Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Republican­s are surging, and they may win big

- David Brooks David Brooks is a New York Times columnist.

Democrats had a golden summer. The Dobbs decision led to a surge of voter registrati­ons. Voters handed Democrats a string of sweet victories in unlikely places like Alaska and Kansas. The momentum didn’t survive the fall.

Over the past month or so, there has been a rumbling across the land, and the news is not good for Team Blue. In the latest New York Times/Siena College poll, 49% of likely voters said they planned to vote for a Republican for Congress, and 45% said they planned to vote for a Democrat. Democrats held a 1-point lead last month.

The poll contained some eyepopping numbers. Democrats were counting on abortion rights to be a big issue, gaining them broad support among female voters. It doesn’t seem to be working. Over the past month, the gender gap, which used to favor Democrats, has evaporated. In September, women who identified as independen­t voters favored Democrats by 14 percentage points. Now, they favor Republican­s by 18 points.

Republican­s lead among independen­ts overall by 10 points.

Politico’s election forecast now rates the races in California’s 13th Congressio­nal District and Oregon’s 6th Congressio­nal District as toss-ups. Two years ago, according to Politico, Joe Biden won those areas by 11 and 14 points. If Republican­s are competitiv­e in places like that, we’re probably looking at a red-wave election that will enable them to easily take back the House and maybe the Senate.

So, how should Democrats interpret these trends? There’s a minimalist interpreta­tion: Midterms are usually hard for the president’s party, and this one was bound to be doubly hard because of global inflation. I take a more medium to maximalist view. I’d say recent events have exposed some serious weaknesses in the party’s political approach:

It’s hard to win consistent­ly if voters don’t trust you on the top issue. In a recent AP-NORC poll, voters trust Republican­s to do a better job handling the economy, by 39% to 29%. Over the past two years, Democrats have tried to build a compelling economic platform by making massive federal investment­s in technology, infrastruc­ture and child welfare.

But those policies do not seem to be moving voters. As the Times’ Jim Tankersley has reported, Democratic candidates in competitiv­e Senate races are barely talking about the $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan, which included direct payments to citizens.

Democrats have a crime problem. More than three-fourths of voters say that violent crime is a major problem in the United States, according to a recent Politico/Morning Consult poll. Back in the 1990s, Bill Clinton and Mr. Biden worked hard to give the Democrats credibilit­y on this issue. Many Democrats have walked away from policies the party embraced then, often for good reasons. But they need to find another set of policies that will make the streets safer.

Democrats have not won back Hispanics. In 2016, Donald Trump won 28% of the Hispanic vote and 38% in 2020. This year, as William A. Galston noted in The Wall Street Journal, recent surveys suggest that Republican­s will once again win about 34% to 38% of the Hispanic vote. In Florida, Gov. Ron DeSantis is leading Democrat Charlie Crist by 16 points among Hispanics likely to vote.

The Jan. 6 committee and the warnings about MAGA fascism didn’t change minds. That committee’s work has been morally and legally important. But Mr. Trump’s favorabili­ty rating is pretty much where it was at the committee’s first public hearing. In the Times poll, Mr. Trump is roughly tied with Mr. Biden in a theoretica­l 2024 rematch. According to Politico, less than 2% of broadcast TV spending in House races has been devoted to Jan. 6 ads.

It could be that voters are overwhelme­d by immediate concerns, such as food prices. It could be that voters have become so cynical and polarized that scandal and corruption just don’t move people much anymore. This year, Herschel Walker set some kind of record for the most scandals in one political season. He is still in a competitiv­e race with Sen. Raphael Warnock in Georgia.

The Republican­s may just have a clearer narrative. GOP candidates are telling a very clear class/culture/status war narrative in which common-sense Americans are being assaulted by elite progressiv­es who let the homeless take over the streets, teach sex ed to 5-year-olds, manufactur­e fake news, run woke corporatio­ns, open the border and refuse to do anything about fentanyl deaths and the sorts of things that affect regular people.

In other words, candidates such as Kari Lake, running for governor in Arizona, wrap a dozen different issues into one coherent class war story. And it seems to be working. In late July, she was trailing her opponent by 7 points. Now she’s up by about half a point.

 ?? New York Times ?? Despite a series of scandals, Georgia Republican Senate candidate Herschel Walker remains competitiv­e in his race against Sen. Raphael Warnock. A recent New York Times/Siena College poll showed that 49% of likely voters planned to vote for a Republican for Congress, and 45% said they planned to vote for a Democrat.
New York Times Despite a series of scandals, Georgia Republican Senate candidate Herschel Walker remains competitiv­e in his race against Sen. Raphael Warnock. A recent New York Times/Siena College poll showed that 49% of likely voters planned to vote for a Republican for Congress, and 45% said they planned to vote for a Democrat.

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