It was 1932 all
over again. The economy had collapsed right before the 2008 election, and, as a
result, Democrats swept to commanding majorities in the House and Senate, and
claimed the White House from an unpopular incumbent Republican.
It had all the
makings of a generational, political realignment. Yet two years later,
Democrats would lose the House. And now four years after that, appear poised to
lose the Senate.
In poll
after poll,
Republicans are more trusted on the economy than Democrats. Incredible. But why
was this time different?
After Herbert
Hoover’s demise and the onset of the Great Depression, Republicans were
politically all but extinct. In addition to losing the White House, Democrats picked up 12 seats in the Senate, and a whopping 97 seats in the House, building on the majority they had regained in 1930.
Things did not
get any better in 1934 for the GOP. Democrats picked up another 9 seats in the
Senate, taking them to 69 seats,
representing a 44 seat majority. In 1936,
it was a 76 to 16 majority.
In the House, after 1936, there were just 88 Republicans left in the House, compared
to 334 Democrats.
So bad had the
economic collapse and the ensuing joblessness been, it nearly annihilated the
political party that had ruled almost uninterrupted since the Civil War.
It is fair to
say that Republicans are still recovering from that experience in many ways.
Except for 1946 when they reclaimed Congress (they promptly lost control again
in 1948), it would not be until 1994 that they would again hold both chambers
of the legislature, and not until briefly in 1952 and again in 2002 when they
would control both Congress and the Presidency.
Yes, there were
times Republicans had the Presidency, but they were almost always hampered by
Democrat majorities in either or both chambers of Congress. Except for 1953 and
1954, it was a de facto 72 year exodus from a true majority.
But by 2008, it
had already come to an end. After a massive financial crisis, Republicans were
once again wiped out.
Yet, like a
phoenix, the GOP came soaring back. What changed?
For starters,
the timing of the economic downturn was not the same. Hoover and his party had
to suffer through three years of collapse before 1932 came along. The 2008
collapse was just a few months old when Barack Obama assumed office.
Hoover and
Republicans lost in 1932 less so because there was a collapse, than because
they had no proper response to the ensuing calamity.
Second, the
financial bailouts of 2008 were a bipartisan affair that was universally
despised by the American people. It generated a citizen uprising that
eventually became the tea party on the right, and later, the occupy movement on
the left. This helped neutralize the partisan effect of the downturn to a
single cycle.
Add to that the
power of better communications and the Internet, and conservatives were able to
provide an account that the financial crisis had been caused as much by
government policies as anything else.
It also laid
the groundwork for reform candidates in the Republican Party to say they had
learned the lessons of the past and were ready to take power again. Very
rapidly, Republicans became an opposition party again, and were able to take
advantage of tea party-led bailout outrage as Democrats began rapidly expanding
the welfare entitlement state upon taking power.
Finally, after
nearly six years in Democrat rule, and trillions of dollars of deficit
spending, quantitative easing, and bailouts, the economy is not much better.
Incomes are flat, it’s still really hard to find a job, and growth is quite
sluggish. Americans are still suffering under a mountain of household debt. The
recovery has not been what was promised.
Under
Roosevelt, it did not matter that persistent high unemployment prevailed until
World War II. Republicans had universally been blamed not just for the
depression, but for failing to turn things around. Then, perception was key.
Now, Democrats
are getting their share of blame for not making things better.
In a September 25-30 Gallup survey, 89 percent of Democrats and 83 percent of Republicans said
good paying jobs were a top priority issue. 86 percent of Democrats and 91
percent of Republicans said the economy was a still a top concern.
Six years after
the financial crisis, the recovery is not as good as the Obama administration
said it would be, and we’re practically due for another recession. The fiscal
and monetary stimulus failed. The jobs are still not there for young Americans
just getting their start. Older Americans are still having trouble retiring. In
short, the economy is just not delivering for the average American. Apparently,
a reputation once broken is not easily mended.
Source: http://netrightdaily.com/2014/10/democrats-lost-economy/ Robert Romano is the
senior editor of Americans for Limited Government.
Comments
The reign of
George HW Bush changed to redefined Republicanism. HW’s orientation, unlike Reagan, was
“statist”. HW allowed all of Ted
Kennedy’s socialist legislation to pass and he signed it without objection. HW
opened the immigration gates, kept the border open and signed the US up for UN
Agenda 21, a treasonous document. By the end of HW’s first 4 years, Ross Perot
looked like a godsend.
When Clinton
took over, the goals outlined by the American Communist Party in 1963 continued
to advance. Clinton joined the RINOs to pass NAFTA to off-shore our
manufacturing jobs. Clinton passed the
Community Reinvestment Act and supported HUD rules forcing lenders to give home
mortgages to unqualified borrowers, thus causing the Meltdown in 2008
When Obama took
over in 2008, he unconstitutionally added $1 trillion to annual federal
spending and he put UN Agenda 21 implementation went on steroids. Obama continues to deny that global warming
is a hoax and continues to overspend by $1 trillion a year. He is the “Manchurian
President”.
The big change
that had been taking place in the Congress were the number of Republican
“moderates” that became a majority, especially in the Senate. Over the past 25 years, we have been able to
track their votes to verify their lean to the Left. These are the “republicans” we refer to as
RINOs. Their role in the destruction of
our economy was their silence. They
enabled treasonous legislation to be passed and a Marxist illegal alien Muslim
to take over the White House.
Norb Leahy,
Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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