Boston Herald

Midterm elections bring madness

- By JACKIE GINGRICH CUSHMAN Jackie Gingrich Cushman is a syndicated columnist.

With less than two months to go, the midterm elections are quickly approachin­g, madness ensuing. In politics, as an election date nears, activity grows more frantic and frenzied. Often, candidates who trail for months can overtake the front-runner in the last few days. Breaking news can create a wave for or against a candidate or party, and that can swing an election’s outcome.

The framework for this midterm election is a mixed bag. Items that help Republican­s: control of the House and narrow control of the Senate; a strong economy; Democrats’ having voted against the tax cut bill (which has been successful). And many Democrats are outspoken against Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t, a losing issue with the overall electorate.

Items that push the other way: Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) is not running for re-election; President Trump is a lightening rod; and the confirmati­on process for Brett Kavanaugh has turned into a soap opera.

Let’s start with the economy. According to an article for The Washington Post by Heather Long, “hiring picked up in August, and so did worker pay — registerin­g the fastest wage growth since 2009 in an encouragin­g sign that wages may finally be moving higher after years of sluggish gains.

“August was the 95th straight month the U.S. economy added jobs, with a robust 201,000 job gains, the Labor Department reported Friday,” Long writes, “while wages for U.S. workers grew at 2.9 percent in the past year. The national unemployme­nt rate remained at 3.9 percent, one of the lowest levels in half a century.”

A strong economy would normally bode well for the party in power. However, popularity of the president also factors into the equation. Jeffrey Jones wrote last week for Gallup, “The president’s party almost always suffers a net loss of U.S. House seats in midterm elections,” says Jones. “However, losses tend to be much steeper when the president is unpopular. In Gallup’s polling history, presidents with job approval ratings below 50 percent have seen their party lose 37 House seats, on average, in midterm elections ... President Donald Trump has a 40 percent job approval rating two months before the 2018 midterm elections.”

This loss for midterm elections is true for both parties.

While President Trump has been talking about a red wave during campaign rallies, a recent “private survey conducted for the Republican National Committee and obtained by Bloomberg Businesswe­ek contains alarming news for Republican­s hoping to hold onto control of Congress in November,” writes Joshua Green in Businesswe­ek. “Most Trump supporters don’t believe there’s a threat that Democrats will win back the House,” writes Green. “President Trump’s boasts that a ‘red wave’ could increase Republican majorities appear to have lulled GOP voters into complacenc­y, raising the question of whether they’ll turn up at the polls.”

If Republican­s don’t turn out, they lose. While those who approve of Trump, both personally and from a policy standpoint, will turn out, “the study says GOP fortunes will hinge on the party’s ability to activate ‘soft’ supporters,” writes Green. Soft supporters approve of policy results — but not style.

The next layer is Kavanaugh’s nomination process. Siobhan Hughes wrote for the Wall Street Journal: “Republican­s, while defending President Trump’s Supreme Court nominee, must proceed cautiously or risk losing votes from women as they aim to narrowly confirm the nominee.”

Democrats will attempt to use the nomination fight as a means to push women away from Trump and Republican­s. “In an August Wall Street Journal/NBC News poll, Mr. Trump was up nine points among men who had registered to vote, with 53 percent approving compared with 44 percent who disapprove­d,” writes Hughes. “But he was down 17 points among women, with 40 percent of registered voters approving, compared with 57 percent who disapprove­d.”

Sit back and watch the midterm madness unfold.

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