Beco
I'm Not Your Guru
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Republicans Pin Hopes on Midterm Elections
November Votes Could Reshape U.S. Politics
By NEIL KING JR. and PATRICK O'CONNOR CONNECT
Jan. 1, 2014 7:36 p.m. ET
Voters are rarely kind to the occupant of the White House in the middle of his second term.
A war-weakened George W. Bush lost control of the House and Senate in 2006. Ronald Reagan suffered a similar blow 20 years earlier, when Democrats grabbed the Senate and strengthened their hold on the House. The big political question this year is whether President Barack Obama will face similarly rough treatment in November.
Mr. Obama's fading popularity and the rocky debut of his sweeping health-care law have given Republicans a big jolt of optimism that they can build on their 31-seat House majority and retake the Senate.
There's no doubt the year ended on a sour note for the president and his party. After riding high amid public backlash against the GOP over October's government shutdown, Democrats took a beating over the troubled debut of the Affordable Care Act. Voters in a rolling average of national polls went from favoring Democratic control of Congress to preferring the Republicans.
The outcome of the midterms will have an impact on the president's last two years in office. Democratic leaders in the Senate have ignored or killed a range of legislation emerging from the Republican-led House, while stifling GOP Senate initiatives. That has insulated Mr. Obama from having to veto bills to cut domestic spending, diminish union clout, increase abortion restrictions and alter or repeal the health law he championed. If Republicans capture a Senate majority, the party could apply pressure more directly on Mr. Obama and shape the environment ahead of the 2016 presidential election.
http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702304202204579256691296159568
November Votes Could Reshape U.S. Politics
By NEIL KING JR. and PATRICK O'CONNOR CONNECT
Jan. 1, 2014 7:36 p.m. ET
Voters are rarely kind to the occupant of the White House in the middle of his second term.
A war-weakened George W. Bush lost control of the House and Senate in 2006. Ronald Reagan suffered a similar blow 20 years earlier, when Democrats grabbed the Senate and strengthened their hold on the House. The big political question this year is whether President Barack Obama will face similarly rough treatment in November.
Mr. Obama's fading popularity and the rocky debut of his sweeping health-care law have given Republicans a big jolt of optimism that they can build on their 31-seat House majority and retake the Senate.
There's no doubt the year ended on a sour note for the president and his party. After riding high amid public backlash against the GOP over October's government shutdown, Democrats took a beating over the troubled debut of the Affordable Care Act. Voters in a rolling average of national polls went from favoring Democratic control of Congress to preferring the Republicans.
The outcome of the midterms will have an impact on the president's last two years in office. Democratic leaders in the Senate have ignored or killed a range of legislation emerging from the Republican-led House, while stifling GOP Senate initiatives. That has insulated Mr. Obama from having to veto bills to cut domestic spending, diminish union clout, increase abortion restrictions and alter or repeal the health law he championed. If Republicans capture a Senate majority, the party could apply pressure more directly on Mr. Obama and shape the environment ahead of the 2016 presidential election.
http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702304202204579256691296159568