Republicans lead in off-year Tuesday elections
Published: 04 November, 2009, 07:56
Edited: 05 November, 2009, 07:15
Polling station November 3, 2009 in Basking Ridge, New Jersey (Hiroko Masuike / Getty Images / AFP)
(11.1Mb) embed videoIn Tuesday’s U.S. elections, Atlanta was also choosing a new mayor while New Jersey and Virginia voted for governors - with a surprise victory for Republican candidates in both states.
And with Barack Obama trying hard to support Democratic campaigns across America, the outcome of the elections is being widely regarded as a measure of the President’s popularity one year into his term.
The day is called a mini version of the Super Tuesday, when all of the candidates’ campaigning comes to a head.
In the 35th Congressional District in the state of Virginia, the governor's race between the Republican candidate, Bob McDonnell, and the Democratic candidate, Craig Deeds, is being closely watched.
In this one district, if Deeds has a problem getting enough votes, this can also signal a problem for President Obama, since the district is usually heavily Democratic.
This meant that the Democratic candidate relied on Barack Obama to boost him in the polls in which he was trailing.
The case is similar, also, to the Democratic governor of New Jersey who is seeking re-election. But if this doesn’t work, some suggest this may be a sign that the President isn’t as popular as he once was.
Throughout the day, the Republican candidate in Virginia, Bob McDonnel, had a steady and strong lead, the case, too, for New Jersey Republican Chris Christie.
But some say that not much should be read into such results.
"Governor's races are pretty localized. They tend to focus on issues in the state,” Professor Dennis Johnson from George Washington University explained.
“It depends on how strong the candidates are. Sometimes you might have very weak candidates who are from the President's party. Sometimes, you have strong ones. The opponents of the President, particularly in the conservative wing of the Republican Party, have not given Obama one moment of peace,” he added.
After all, the real truth about the President’s popularity comes through when the Super Tuesday isn’t “mini”.
04.11.2009, 05:22
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04.11.2009, 14:01
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There is no real difference in the democrats and the republicans. America has only one party. It is the Billionaire's party. They operate like a MUT AND JEFF TEAM spewing their propaganda and keeping the people brainwashed into the so called two party system. The people are not smart enough to break loose from this fraud and elect someone outside the REPUBLICAN AND DEMOCRAT SCAM {billionaire's party}. I don't know if they really deserve anything better, because they are not smart enough to see this going on. Keep preaching DEMOCRACY around the world when you are owned and controlled billionaires, like the recent Mayor's election in New York City.












The economy is in relative shambles, and the Republicans were extremely unpopular in 08 whereas Obama was the utter reverse. As economic woes persist, as the 8 horrible years of Bush become less proximate, as nervousness ensues over the new president's agenda, it is inevitable that the Democrats will loose some of their present power because basically they got about as much power through the 06 and 08 elections as it was possible for Democrats to acquire with the electorate. This isn't to say they'll lose their majorities in both houses, but these majorities are likely to decrease. More certainly in the house than in the senate because the third of the senate that is coming up for reelection next year was last elected in 04, which was the last time the republicans did well in a federal election. In contrast, the entire house is up for reelection every year, so the Republicans are very likely to gain some seats in the house. The only third parties that have ever succeeded, and only a few ever did, in the 200+ years history of the US democracy were vast defections from a preexisting major party. Through a combination of largely lacking run off elections and of as a rule having winner takes all elections for legislatures (as opposed to the proportional system that exists in many European states and ensures minority voices gain representation thereby removing the risks associated with voting for a third party) the US system ensures a duopoly on power. Hence, although the American people are dissatisfied with both parties, they are tragically stuck with them.