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In other news…

Democrats now have absolute power. They own all that they have done and will do.

Completely drowned out by all the hoopla over news of Arlen Specter’s return to the Democrat Party he abandoned so many years ago, was this little item from top pollster Scott Rasmussen:

For just the second time in more than five years of daily or weekly tracking, Republicans now lead Democrats in the latest edition of the Generic Congressional Ballot.

A new Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey found that 41% would vote for their district’s Republican candidate while 38% would choose the Democrat. Thirty-one percent (31%) of conservative Democrats said they would vote for their district’s Republican candidate.

Overall, the GOP gained two points this week, while the Democrats lost a point in support.

Lest Republicans have any notions to uncork the champagne, Rasmussen cautions that the GOP’s gains are not from anything Congressional Republicans have done, but rather are an indication of sinking support for Democrats. Still, the Dems are now at their nadir of support in the past year, while Republicans have reached their zenith. This is significant, because it hints at an opportunity for the GOP.

If Republicans continue to act like Democrats, the window of opportunity will quickly slam shut, likely breaking some fingers in the process. But if Republicans can start behaving as Republicans again, they could profit. What is needed, of course, is a coherent and easy to understand message from the GOP, with actions to back up the words. No, Dr. Von Braun, it’s not rocket science. Republicans of all stripes need to simply get on the same chapter and verse, one which can be boiled down to two words: fiscal responsibility.

Just for now, if conservatives and moderate factions within the once-grand Old Party can set aside their differences over social issues and focus on pocketbook matters, the American public will give them a fair hearing. They will be listening for a clear message and watching for actions to back up the rhetoric. There can be no more defections on spending, no more pork, no more bailouts. The GOP needs to blast out a line in the rock and hold that line on spending matters. Republicans on The Hill need to shine a bright light on the Democrats and what they have been doing with the taxpayers’ hard-earned money.

Ever since John McCain wrapped up the GOP primary race, there’s been a cloud lingering over the heads of Republicans, sort of like the one which hovered over Joe Btsfplk, a hapless character in the legendary comic strip Lil’ Abner. Only this cloud could have a silver lining. Scott at FA says that by abandoning his Republican friends and allies, Arlen Specter may have unwittingly caused that silver lining to form around the cloud that has been dogging Republicans. Specter’s defection, he argues, gives the Democrats absolute power. They control the white house and both houses of Congress, and they now have a filibuster-proof majority:

Therein lies the silver lining.

It’s been 100 days for President Obama
It’s been well over 2 YEARS for the Democratic Congress

While tomorrow is day 100, Thursday is day1 in a completely new respect:
THERE CAN BE NO MORE EXCUSES

Nothing washes, nothing is credible, no scapegoating can work.

Though Democrats will fail and will blame the previous administration for it, the American people won’t buy it. They elected these guys in 2006 and 2008, and now they expect to see something for it. They have been very patient with President Obama and have been quick to forgive his many rookie mistakes. But, as the Rasmussen survey reveals, they are not so willing to forgive Congressional Democrats. But now, at long last, both the White House and the Congress have to show the voters that they can solve problems, not just make them worse.

Democrats spent trillions and have absolute power. What will they be able to show for it? America and the rest of the world are watching. Republicans, that’s your cue. Hit your marks, and don’t forget your lines.

- JP

COMMENTS

  • aesthete

    n/t

  • aesthete

    n/t

  • Husker

    No longer can they use the tried and true “party of no” garbage to explain away their ineffectiveness to keep their people in line.

    Everything they touch will have their fingerprints all over it and no cover to hide under when it hits the fan.

    • farstar99

      Unfortunately, the electorate watches reality TV and gets its news from Jon Stewart.

      It’s going to take a lot more than three percent to make any difference when the news media work for Obama.

      The end result is, if they don’t report it, it didn’t happen, except to those who pay attention and get their news elsewhere.

      Imagine if Watergate had happened under JFK.
      We would never have known.

      It means the GOP leadership’s going to have to actually get off its collective ass and work at defeating this cult or it’s all over.

      • Adjoran

        more than anything else, and doesn’t need the dwindling MSM coverage to tell them how things are going.

        Presidents are always credited or blamed for the economy’s performance on their watch (although what effect a President can have is longer-term, as new policies generally require at least a couple of years). Absent serious terror losses or foreign crises, that is the standard by which Obama and also his filibuster-proof congressional majorities will be judged, rightly or wrongly.

        Normally, we could expect a natural turnaround in the economy even if the government had done nothing at all, and our economy is so large this still may occur because it will take time for Obama’s follies to tally their full economic costs. So it is entirely possible we will be riding a temporary recovery by the time of the 2010 campaign, in which case we’ll be swamped.

        The dramatic “change” and astronomical spending levels Obama has brought to Washington should start showing up in reduced growth by the time he is up for reelection in 2012, though. That may be a more realistic election for GOP resurgence than 2010.

      • GreyCloak

        Absent his usual positive bias, Stewart (a resident of New York City) was only too happy to blast the new administration for burning thousands of pounds of jet fuel to get a “photo-op” while causing panic among citizens that don’t even work on Wall Street.

        • bs
  • http://andrightlyso.com/ civil_truth

    The Republicans will be to blame.

    Seriously, the left always has someone else to blame when their programs. That’s why you get endless purges; there’s always a new counterevolutionary to neutralize.

    Once the Republicans are neutered, there will be big oil, rich executives (but only Republicans), insurance companies – or they’ll come up with conspirators. Nothing like show trials to warm a leftist’s heart – especially when they can’t heat their homes because of shortages.

    If you want the model for what’s coming under the Democrats, just look at Chavez and his incremental dismantling of democracy and replacement by a dictatorship.

  • Rapunzel46

    Soros promised Specter for his re-election campaign to make the switch… BTW Lindsay Graham is having a nervous breakdown over this and says he is calling Tom Ridge tomorrow to urge him to run against Toomey — seems Toomey is just too conservative for the man who “claims” he is one of the most conservative Republicans in the senate.

    • Husker
    • Adjoran

      He has his moments, though, being very effective in critiquing the Obama Administration thus far.

      Being McCain’s personal valet, he naturally rushes to the defense of any liberal Republican. Lindsey’s participation in the “Gang of 14″ debacle spelled the end of GOP control in the Senate.

      He’s just having another hissy-fit about Toomey. It’s not about Toomey at all. This isn’t some challenge manufactured out of whole cloth by the challenger. It’s about the Republican electorate in Pennsylvania – how dare those yokels put their conservative principles ahead of Specterian ambition?

      My best advice to Senator Graham is to follow his vaunted, if inconsistent and impenetrable, principles and resign his own seat in protest. That would show us conservatives! Why, we’d have to spend the rest of our days pining away for his lost brilliance, in the crushing guilty knowledge it was our own mean-spiritedness that drove this gentle soul from our midst.

      Somehow I expect we’d eventually get over it, but it would leave a mournful mark on our hearts. Boo freaking hoo. I’m verklempt – talk amongst yourselves . . .

      • red_oakster

        It’s one thing to deal with moderates like Collins or Snowe in blue states. But how Graham was allowed to walk in and claim Strom Thurmond’s seat is a more disturbing story. GOP senators in solid red states should be reliable conservatives. We need to do a better job in preventing the Grahams by recruiting good conservatives for safe seats.

        One can only hope that a conservative will think about running for this seat in 2014.

        • redware

          He ran as a solid conservative,then betrayed us repeatedly as McCain’s lapdog,and a member of every “moderate” gang he could find.Last year no viable candidate came forth with enough money or name recognition to challenge him.With a 6 million dollar warchest at his disposal he blanketed the airwaves with ads touting his conservative credentials.Since no name brand Democrat would challenge him,a libertarian and former Republican won the Democrat nomination.Many Dems actually voted for Graham,given his “moderate” treason,and the conservative credentials of his opponent.Please don’t blame us conservative Republicans in South Carolina for a Graham Senate seat-he hoodwinked us once and had huge advantage the second time around we just couldn’t overcome.That said-It’s time for Lindsey to come out of the closet-and tell the world he is a Democrat and proud of it!

  • Paul_In_Houston

    comes absolute responsibility.

    It may not seem like it now, but Karma is real, and is one mean b****h.

    -

  • Dencal26

    Democrats usually lose by reverting to their 3 basic flaws
    1) Moral Decay
    2) Tax Increases
    3) Weak on Defense and cowtow foriegn policy

    We have seen 1 and 3 . And the tobacco tax on the poor didn’t make much news but eventually they will raise taxes on everyone to pay the massive debt they caused. GOP just needs to sit tight