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Republicans to Republican Party: WE WON’T VOTE FOR YOU!!

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The Republican Party is getting exactly what it has been begging for: defeat. This time in Mississippi. Last time was Louisiana. Before that was Illinois. The Republicans are paying the price for playing Democrat. This is GREAT!! Let’s vote against ALL Republicans until some of those morons figure out that Republican voters want to be able to vote for a true Republican, not a RINO. Not to worry: the disaster for the GOP is just beginnning. From the article:

May 14, 2008
GOP Stunned By Loss in Mississippi
By Reid Wilson

In a major blow to national Republicans, a Mississippi congressional seat that once voted for President Bush by a twenty-five point margin elected a Democrat on Tuesday. Prentiss County Chancery Clerk Travis Childers beat out Republican candidate Greg Davis, the mayor of Southaven, by a 54%-46% margin, a spread that several Republican strategists on Capitol Hill characterized as a startling wake-up call for a party in dire straits.

Voters cast ballots for the fourth time in three months for the seat, vacated when Republican Roger Wicker was appointed to fill the remainder of Senator Trent Lott’s term. After winning the primary and the runoff election, Childers came within 410 votes of winning the first round of the special election against Davis on April 22, beating the Republican by a 49%-46% margin.

Last night, Childers, a conservative Democrat, again outperformed Davis in many rural counties. Childers did better than in April in eighteen out of twenty four counties, while he underperformed in just two counties. Childers held steady in three of the remaining counties, while Winston County produced just ten votes. Most importantly, Childers held firm in Lee County, the district’s largest and home to Tupelo, winning 58% of the vote, while improving his showing in DeSoto County, Davis’s home field. Childers won 25% of the vote in DeSoto County, better than his anemic 17% showing in April.

The results came despite national Republican efforts aimed at winning the seat. Senators Thad Cochran and Roger Wicker, former Senator Trent Lott and Governor Haley Barbour campaigned hard for Davis. On Monday, perhaps as an unfortunate measure of how Republican the district really is, Vice President Dick Cheney held a rally for Davis. Closing the gap in DeSoto County, said Childers pollster John Anzalone, was crucial. “All we were looking to do was to cut the margins there,” he said.

The loss has already shaken establishment Republicans in Washington. After losing special elections in Illinois and Louisiana, the House GOP conference already expects a bad year for their party. But those two districts voted for President Bush by eleven and nineteen points, respectively, not by a whopping twenety five points. “People are going to want change,” said a top aide to a leading House Republican. “The excuses, that [Davis] didn’t have the resources or that he wasn’t from the right part of the district, that’s just not going to hold up.”

In the earlier special elections, Republicans blamed their candidate — businessman Jim Oberweis in Illinois and former state legislator Woody Jenkins in Louisiana — for the party’s loss. As polls showed Davis losing to Childers, national Republicans began to signal they would blame Davis for being from the wrong part of the district.

But instead of blaming Davis, National Republican Congressional Committee chairman Tom Cole issued a surprisingly blunt statement about his party’s own chances, coming a week after a national poll showed Democrats leading Republicans by a wide 50%-32% margin on generic congessional ballot tests. “Tonight’s election highlights two significant challenges Republicans must overcome this November,” Cole said. “First, Republicans must be prepared to campaign against Democrat challengers who are running as conservatives, even as they try to join a liberal Democrat majority. Though the Democrats’ task will be more difficult in a November election, the fact is they have pulled off two special election victories with this strategy, and it should be a concern to all Republicans.”

“The political environment is such that voters remain pessimistic about the direction of the country and the Republican Party in general,” Cole continued. “I encourage all Republican candidates, whether incumbents or challengers, to take stock of their campaigns and position themselves for challenging campaigns this fall by building the financial resources and grassroots networks that offer them the opportunity and ability to communicate, energize and turn out voters this election.”

Still, losing heavily Republican seats in the Deep South is a big blow to the Washington GOP. “To lose two Southern seats in two weeks, I mean, oh my God,” the leadership aide said. The aide told Real Clear Politics that something new is going to happen at the NRCC. “People look at Cole, and they say, ‘What are you going to do to change?’ And if he doesn’t want to change, change is going to be forced on him.”

A top adviser to a Republican incumbent who has a difficult race in November already says his boss is not looking to the NRCC for the same help he got in 2006. “This chairman badly underestimated how important it is to have top-flight staff,” the adviser said, adding that some NRCC staffers are “toiling” under supervisors with less campaign experience. “We had been planning all along to operate without much help from them.”

Read the entire article HERE.

There’s more good news for Conservatives in the Financial Times:

Republicans fear election juggernaut

By Edward Luce and Andrew Ward in Washington

Published: May 14 2008 18:49 | Last updated: May 14 2008 18:49

Hillary Clinton’s supporters on Tuesday proclaimed her crushing victory in West Virginia as evidence of Barack Obama’s continuing weakness among blue collar workers. But the simultaneous Democratic victory in a Mississippi congressional race suggested there may be little the Republicans can do to stop 2008 from being a washout.

Fuelled by a strong African-American turnout, the Democratic win in Mississippi on Tuesday delivered the third consecutive Republican congressional defeat in otherwise safe districts following a recent loss in Louisiana and in the Illinois district of Dennis Hastert, the former Republican speaker.

In both Louisiana and Mississippi, Republican attempts to link the Democratic candidate to Mr Obama failed. Polls suggest the Democrats could increase their Senate lead from a 51-49 split to a safer 55-45 majority and add to their majority in the House of Representatives by 10 to 15 seats in the elections in November.

“Since 1980 I have not seen a terrain so tilted against one party as it is against the Republicans in 2008,” says Norman Ornstein, a political analyst at the conservative American Enterprise Institute. “To be sure, Barack Obama may face a close race against John McCain, but there is no evidence his candidacy would harm Democratic congressional prospects.”

Read the entire article HERE.

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