After a second day of analysis and reflection, key implications of Tuesday’s elections seem clearer.
The election was a referendum, all right, but on the state of the U.S. economy, not President Obama. In exit polls, most voters (over 80 percent) said the economy was their top concern. Those who professed to be “very worried” backed the Republican candidates for governor in Virginia and New Jersey by wide margins. If high unemployment persists well into next year, as White House economists forecast, it will spell serious trouble for Congressional Democrats.
Republicans were more motivated to vote Tuesday. Democrats suffered a big drop-off of voting by the young and minorities compared to 2008. But the pivotal factor was the dramatic swing of independents, whom Obama won last year. This time, independents voted 2-1 for Republican candidates.
There was an ideological subtext to the independents’ defection. In addition to worries about jobs and the economy, many of them seem fixated on the nexus of “big government,” spending and debt. There’s no doubt that growing distrust of government is complicating President Obama’s ability to forge majorities in Congress for his big, and costly, initiatives, especially health reform.
Many progressives worry that the election results will send moderate Democrats running for the tall grass. Certainly, the outcome should concentrate the minds of Congressional negotiators who are struggling to get 60 votes in the Senate for health reform. Too much time has been wasted on the public option, which already has been watered down and which in any case isn’t worth jeopardizing prospects for an historic breakthrough on universal coverage.
The way for Democrats to hold their moderates in line is to 1) make sure the bill’s cost doesn’t balloon, and that it meets Obama’s demand to add “not one penny” to the federal deficit; and, 2) take tougher steps to reduce medical cost inflation.
The election also may fuel Congressional demands to put on hold President Obama’s other ambitious goals – regulatory reform, a carbon cap-and-trade scheme, immigration reform – so that lawmakers can concentrate instead on the economy. That may make sense, if they can find practical ways to relieve economic distress without aggravating public anxiety about government overreach and profligacy.
But one thing Tuesday didn’t produce was evidence of an electorate turning hard right. The only movement conservative running – Doug Hoffman – lost his race for Congress in upstate New York, flipping a traditionally Republican seat to the Democrats. Will the Palin-Beck wing nevertheless continue their crusade to drive moderates out of the Republican Party? We can only hope.