[Originially posted 8/11/06 on Forward Together Blog]
The Hotline‘s Chuck Todd wrote an astute analysis of Tuesday’s primary elections, which saw the historic defeat of three incumbents. Each of the primary battles shared a common thread:
…they all lost to candidates promising to do the same thing: change Washington. Change the spending habits, or change the foreign policy, or simply change personal behavior.
More than their ideology, voters chose the challengers because they’re looking for a change, a new approach to handling the issues facing our nation.
The pundits are painting Tuesday’s results as a sign to Democrats. But it’s larger than that: it’s a sign that voters are tired of any incumbent that hasn’t challenged this President and his policies. This week’s poll results further emphasize their desire for change.
Governor Warner said yesterday that, “Republican wishful thinking notwithstanding, Tuesday’s vote was anything but a Democratic party repudiation of a robust and determined defense of this nation’s security.” Rather, it is a referendum against the Republican leadership of the last several years.
Otto Man from “Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Nachos,” comes to this conclusion:
We’re seeing two overlapping, but not identical movements out there — an anti-incumbency mood in the general electorate, and an anti-Bush drive in the Democratic ranks. Together, they spell bad news for the Bush enablers. Incumbent Republicans are running scared, not just from Bush’s Corleone Kiss of Death but from any connection to the Republican Party at all. Man oh man, is that a bad sign for the GOP.
The lesson is simple: Democrats and Americans in general are sick of the way things are being run. They want to see a declining deficit, not a rising one. They want to see progress in Iraq, not just rhetoric. They want real leadership, not more broken promises.
Ultimately, since there seems to be no interest from Republicans in changing our current government’s course, voters want to see improvements in their lives and not more of the same.