I was not the only one to take the loss personally. A whole lot of cussin’ going on out there. And blaming. Mostly at the Democrats who apparently let this happen, either by choosing bad candidates, by running hopelessly out-of-touch campaigns, or by being pseudo-Democrats who pretended they cared but didn’t feel the need to actually go out and vote.
For once it wasn’t Obama’s fault, it was the fault of the Democrats who moved away from Obama in order to have a chance at winning in Obama-hostile states. Unless you believe it was Obama’s fault for not giving those Dems reason enough to want to include him in their quest, as representatives of his party, to win a seat on the Democratic side.
There is plenty of blame to go around and all of the principals deserve a portion of the flak, but the bottom line is that the Republicans are now in charge of everything but the executive branch of our government, and the big unknown is how the executive branch will handle it. The truth is, President Obama doesn’t follow a predictable path. He doesn’t even follow a Party path. He is the epitome of the Big Unknown. Will he now suddenly become our 21st Century FDR? I wish. But no, he won’t.
Will the Republicans suddenly come to their senses and realize they have two years to attempt to fix the damage they’ve already done, hoping that by 2016 we’ll forget that they’re the enemy and give them a chance at owning the entire government? No to the first part but yes to the last.
I want to quit. I’m tired and mad and demoralized and hurt. But it’s like voting. If I stay home, deciding my vote won’t count, it won’t. If I decide my voice won’t count, it won’t. My singular voice doesn’t count, but if I add it to the thousands of others who can’t and won’t give up, we might just make a difference.
It’s the hopeless optimists the Republicans have to fear. We’ve always been their undoing.
floyd[@]greenfloyd.org November 11th, 2014 at 18:47
Obviously most people think politics are boring, predictable and corrupt… and they be correct. We need to spice things up. I suggest a random factor, a candidate draft or lottery.