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11/14/00
3:30 p.m. By NRs John J. Miller & Ramesh Ponnuru |
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The Agony of Victory This time, the losers may discover some demoralization in their ranks but mostly they'll encounter outrage. Instead of pointing fingers at each other ("Why didn't Gore campaign with Clinton?" or "Why did Bush spend so much time in California?"), they'll believe an injustice has been done to them. The enemy won't be within, but without. They'll feel like football players on a team that lost a game because of a referee's bad call on the final play. Instead of thinking about how they might have given their quarterback more pass protection in the first half, all they'll want to do is make an angry call to the league office on Monday morning. These sentiments may become an important organizing tool for whichever party isn't in the White House during the 2002 elections. Like all mid-term elections, these will be said to favor the party that doesn't control the executive branch. Redistricting and a round of Democratic retirements plus unforeseen political events are sure to play a large role. But an overriding sense of disenfranchisement will animate one of the parties two years from now. Just as some Republicans think losing the presidency in 1992 might have been worthwhile because it made the sweeps of 1994 possible, the party out of luck in 2000 may thank this misfortune later or at least its congressional wing.
Back in Black In Missouri, for instance, the black vote share grew from 5 percent to 12 percent an increase of 140 percent that probably explains why Democrats won close races for governor and senator. Turnout also rose in North Carolina, which may have made a difference in the gubernatorial race, won by a Democrat. But did these increases matter on the presidential level? Bush carried both Missouri and North Carolina, as well as Tennessee (where black turnout also was up dramatically). Well, there's Florida, where black voters leaped from 10 percent of the electorate in 1996 to 15 percent last week. It's too early to say what caused it, but one possibility is already making the rounds: Ward Connerly's suspended Florida Civil Rights Initiative, and Gov. Jeb Bush's reactive One Florida plan. If true, that's bad news for the anti-racial-preferences movement; its support among Republican lawmakers, already weak, may erode further. |
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