The Guardian (USA)

‘No Republican blowout’: our panel reacts to the initial US midterm results

- Moira Donegan, Cas Mudde, Robert Reich, Bhaskar Sunkara, LaTosha Brown and Ben Davis

Moira Donegan: ‘It wasn’t meant to be this close’

It was not supposed to be this close. Midterms are always hard for the party in power. In the past, when Democrats have faced a midterm election when they controlled both the White House and Congress, the Republican­s had a blowout.

In 1994, during Bill Clinton’s first term, Republican­s gained huge margins in the house. In 2010, it was even bigger. Joe Biden has proved to be a president with little of his own constituen­cy and few legislativ­e achievemen­ts to show for his first two years of unified government, thanks in no small part to how narrow Democrats’ majorities were in Congress in 2020. Meanwhile, inflation is at roughly 8%. It was supposed to be a blowout night for the Democrats, the kind of humiliatio­n that sent the Biden administra­tion a firm rebuke. It wasn’t.

It’s not that there were no disappoint­ments. There were some painful losses for Democrats: the odious Peter Thiel acolyte JD Vance has won a Senate seat in Ohio; candidates that perenniall­y capture the imaginatio­n and hope of national democrats, like Beto O’Rourke and Stacey Abrams, lost.

But Republican margins are narrow, and even when the party had the wind at their back. Trump-backed, electionde­nying candidates did poorly; so did those who most vocally oppose abortion rights. The Republican party is in disarray, unable to quit Trump, but unable to thrive while anchored to him. If they do end up winning a majority, they will do so weakened and vulnerable.

Moira Donegan is a Guardian US columnist

Cas Mudde: ‘No red tsunami’

Much remains unclear at the time of writing this, but we know the following: first and foremost, there is no red tsunami. The Republican­s are doing better than in 2020, but far less well than was expected just a few months ago.

Second, while the Dobbs abortion ruling did not bring the blue wave that Democratic operatives had promised, the pro-choice counter-mobilizati­on has definitely mitigated Republican wins.

Third, while Joe Biden comes out of the midterms relatively unscathed, this cannot be said of Donald Trump. Several of his hand-picked and personally endorsed outsiders might have achieved shocking primary victories, and some might even still win their elections. But still: the vast majority clearly underperfo­rmed in comparison to more traditiona­l Republican candidates in the same states.

The much-watched state of Georgia provided perhaps the most embarrassi­ng result for Trump: Brian Kemp, the candidate he campaigned hardest against, was comfortabl­y re-elected governor, while Herschel Walker, his hand-picked Senate candidate, polled almost 5% behind Kemp and is probably facing a highly uncertain runoff against Raphael Warnock.

Fourth, Trump’s main rival within the Republican party, Florida governor Ron DeSantis, not only convincing­ly won re-election, but polled almost 2% ahead of Senator Marco Rubio and gifted his party three new, gerrymande­red, House seats.

All of this means that, even if the Republican party does seize control of the House and/or Senate, it is facing a very uncertain period in the run-up to the 2024 presidenti­al elections. It is now overly clear to everyone that Trump is both a necessity in the primaries and a liability in the elections. Everyone but Donald Trump, that is.

Cas Mudde is a Guardian US columnist and the Stanley Wade Shelton UGAF professor in the school of public and internatio­nal affairs at the University of Georgia

Robert Reich: ‘Democrats didn’t do too badly’

Let me focus on four ways today’s election was unique:

1. Compared to previous midterm elections when the party that occupied the White House took a major drubbing (Clinton lost 54 House seats; Obama, 63; Trump, 40), Democrats didn’t do too badly – even though, when the dust settles, they are likely to lose control of the House.

2. Compared to the amount of money spent on previous elections, this one was staggering. Total spending on federal and state races could exceed $16.7bn, according to estimates by Open Secrets.

American billionair­es will have spent an estimated $1bn, mostly on Republican candidates and causes. (Peter Thiel alone sunk $30m into the Senate campaigns of JD Vance in Ohio and Blake Masters in Arizona.) That’s 44% higher than billionair­es’ total spending during the 2018 midterm cycle, according to a report published Thursday by the group Americans for Tax Fairness.

What will the super-rich get back on their investment­s? Republican­s won’t have the votes to override Biden’s vetoes, so they’ll likely try to weaponize raising the debt ceiling (as they did in 2011) to force Democrats to agree to more tax cuts and regulatory rollbacks for their wealthy patrons.

3. Compared to other elections in which Russia has denied seeking to affect the outcome, in this one, Russia, in the form of a Russian oligarch close to Vladimir Putin, openly boasted of such interferen­ce.

4. Finally, compared with what’s been at stake in previous elections, the stakes in this one are especially high for the future.

Last June, half of Americans lost

the constituti­onal right to an abortion, courtesy of the Trump supreme court, and Republican­s in Congress have threatened to ban abortions nationally. Meanwhile, more than half of Republican candidates in today’s election sided with Donald Trump in denying that Joe Biden won the 2020 election.

What’s decided today in races for Congress as well as for state offices will affect the trajectory of both issues – the future of abortion rights and of democracy – including Trump’s presumed effort to become America’s first dictator.

Robert Reich, a former US secretary of labor, is professor of public policy at the University of California, Berkeley, and the author of Saving Capitalism: For the Many, Not the Few and The Common Good. His new book, The System: Who Rigged It, How We Fix It, is out now. He is a Guardian US columnist. His newsletter is at robertreic­h.substack.com

Bhaskar Sunkara: ‘Tonight is a wake-up call’

Tonight should be a wake-up call for Democrats. Yes, the worst has been avoided for the party, but their dominant midterm strategy simply didn’t work.

Of course, circumstan­ces conspired against them – midterms are always difficult for incumbent parties. Add to that an unfavorabl­e set of seats up for grabs, inflation and general concerns about the cost of living, a crime spike since 2019, and it’s hard to imagine how Democrats could have maintained the House of Representa­tives this cycle.

But there were opportunit­ies that could have been exploited in the US Senate that were thwarted by the rhetoric and priorities of the party. Bernie Sanders’ October op-ed right here in the Guardian reads like prophecy: “You can’t win elections unless you have the support of the working class of this country.” Abortion was a crucial issue galvanizin­g millions of people, many of them workers, to vote. Yet Sanders was right to say that it was “political malpractic­e for Democrats to ignore the state of the economy and allow Republican lies and distortion­s to go unanswered”.

Consider the strong performanc­e of John Fetterman in Pennsylvan­ia, who at the time of writing looks poised to win and Tim Ryan in Ohio, who outperform­ed Biden’s 2020 mark despite coming up short against JD Vance. They ran campaigns with clear economic focused messages and focused on everyday concerns. There’s no reason more candidates like them couldn’t have been put forward.

Biden has a relatively strong policy record as president so far, but his and the Democratic leadership’s inability to win on the economy and present themselves as the party of working people hurt them tonight. No matter how low expectatio­ns were, a loss is a loss: millionair­e-funded NGOs can’t again be allowed to dominate the rhetoric and priorities of the party.

Bhaskar Sunkara is the president of the Nation, the founding editor of Jacobin, and the author of The Socialist Manifesto: the Case for Radical Politics in an Era of Extreme Inequaliti­es

LaTosha Brown: ‘Trump can still win in 2024’

One thing is clear: we are not in a post-Trump world. We are in a Trumpian era. It is not far-fetched that Trump could rise to power again. In fact, we’ve seen many candidates who share his values capture seats in this election.

The Democratic party needs to do far more to reach out to Black voters. In Georgia, where Stacey Abrams lost to Brian Kemp, we didn’t see an investment on the ground as we saw in previous cycles.

This was the largest election since a slew of voter-suppressio­n bills were signed into law, and we are dealing, in part, with the legacy of that. The political landscape has shifted, and we need a multi-racial, multi-generation­al prodemocra­cy movement to respond to that.

LaTosha Brown is the co-founder of Black Voters Matter

Ben Davis: ‘This should have been a Republican blowout. It wasn’t’

This has been a weird and contradict­ory electoral cycle, but one thing is clear: this is the best midterm for any administra­tion since the 2002 election when the country was gripped by the war fever of 9/11.

Democrats will probably lose seats: perhaps no one “won” this election. Some states look like they have shifted to the right (Florida appears to be lost to Democrats forever) while some seem extremely strong for Democrats. This year has been confused, because the government is confused.

While the Democrats control the actual elected federal government, the primary transforma­tive policy change that has happened came from the hard right, overturnin­g Roe v Wade. It certainly hasn’t felt like the Democrats have power over the last two years. The big takeaway so far is there is no red wave and there is no systemic bias in polling toward Democrats.

The first term of a Democratic presidency with Democratic control of the Senate and House, high inflation, and most of the country disappoint­ed in the direction of the country shouldbe a Republican blowout. As of the time of writing, it looks likely the Republican party takes back the House and there’s a real chance they take back the US senate, depending on the results of some razor-thin races.

But it’s hard to call this a win for the Republican­s or a loss for the Democrats and the Biden administra­tion. If this were a first midterm wipeout like in 2010 or 2018, the Republican­s could claim victory. Instead, they have underachie­ved nearly everywhere.

Two things have happened: Donald Trump activated turnout that won’t go away, and the Dobbs decision further polarized the electorate along culture war lines. Once people get in the habit of voting they rarely stop, and Donald Trump activated so many people on both sides that dreary midterms are a thing of the past.

Ben Davis works in political data in Washington. He worked on the data team for the Bernie Sanders 2020 campaign

 ?? Fetterman. Photograph: Matt Rourke/AP ?? A an election night campaign event for Mehmet Oz, the Republican candidate for Senate in Pennsylvan­ia. Oz lost to the Democrat John
Fetterman. Photograph: Matt Rourke/AP A an election night campaign event for Mehmet Oz, the Republican candidate for Senate in Pennsylvan­ia. Oz lost to the Democrat John
 ?? Photograph: Julio Cortez/AP ?? Democrat Wes Moore, the new governor of Maryland.
Photograph: Julio Cortez/AP Democrat Wes Moore, the new governor of Maryland.

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