Here’s Karl Rove’s take on the 2020 elections, from his Wall Street Journal op-ed:
So what lessons can each party take from 2020?
One is that money can’t buy victory. Democrats outspent Republicans in every seriously contested Senate race yet flipped only Arizona and Colorado. Democrats showered $132.7 million on South Carolina’s Jaime Harrison against Sen. Lindsey Graham, who raised $109.3 million. Mr. Graham won by 10 points. Kentucky’s Amy McGrath, a Marine veteran, received $96.3 million for her bid against Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, whose bankroll was $69.9 million. He won by 19.6 points.
Money also can’t buy a compelling message. In many races, Democrats had little more to say than that their Republicans opponents didn’t care about people with pre-existing conditions and were lackeys for President Trump.
This fell especially flat when Republicans explained and defended some of Mr. Trump’s policies in ways the president never did, pointing to results from tax cuts, regulatory relief, strong defense and energy independence. Maintaining public safety, standing up to adversaries abroad and socialism at home, and conveying that America was abiding by trade rules while other countries weren’t—all were winning issues.
The Democratic Party’s left had a winning message—but outside of deep-blue districts, it was winning for Republicans who were smart enough to contrast with it. “Medicare for All†became the abolition of private health insurance. “Green New Deal†became shorthand for lost jobs. “Defund the police†meant just that. All helped create a huge target for the GOP: the Democratic Party’s move toward socialism.
There was little ticket splitting, but it mattered a great deal. In Maine, Republican Sen. Susan Collins was outspent $75.6 million to $30.6 million. Joe Biden carried the state by 9.1 points. Yet Ms. Collins won by 8.6 points. Republicans led overall in both Georgia Senate races while Mr. Biden was carrying the state. Two of those three contests would give Republicans control of the Senate.
The modest amount of ticket splitting also gave the GOP House seats and helped them more than hold their own in state legislatures as once-solid suburban Republican voters found their way home down-ballot after voting for Mr. Biden or abstaining from the presidential contest.
American politics remains deeply polarized, with the House and Senate narrowly divided. Mr. Biden won decisively, but enough battleground states were close that it could easily have gone the other way. The combined margin in Arizona, Georgia and Wisconsin was 42,918 votes. The election would have been a 269-269 tie if those states were in Mr. Trump’s column.
Bipartisan progress in Washington is possible even after a bitter election. Both parties have an interest in looking as if they’re getting things done—but actually doing something will require statesmanship, which will be in short supply since both parties are fractured.
Among the Democrats, the left has the energy, but its policies frighten most Americans. Republicans must figure out how to keep Mr. Trump’s blue-collar followers while regaining strength in the suburbs.
Hostility proved as powerful as enthusiasm in motivating voters. For the entire campaign, Trump supporters said their vote was more for Mr. Trump than against Mr. Biden while Mr. Biden’s supporters said their vote was more against the incumbent than for the challenger. Whatever the motivation, the result was a gigantic 66.2% turnout, biggest since William McKinley’s 1900 re-election.
Republicans learned that diversity is a winner as female and minority candidates won many of their congressional and state legislative victories. Democrats would be wise to realize identity politics is a loser. The idea that anyone of any background can represent American values is more powerful than the notion that people need representatives who “look like†them.
I don’t believe that either party will take any of those lessons seriously, at least judging by conduct since the elections. IMO the only real lessons from the elections are
- Trump managed to get out the vote—both for him and against him.
- More people really didn’t like Trump than really like him.
- A lot of people don’t like either political party very much.
- The politicians who are farthest right and those who are farthest left are really out of touch with the vast preponderance of voters.
What lessons can be taken from the 2020 elections? Acknowledging that they’re not over yet, of course.
” Democrats would be wise to realize identity politics is a loser.”
Identity politics worked well for Trump in the 2016 election and even with his bad unfavorables got him a lot of votes in 2020. Identity politics is all part of our tribalism. Dont see to going away in a long while.
Steve
I’m not so sure. One lesson was that trying to buffalo your way through proved ineffective, at least in SC. GA is yet to be determined.
Mace beat Cunningham in SC1. Cunningham, a likeable guy, was beaten because Mace simply cited his lockstep voting record with Pelosi – something like 95%. Cunningham previously ran as, and tried to run again, claiming to be an independent minded guy, and just professing faux outrage “oh can you believe it; look how they are just smearing me” in his adds with his adorable kids. He never once addressed the issue of his voting record (never), which Mace just kept repeating. He lost. A one termer.
The GA senate runoff is interesting. Loeffler is running by simply taking actual quotes from Warnock and putting them in ads. Such as “somebody has to empty the jails.” Or “the police are an evil force.” Or “serving in the military and being religious are incompatible.”
Warnock chooses to claim those are taken out of context (I’m not sure how “somebody has to empty the jails,” or the others, are taken out of context) and tell people what a swell guy he is by pulling himself up by his bootstraps rather than explain himself. He’s actually a wild eyed leftist in the AOC mode. We will see. The rampant fraud issue still pertains next door in GA.
Ossoff is a garden variety creep (selling “documentaries” helpful to Chinese and Middle Eastern interests) while running as a champion of the common man. Its not clear what he’s ever done for the common man.
But as I said, the fraud machine is still in full force down here. Stacey Abrams has seen to that.
Identify politics works, if it’s inclusive. Not White supremacy, American supremacy, including newly minted Americans.
Divisive identity politics necessarily makes candidates contradict themselves from setting to setting.
I understand people will say, what about Trump?
IMO, Trump beat himself, despite a strong message, by stumbling over his ego.
It would be strange if some potential Republican candidates don’t pick up and run with that.