Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Gleeful Democrats see political wave; GOP says not so fast

- By Steve Peoples

Jubilant Democrats across America are declaring their big election victories in Virginia and New Jersey — their first of the young Trump era — mark the beginning of an anti-Trump surge that could reshape the balance of power in Congress in 2018. Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer says he can “smell a wave coming.”

Not so fast, Republican­s said Wednesday. But they acknowledg­ed that setbacks in Virginia, New Jersey and elsewhere on Tuesday created new urgency for the GOP to fulfill its list of campaign promises before voters head back to the polls next year. They, along with President Donald Trump, have failed to demolish “Obamacare” and now are straining to approve a far-reaching tax overhaul despite controllin­g the White House and both houses of Congress.

“If anything, this just puts more pressure on making sure we follow through,” House Speaker Paul Ryan said at an event hosted by the Washington Examiner. He added, “I think it simply means we’ve got to deliver.”

Whether the president’s party delivers or not, there is clear cause for concern for a Republican Party that would lose its House majority if Democrats gained 24 seats next fall.

Tuesday’s results left little doubt that Trump’s dismal approval ratings can drag down Republican allies, particular­ly those serving in states he lost last November. And even if his ratings show signs of improvemen­t, history suggests that the first midterm elections for any new president often lead to major gains for the opposing party.

An early string of Republican retirement announceme­nts in competitiv­e districts across Florida, New Jersey and Arizona adds to the GOP’s challenge.

“We’re taking our country back from Donald Trump one election at a time,” Democratic National Committee Chairman Tom Perez said in a Wednesday conference call. “This is not just one night. It is a trend.”

Added Schumer, the New York Democrat: “Our Republican friends better look out.”

Trump declared that the blame for Tuesday’s losses was not his.

“Ed Gillespie worked hard but did not embrace me or what I stand for,” the president tweeted as he toured Asia.

Actually, Gillespie, a mainstream Republican who lost the Virginia governor’s race, had taken up Trump-like positions on such issues as Confederat­e monuments, NFL players’ national anthem demonstrat­ions and the dangers of Hispanic gangs. Trump endorsed him but was not invited to campaign in the state in recent weeks.

Republican National Committee Chair Ronna Romney McDaniel had a different view from Trump’s.

“I absolutely think any candidate should be embracing the president,” she said, “and I think Ed did.”

As for Tuesday’s longerterm significan­ce for the Democrats, both parties’ leaders know that much can change in the year before voters decide the 2018 midterm elections. And Republican­s enjoy a redistrict­ing advantage that limits the number of truly competitiv­e House races, thanks in large part to GOP routs during Barack Obama’s eight years in office.

Also, Democrats wrestle with their own party strife, pitting the Bernie Sanders’ wing against the more mainstream.

The liberal group Democracy for America had abandoned Virginia’s gubernator­ial candidate, Ralph Northam, over immigratio­n policy, then celebrated his win days later. “The plus of a tidal wave like this is it washes away the stains of all the campaigns,” Charles Chamberlai­n, DFA’s executive director, said in an interview.

Republican Party leaders also expect their political outlook to improve dramatical­ly once the GOP-led Congress takes action on taxes or health care.

Based on Tuesday’s results, they need to act quickly.

Governors’ races in Virginia and New Jersey — where Phil Murphy will replace Republican Chris Christie — were perhaps the most consequent­ial, but Democrats also celebrated victories in Maine, where voters slapped the state’s Republican governor, a Trump ally, by backing a measure to expand Medicaid coverage under Obama’s health care law. Manchester, New Hampshire, elected its first Democratic mayor in more than a decade. And Virginia voters sent a large and diverse group of new Democrats to the statehouse, including a transgende­r heavy metal singer, a member of Democratic Socialists of America and a former news anchor whose journalist girlfriend was fatally shot while on-air in 2015.

The results were particular­ly troubling for Republican­s serving in suburban districts in states Trump lost last fall.

Schumer singled out by name one of the most vulnerable House Republican­s in the nation: Rep. Barbara Comstock, whose northern Virginia district lies just west of Washington.

Roughly two of three voters in the counties that primarily make up Comstock’s district backed the Democrat in this week’s governor’s race. Sensing opportunit­y, more than a half dozen Democrats have already lined up to challenge her.

A spokesman for Comstock said that Democrats have regularly underestim­ated the two-term congresswo­man. “Barbara has always over-performed and that won’t change in 2018,” said political director Ken Nunnenkamp.

Trump’s team concedes the Republican Party’s suburban challenges but predicts voters will bounce back once Congress begins to enact his agenda. Embedded in that diagnosis, however, is a warning for Republican lawmakers that continued inaction could be disastrous.

 ?? TOM GRALISH/THE PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER VIA AP ?? New Jersey Gov.-elect Phil Murphy leaps as he jumps onto the stage at his victory party Tuesday, Nov. 7,, in Asbury Park, N.J.
TOM GRALISH/THE PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER VIA AP New Jersey Gov.-elect Phil Murphy leaps as he jumps onto the stage at his victory party Tuesday, Nov. 7,, in Asbury Park, N.J.

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