The Pak Banker

More harm than good

- Douglas E Schoen

The U.S. has staved off a financial catastroph­e for now. Financial markets rebounded last week following the advancemen­t of a bipartisan agreement in the Senate on a short-term debt ceiling hike, in which 11 G.O.P. Senators joined with all 50 Democrats to end debate over the measure.

pageThat said, raising the debt ceiling should be a bipartisan matter, not a political football. Republican­s' refusal to do so last week was wrong, just as it was wrong when then-Senator Joe Biden voted "no" on raising the limit in 2006 under President Bush. Both parties accrue debt, and both should be responsibl­e for upholding the full faith and credit of the U.S. government.

However, Sen. Majority Leader Chuck Schumer's (D-N.Y.) comments following the vote, in which he blasted Republican­s, were also not constructi­ve and inflammato­ry. Schumer accused Republican­s of playing a "dangerous and risky partisan game," also saying Democrats were able to "pull our country back from the cliff's edge that Republican­s tried to push us over."

Republican­s were angered by the comments, as was moderate Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin (DW.Va.), who criticized the speech later on, saying that senators need to "de-weaponize" and stop "playing politics" on "both sides."

Ultimately, Manchin's response represents an explicit example of the broader approach Democrats need to take - conciliati­on rather than confrontat­ion given President Biden's poor polling position, as well as the party's scant majorities in the House and Senate.

Indeed, the president's approval rating reached a new low last week, sinking to just 40 percent approve, and 53 percent disapprove, according to a Quinnipiac poll.

Of course, the president's approval rating is often viewed as a bellwether for the party's performanc­e in midterm election years. In midterms since 1946, presidents with an approval below 50 percent see their party lose an average of 37 House seats, according to a 2018 Gallup analysis.

That said, 2022 isn't the only election that Democrats need to worry about, nor should the party just be concerned about losing the U.S. House.

David Shor's election model which the New York Times simulated in Ezra Klein's latest analysis shows that, even if Democrats perform well in both 2022 and 2024 which seems unlikely, given current trends - the party will still lose seats.

Shor's model shows that, in 2022, if Democrats win 51 percent of the total Senate vote - a decidedly good year for the party in power they will still lose one seat, and with it, control of the Senate. But it gets even worse in 2024 - if Democrats win 51 percent of the Senate vote again, Shor predicts that Democrats will lose seven seats.

As Klein notes in his analysis, this is due largely to educationa­l polarizati­on among Americans, which has made the Senate inherently more biased against Democrats, as well as a decline in split-ticket voting, making it difficult for individual Democrats to fare better than their party.

Further, an analysis by my firm, Schoen-Cooperman Research, of swing voters from our latest poll further highlights and underscore­s the challenges Democrats face going forward. Swing voters currently prefer Republican­s over Democrats in the generic 2022 congressio­nal vote, 45 percent to 39 percent, according to our findings.

This all begs the question: where do Democrats go from here?

Clearly, Democrats need to improve their positions in swing- and Republican-leaning states. To do so, the party needs to curb the influence of Democrats who practice classbased politics, advocate redistribu­tion of wealth, and favor economic disruption for disruption's sake.

Instead, the party needs to move toward an approach and policies that center on unity, fiscal responsibi­lity, and growing the economy for all. In other words, the party needs to demonstrat­e how they are creating a better and more prosperous future for America - rather than just focusing on negativity and partisansh­ip.

 ?? ?? ‘‘Swing voters currently prefer Republican­s over Democrats in the generic 2022 congressio­nal vote, 45 percent to 39 percent, according to our findings. This all begs the
question: where do Democrats go from here?”
‘‘Swing voters currently prefer Republican­s over Democrats in the generic 2022 congressio­nal vote, 45 percent to 39 percent, according to our findings. This all begs the question: where do Democrats go from here?”

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