Starkville Daily News

Will Trump Republican­s avoid the Off-Year Curse?

- Michael Barone is a senior political analyst for the Washington Examiner, resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and longtime co-author of The Almanac of American Politics.

Curious fact, and one disquietin­g for Republican­s looking ahead to

2018: In the past 65 years, starting with 1952, the president's party has managed to win a majority of seats in an off-year election only four times.

In the other 12 off-year elections, the opposition party won a majority.

Special circumstan­ces, unlikely to be replicated next year, accounted for the four presidenti­al party victories.

In two of these off-year elections, 1966 and 1978, a Democratic president's party had won better than 2-1 majorities in the House two years before. In the 1966 backlash against Lyndon Johnson's Great Society, Democrats were reduced from 295 seats to 247, but it was still well above the 218 needed for a majority. In a milder recoil against Jimmy Carter in 1978, Democrats were reduced from 292 seats to a still robust 277.

Those precedents don't apply now. Yes, Republican­s won 241 House seats in November 2016 and have held on to the four up for grabs in the special elections this spring, and they're unlikely to lose the one currently vacant seat, in Utah, in the special election next fall. But unlike the Democrats in 1966 and 1978, who could have lost 70-plus seats and still kept a majority, Republican­s will lose theirs next year if they lose a net of only 24 seats.

In the other two off-years in which incumbent parties held House majorities, the president enjoyed highly positive job approval. John F. Kennedy's approval rating in October and November 1962 ranged from 62 to 74 percent. George W. Bush's approval numbers ranged from 56 to 59 percent in those months in 2002.

Those approval ratings were boosted by their responses to foreign threats — Soviet threats on Berlin and the Cuban missile crisis in 1961-62, the 9/11 attacks and fighting in Afghanista­n in 2001-02. It's possible that his response to similar crises could boost Donald Trump's job approval far above his current 40 percent.

But these precedents are not necessaril­y applicable, either. Democrats had what everyone considered a permanent House majority for going on four decades. In every congressio­nal election from 1958 to 1992, they won at least 243 seats — more than Republican­s won in every election over the past 65 years except 2014.

During that period, most voters usually split their tickets, favoring Republican­s for president and Democrats for Congress. In that climate, major legislatio­n was typically bipartisan — 1970s and '80s deregulati­on, the 1981 tax cuts, tax reform in 1986, the 1986 immigratio­n law, the ClintonGin­grich welfare reform and balanced budget in the '90s. A key role was often played by the traditiona­lly bipartisan and ably led Senate Finance Committee.

That has changed, thanks to the polarized partisan patterns that have prevailed (except for a 2006-08 lurch toward the Democrats) since the mid-1990s. They have resulted in more narrowly divided houses of Congress, with both parties fearful (or hopeful) that the next election could change party majorities.

George W. Bush succeeded in producing bipartisan majorities for 2001 and 2003 tax cuts and the 2003 Medicare prescripti­on drug law but failed on Social Security reform in 2005. Barack Obama proved unable to resist the tempta-

tion, given the Democrats' luck in securing a Senate supermajor­ity, to produce monopartis­anly a stimulus package in 2009 and Obamacare in 2010.

After Republican­s gained 63 seats and recaptured the House in 2010, the Democrats' Senate leader, Harry Reid, changed Senate rules and clamped down on colleagues inclined to bipartisan­ship, such as Kent Conrad and Ron Wyden. The Senate Finance Committee was changed from a crucible of bipartisan­ship to a creature of the party leadership.

Bipartisan­ship means shapers of legislatio­n have many options, whereas monopartis­anship requires corralling all or all but a couple of a party's legislator­s. A predictabl­e result is flawed, slapdash mishmashes, such as Obamacare and the Republican­s' attempts at an Obamacare replacemen­t.

Obama's monopartis­an legislatio­n triggered a return to the 1994-2004 polarized partisan patterns. Will the Trump Republican­s' monopartis­anship provoke a lurch toward the Democrats like that in 2006-08?

The special election results suggest it may. But in special elections, voters can cast protest votes without risking a change in party control. That risk is higher in off-year elections.

Analysis by Echelon Insights' Patrick Ruffini shows that Democratic turnout spiked in the first three special elections this year. But Republican turnout spiked as well in the runoff election in Georgia's 6th Congressio­nal District and prevented a Democratic victory. Does that suggest the president's party will be the fifth in 66 years to hold its House majority in the off-year elections? Maybe.

 ??  ?? MICHAEL BARONE CREATORS SYNDICATE
MICHAEL BARONE CREATORS SYNDICATE

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