 @ 7:52AM
It's a beginning. Now, at last, the Ted Kennedy saga is over and we can breathe a sigh of relief. Time to tackle the other "glued to their senate seat" old pharts.
MTB| 1.20.10 @ 12:24PM
Hear! Hear! Louis. Now, citizens of Massachusetts, can you PLEASE, PLEASE, PLEASE get rid of that blowhard, Barney Frank!
Karibou Kid| 1.20.10 @ 8:06AM
The descendants of the people who started the First American Revolution have now started the Second.
Thank you Patriots of Massacheusetts!!!
Neolibertarian| 1.20.10 @ 8:51AM
The raucous cheering of a “moderate” by the right wing drowned out an ominous chuckle emanating from a pin-stripe pants suit; all the time the independents nodded sagely and many libertarian secret handshakes were exchanged
Siegfried X| 1.20.10 @ 2:23PM
The conservatives are being perfectly logical here. Brown is being cheered because IN THIS CASE he has pledged to act like a real conservative, a real libertarian would. His election and small government vote against health care will make a real difference. So it makes perfect sense for small government conservatives to be happy now.
And there will be no contradiction when we turn against Brown when he begins to vote like a "moderate" (= a Democrat). That's because we have principles and judge people on how they vote.
I guess the moderate would then say "Well, why don't you vote for ALL moderate Republicans?" as though cheering for Brown in this case somehow proves that I should. But there is no connection at all. Cheering for the death of Obama's health care plan has nothing to do with voting for RINOs in general. Many leftist programs have passed only because they had "moderate" Republican votes.
ed| 1.20.10 @ 9:31PM
And like a true Libertarian he had to run as something else to actually win. "sagely", that's a good one.
Donserge| 1.20.10 @ 9:04AM
The Mass. voters did the nation a great service however let us ne'er forget that this is a very blue state. Marxism is deeply ingrained. This state went for Obama by plus 27%. It will take considerably more than one senate election won by 5% to change the landscape there. Do not forget that 47% voted for an incompetent idiot! The vast majority of so-called Mass. independent voters are still liberal.
ed| 1.20.10 @ 9:32PM
Which incompetent idiot - Coakly, Obama, Kennedy, Kerry, or Frank? Jeez, they have a lot of making up to do, but Brown is a great start.
GeorgieGirl| 1.20.10 @ 9:05AM
As a resident New Yorker who proudly contributed to Brown's campaign I say.....LOOK OUT SCHUMER and GILLIBRAND......YOU"RE NEXT!!!!
gearjammer| 1.20.10 @ 9:07AM
Trusting a younger generation over an older one seems non conservative. One thinks a person has wisdom with age, but this is not the case. First of all, we have the baby boomers and far too many of them are plain and simple lost in space. They are a generation that accepts fantasy as reality. Older generations back the the WW2 generation have their own set of issues that make them susceptible to voting foolishly. One big problem with them is television. They are not media savvy and are gullible to media manipulation by tv and those nice, well dressed, so smart media celebrities. They believed in Uncle Walter and Oprah and all the rest of that junk propaganda and are brain washable. Younger people have a better sense of when they being played and manipulated. The negative ads in particular insult them. This does not make them automatic republicans or conservatives, but they are more open minded, inquisitive, and those will give all ideas a listen more often than not. When I say young people, I exclude the pathetic cultist who worship Obama.
gearjammer| 1.20.10 @ 9:20AM
The majority in Mass and many other places Donserge are becoming politically agnostic. Read a bit about politics and thinking by the late Michael Crichton. His agnosticism led him to question global warming, and this got him attacked in many quarters, but he had some guts and we now know his questioning of the Gore inc thesis was valid. The party of the 60's generation which implored that we question has now done a monumental flip flop and disdains being questions. Look at Gore, ask him a question and he wants you jailed as an enemy of the planet. This is a guy who was at Harvard in the 60's. Now his generation is being far more disavowed than his father's by a critical mass of citizens who nobody can still not quite define.
Steve| 1.20.10 @ 9:32AM
Wow. The forelock tugging peasants of Taxachusetts finally grew a pair.
And they say miracles don't happen anymore.
TennesseeVolunteer| 1.20.10 @ 10:03AM
Scott Brown played high school basketball?
Brown vs. Obama in a one on one game Loser Leaves Town. My bet is on Scott!. Obama takes way too long to get his shot off, doesn't box out or play defense. Take him to the rack, Scott!
Commonsensedad| 1.20.10 @ 12:25PM
Scott Brown played college basketball at Tufts. He would kick Obumah's butt until his nose bleeds. Have you ever seen the facist in chief swing a golf club or shoot a basket? he doesn't have an athletic bone in his body.
ed| 1.20.10 @ 9:35PM
Obama "plays" basketball only because he's the president - no touching, no defending, and his turnovers and errors are your turnovers and errors. He's about as athletically gifted as he is intellectually gifted.
ccc| 1.20.10 @ 10:19AM
Yes Mass. is edging away from it's insanely liberal history. But the republicans will soon go back to their traditional habit of treating moderates, who elected brown, with normal complete contempt. Thereby driving Mass solidly democrat again.
Galen| 1.20.10 @ 10:28AM
As James Thurber once said "Don't count your boobies till they've hatched." I hope this is the beggining of getting our country back but it will be a LONG MARCH.
Alan Brooks| 1.20.10 @ 12:19PM
Finally, a solid, sober comment.
Considering Mass. is a small state of medium importance; it isn't California. If Mass disapperaed, we'd still exist.
Now here is a question: what do you think we'd do if California's agriculture-- just for starters-- disappeared? Pray an earthquake such as in Haiti doesn't hit the Golden State.
Roy| 1.20.10 @ 1:24PM
All I can say is, if that's our biggest concern, we are in great, great shape.
Oh wait, a million a year are getting arbitrarily vivisected. Guess it isn't.
Paul Revere| 1.20.10 @ 10:42AM
How do I add to this? Stephanie, Son of Sam, et al, you are all my heroes for the day!!!!!
Peter McGrath| 1.20.10 @ 10:44AM
Yesterday's vote was a referendum on the Reid/Pelosi/Obama cabal.
We have witnessed a decisive, strategic defeat for the Left.
One year to the day after his inauguration, Obama wakes up this morning as a lame-duck President.
Congressional Democrats are now scattering like cockroaches trying to squeeze behind the wainscotting to hide from their impending political doom.
Wow. What a difference a Massachussets special Senate race makes ... I feel like like I'm walking on sunshine ... Whooooheee !!!
Dave Williams| 1.20.10 @ 10:47AM
To the people of Massachusetts: THANK YOU, THANK YOU, THANK YOU!!!!!
To Demon-crats in NY, CA, and other pestholes of liberalism: Be afraid....be VERY afraid!
Paul Revere| 1.20.10 @ 10:50AM
As Calvin Coolidge said, "Have faith in Massachusetts" :-)
Jim Hlavac| 1.20.10 @ 11:24AM
The Mass voters Are waking up to the crud of politics. The 47 % that voted for Coakley were going through the motions -- with no enthusiasm -- and large thoughts in their heads of "is this really true? are the Democrats all creeps?" and the answer is coming to be "yes, they are." But they had 50 years of habit to break -- hard to do. They had to overcome the thought of both Not voting for Coakley, and FOR voting for Brown. Many took that first step and did Not vote at all, hence the 47% - and many took a step further and went for Brown. It is a journey though, a political culture does not change over night -- and we can predict that democrats the country over are going to go down -- one by one -- and Mass. will continue doing to too. And so, don't dismiss the 47% who voted by habit -- (how do you think all those RINO republicans get in and stay? -- habit) -- but keep on pointing the way to the Light of Liberty -- and away from the dark of socialism. It may take a few more years, but they'll come over. There are many on the fence, -- and few will remain there -- as the issue is crystalized: Liberty v. Socialism. That's what all races must be about -- tar and feather the Dems as socialists and be done with them.
Oldefarte| 1.20.10 @ 11:42AM
America 1, Democrat terrorist-thugs 0!!!!!
Margie| 1.20.10 @ 11:58AM
Do you think Ted Kennedy will try to contest the election results?
ed| 1.20.10 @ 9:37PM
Why should he? He and the other dead democrats all got to vote yet again, right?
WilliamInWien| 1.20.10 @ 2:43PM
I have often "wrestled" with the process of naming the state with the WORST congressional delegation. Mass usually came in first, just ahead of Illinois and California. Perhaps, MASS can now creep back from being #1 in my book with a solid showing in a statewide election. But then there is Barney and Sen. John French Kerry and, well, there is a lot of work to be done.
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