Las Vegas Review-Journal

Midterms deliver a stalemate Ross Douthat

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For once, it all happened more or less as we foresaw — and by “we” I mean risk-averse political commentato­rs who hugged the polling averages and projection­s tight while resisting both Betomania and the occasional flashbacks to 2016. A good night for Republican­s in the Senate. An excellent night for Democrats in the House. The Trumpian Upper Midwest swinging back toward Democrats. Red-state Senate voters sticking with the GOP. The mobilize-the-base strategy falling just short for Democrats in Florida and Georgia. A rebuke to President Donald Trump in the overall returns, but not a presidency-ending repudiatio­n. Two years of chaos and hysteria ending in a return to stalemate.

Between their Senate gains and a few surprising gubernator­ial victories, Republican­s probably have enough consolatio­n prizes to feel OK about the outcome. Trump critics on the right will feel a little better than OK, since now the House can check and investigat­e our morally challenged president while the Senate keeps confirming conservati­ve judges.

But this election confirms that, contra certain Trump enthusiast­s, the #MAGA era in right-wing politics is essentiall­y a defensive era, in which the GOP leverages a fortunate Electoral College win and an advantage in the Senate to fill the courts and delay liberal ambitions for a time — but fails, conspicuou­sly, to reap political rewards from the current economic expansion and to build an actual popular majority.

Instead, after its nominee traded a lot of suburban voters for stronger working-class support in 2016, the Trump-era Republican Party has continued to hemorrhage suburbanit­es while also giving back some of those Midwestern, blue-collar gains. The political strategy for Republican­s after Trump’s victory should have been obvious: Seal the working-class realignmen­t with a dose of economic populism, hold the suburbs by dialing back the Trumpian excesses. Instead the president let congressio­nal Republican­s have their way on policy, and they let him be himself in other ways — which makes the Democratic sweep in the House exactly the outcome that both the soon-departing Paul Ryan and the president deserve.

And to the extent that conservati­ves — normal and Nevertrump alike — are willing to live with that outcome so long as they hold the Senate, it’s what we deserve as well. There is no conservati­ve governing agenda at the moment; there is only a desire not to be ruled by liberalism. So that desire will be fulfilled for two more years and possibly for more — but meanwhile the ability to actually move legislatio­n will be rightfully taken from a movement and a party that had no agenda of any significan­ce to move.

What about Democrats? If Republican­s just spent two years squanderin­g a chance at a populist realignmen­t, their rivals spent Election Day proving that they have solved some of their Obama-era problems — midterm turnout, above all — without finding a way to turn a popular-vote advantage into the Senate majority that, no matter how unjust liberals increasing­ly find the existence of the Senate, they still need to somehow win.

The big, bold claim from the party’s progressiv­e wing, that mobilizati­on and demographi­c change can make the nominate-a-moderate strategy unnecessar­y, fell conspicuou­sly short in several races. Meanwhile Joe Manchin showed that the old model of nominating a populist who fits your state’s swing voters still has life. But not enough life to save Joe Donnelly or elect Phil Bredesen, or to persuade the Democratic base to suddenly discover an enthusiasm for Senate candidates who are pro-life or immigratio­n-restrictio­nist or ready, like Manchin with Brett Kavanaugh, to confirm Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court.

No: Democrats obviously want to win purple and red Senate seats, but they want to win them the way they just lost in Texas, with charisma and mobilizati­on rather than with ideologica­l compromise. So they’re left waiting, as before, for demography or a recession to deliver them that opportunit­y.

Until it comes, we have two parties that in different ways seem content with their insufficie­nt coalitions, and a country that needs a governing majority but will settle yet again for stalemate.

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