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Talk about a shellacking. Two-thirds of voters in last week's elections are dissatisfied or angry with Republican Party leaders in Congress, according to exit polls, and nearly six in 10 disapprove of the GOP altogether.
While it's undeniable which party won the most campaigns this year, the Republican Party didn't win the overall election – not with numbers like that. The winners were disgust, apathy, and a gnawing desire for a better choice – an alternative to what the two major parties are currently offering.
History will record 2014 as one in a pattern of national elections that amounted to a vote of no confidence for the political status quo.
Read more http://www.nationaljournal.com/poli...win-the-midterms-they-just-lost-less-20141111
While it's undeniable which party won the most campaigns this year, the Republican Party didn't win the overall election – not with numbers like that. The winners were disgust, apathy, and a gnawing desire for a better choice – an alternative to what the two major parties are currently offering.
History will record 2014 as one in a pattern of national elections that amounted to a vote of no confidence for the political status quo.
- In 2010, voters changed ownership of the House from Democrat to Republican in protest of President Obama.
- In 2008, voters changed ownership of the White House from Republican to Democrat in protest of President Bush.
- In 2006, voters gave Democrats control of the House, the Senate, and a majority of governorships in what Bush called a "thumpin'."
- In 2004 and 2012, unpopular presidents won reelection by essentially disqualifying their opponents in brutally negative campaigns. Bush and Obama epitomize this era of voter unrest, because they campaigned successfully as the better of two lousy choices.
Read more http://www.nationaljournal.com/poli...win-the-midterms-they-just-lost-less-20141111
