“It isn’t hard to find Democratic pollsters who privately
concede that the [polling] numbers they are looking at now are
worse than what they saw in 1994,”
says Charlie Cook, the knowledgeable pundit
and editor of the authoritative Cook Report.
The Gallup Poll has the
generic party ballot in double-digits
favoring the GOP, double the margin in 1994, the year the
Republicans swept into power via the Contract for
America.
If you are a conservative Midwesterner like me, you might
prefer to under-promise and over-deliver, not the reverse. But it
is hard to ignore the political sea change in progress. Dozens of
House races are targets for recovery by the Republicans. Senate
seats in Missouri, Pennsylvania, Arkansas, even Wisconsin may be
shifting to the “R” column. The President’s job approval numbers
are below 50 percent, and Americans tell pollsters that the GOP can
do better in every issue category except the environment. All this
with record low approval ratings for the party of Lincoln
notwithstanding.
Even in my own congressional district, Virginia’s 11th,
the very heart of the northern suburbs outside of Washington, D.C.,
a district in which President Obama handily defeated Senator McCain
in 2008 and set the stage for his historic victory in the
Commonwealth, the Republican tide is rising again. Exactly how high
is, as yet, unknown.
Keith Fimian, a handsome, successful
businessman, former athlete and battle-hardened campaigner is
running against Gerald Connolly, an incumbent and a career
politician who voted consistently with Speaker Pelosi during his
first term in office. I say that Fimian is “battle-hardened”
because he was beaten by Connolly during the Obama blowout of
McCain.
Fimian recently defeated a Republican county official in a
heated primary in which more establishmentarian Republicans lined
up against Fimian, who is a strong supply-sider and
pro-life.
Fimian points to his own polling, which shows him beating
Connolly, a former chairman of the Fairfax County Board of
Supervisors. At this point there are no public polls tracking the
race. Still, the fact that Fimian, who has a knack for fundraising
— and no fear of going negative when necessary — is even
competitive is really amazing.
Keep in mind that this area of Virginia is more like a New
Jersey suburb and is populated by tens of thousands of government
employees or employees of firms who work for the government. It has
the highest median income of any congressional district in the
country and is one of the wealthiest areas in the country. However,
its wealth is grounded in the workings of government and the
political process rather than the market place.
Virginia’s 11th was once held by moderate Republican
Congressman Tom Davis, who spends an inordinate amount of time
complaining about the GOP’s lack of inclusiveness. Yet Virginia’s
new Republican Governor Bob McDonnell was able to win in northern
Virginia last year, a feat that two previous Republican
gubernatorial candidates failed to accomplish. So things are
looking up in this part of the Commonwealth.
I hope to revisit this race from time to time in the
coming weeks, not just because it is my district and convenient for
me to follow, but it is an indicator of how big a tidal wave may or
may not be coming in November. If Keith Fimian wins the 11th, the
GOP will far exceed their electoral success of 1994. You can follow
the Fimian campaign itself at KeithFimian.com.
The Labor Day sprint to November has begun. The game is
afoot.
John Daniel| 9.7.10 @ 7:06AM
The Post will start it's macaca campaign beginning October 7. Hope Fimian's ready.
Ken (Old Texican)| 9.7.10 @ 7:07AM
G.
Lots of luck in a district of federal teat-suckers.
Stuart Koehl| 9.7.10 @ 9:15AM
Residents of Fairfax County only voted Connolly into Congress to get him out of the Chairman's seat on the Board of Supervisors. Now that we have accomplished that, we can return this hack to the private sector, where he spent most of his time shilling for unpleasant clients seeking government handouts.
Santino 49| 9.7.10 @ 11:51AM
Connelly needs to be careful - he might actually encounter some constituents in this campaign. He is the king of the robo-call gated-community "town hall meeting." Looking forward to seeing him have to work for a living when this is over.
Yosemeti Sam| 9.8.10 @ 12:51AM
" ... The game is afoot."
Indeed - and the Hound of the Baskervilles is in pursuit of the Democrats!
LOL.