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About Paul R. Hollrah
Paul R. Hollrah is a freelance writer. He is a member of
the Civil Engineering Academy of Distinguished Alumni at the University of
Missouri - Columbia and a Senior Fellow at the Lincoln Heritage Institute.
He currently resides in Tulsa, Oklahoma. |
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Past Articles
Harry
Reid's Waterloo
Sheriff
Dupnik's Can of Worms
Jewish-Americans and The War on Terror
We Live
in Dangerous Times
Saving America, Sharing the Pain
Palin &
Obama: Head-to-Head
It's
Time to Play Hardball
California: Into the Abyss
The
Beginning of the End
The
Last Democrat Administration
Playing
the Democrats' Game
Parsing Obama
The
Unraveling of a Political Party
The
Anti-Rally Rally
An Open
Letter to Michael Steele
Mr.
Obama, Meet Ms. Everywoman
Integrating the Congressional Black Caucus
A
Republican To-Do List
Our
Failing Public Schools
Islam's Achilles Heel
From
Hooverville to Obamaville
The
Electoral College is Under Attack
Democrats Suppress Military Vote...Again
Remembering Gravitas
The
States Trump Obama
Charlie Bolden Has Fleas
It's Not
Easy Being Greene
The
General & The Community Organizer
The Eric
Balderas Caper
Al &
Tipper Split the Sheets
A
Cancer is Growing on the Presidency
Greece
Today, America Tomorrow
The
Obama Eligibility Question
A
Tangled Web
The
Post-Decency Pretender
The
Reluctant Boy Scout
Political Violence in America
Killing
the Healthcare Monster
Confessions of an Axe Murderer
The
Obama Eligibility Question Lives On
The
Enemy Within
Chuck de
Caro's War: Part 3
Liar,
Liar, Pants on Fire
The Fall
of Barack Obama
Chuck
de Caro's War: Part 2
Shifting
Political Winds
The
Insanity Called Airport Security
The
Pentagon War on CVSA: An Analysis
The
2010 Elections: Our Last Chance?
Testosterone Shortage Strikes GOP
Honduras
Snubs Obama
Chuck de
Caro's War
The
Twenty-Eighth Amendment
Obama Is
Not Eligible
The Pot &
The Kettle
Unemployment Flim-Flam
Is Obama
Impeachable?
Rising
Above the Rabble
Obama's
Dual Citizenship
The Summer
of 1981
Democrat
Racism "Bubbles" Up
Political
Poison Pills
'C' is for
Conspiracy, 'D' is for Democrat
Echoes from
the Grave
The Real
Ted Kennedy
Revolution
The Real
Problem with Healthcare
Hostage
Rescue...Clinton Style
Recalling
Soylent Green
Obama:
Hope, Change & Failure
Obama's
Double-Edged Sword
Obama's
Honduras Blunder
Obama-Soros
Hyperinflation
The Mark
Sanford Affair
GM's
330-Page Death Warrant
History
Repeats Itself
Obama the
Cyber Snowman
The
Sotomayor Nomination
A 100-Day Report Card
Corrupting the 2010 Census
Our Presidential Dilemma
The Drug War is Lost
The Icarus Factor
The Four Horsemen of the (American) Apocalypse
Bernie & Ruth & Chuck & Hillary
Obama is Dancing, But Who Calls the Tune?
Well...Is He, or Isn't He?
A Tale of Two Impeachments
The
Road to Fascism
Mad
Max Threatens California |
Paul R. Hollrah
Harry Reid's Waterloo
January 21, 2011
In the wake of the historic drubbing the Democratic Party received in November
2010...with Republicans winning a substantial majority in the House of
Representatives, I have previously predicted that Senator Harry Reid is destined
to be the unhappiest man in Washington during the term of the 112th Congress.
Why? Because chances are he will be, in the months ahead, the majority leader of
a fractured majority.
Of course, the "conventional wisdom" in Washington maintains that repeal of
Obamacare is impossible because, while Republicans have had little trouble
passing a repealer in the House, there is no chance of passing it in a Senate
controlled by Harry Reid and a thin Democratic majority. (It is called
"conventional wisdom" because lame-brained commentators such as Bill O'Reilly at
Fox think it is the epitome of political astuteness). Furthermore, as
"conventional wisdom" has it, Barack Obama would be certain to veto the repealer...so
why even try?
What the naysayers fail to take into account is: a) the latent power of the Tea
Party movement, and b) the fear factor that keeps a lot of Democrat awake at
night, particularly those who plan to seek reelection in 2012. All that is
needed is for Republicans and Tea Party activists to force a straight up or down
vote in the Senate, avoiding what would be a rare majority filibuster against
the minority. Republicans would need just four Democratic crossovers to win
repeal in the Senate and 13 to defeat a rare majority filibuster. Here's a
rundown on the senators who might be persuaded to vote with Republicans on key
issues that informed the 2010 elections.
Senator Sherrod
Brown, of Ohio, is completing his first term in the Senate. In 2006, Brown
defeated incumbent Republican Mike DeWine, winning 56% of the vote. However, he
can't help but notice that, in 2010, Republicans won the statewide races in Ohio
for U.S. Senate, governor, lieutenant governor, attorney general, state
treasurer, state auditor, and secretary of state, as well as thirteen of the
eighteen congressional races. Ohio has turned decidedly Republican and Brown
will be wise to keep his fingers on the pulse of people back home during the
next two years. He is a prime "target" for Tea Party conversion.
Recent polls show that, as matters now stand, just 45% of Ohio voters would vote
to reelect him.
Senator Kent Conrad, of North Dakota, a moderate Democrat completing his fourth
term, has announced that he will not seek reelection in 2012. As one who has no
political future to protect, Conrad can be seen as one of the Democrats most
likely to abandon Harry Reid.
Senator Joe
Manchin, of West Virginia, was elected in 2010 to complete the unexpired term of
the late Senator Robert Byrd. Manchin was elected, in part, on the strength of
his pledge that, had he been in Congress in 2010, he would have voted against
Obamacare.
No
Senate candidate in recent times has run as strongly against a president of his
own party as Manchin did in 2010. He will be given the opportunity to put his
words into actions.
He can be
expected to vote with Republicans for repeal.
Senator
Claire McCaskill, of Missouri, is completing her freshman term in the Senate,
having been elected with just 49.6% of the vote in 2006. McCaskill is seen as a
moderate on healthcare reform. However, after voting in favor of Obamacare,
McCaskill is now looking warily over her shoulder, saying that she is seeking
alternatives. And while Republicans will be looking to her as one of the
Democrats most likely to turn her back on Harry Reid, she will likely be focused
on the fact that Republicans won some 71% of the Missouri vote in 2010.
Senator Bob Menendez, of New Jersey, is completing his first full term in the
Senate. While Menandez would normally be considered safe...a liberal Democrat in
a normally liberal state...he may be open to persuasion if former CNN anchor Lou
Dobbs enters the race early and orchestrates a steady drumbeat of anti-Obamacare
sentiment. The popularity of New Jersey's tough new Republican governor, Chris
Christie, has many New Jerseyites believing in political and economic austerity
as the wave of the future.
Senator Ben Nelson, of Nebraska, is completing his second term in the Senate and
has decided to seek a third term. However, Nebraskans have not forgotten the
negative publicity he brought to the state as a result of the so-called
"Cornhusker Kickback," a deal offered to Nelson by Harry Reid in exchange for
his vote for Obamacare. A December 2009 Rasmussen poll shows GOP Governor David
Heineman leading Nelson by a margin of 61-30%, with just 4% undecided. So long
as Republicans and Tea Party activists keep the pressure on Nelson it is
difficult to see how he could vote with Harry Reid against the repealer.
Senator Bill Nelson, of
Florida, a former astronaut, is completing his second term in the Senate. A
statewide poll published in July 2010 matched him against former Senator George
LeMieux and former Governor Jeb Bush. Although LeMieux scored only 49-28%,
former Governor Jeb Bush polled just two points behind Nelson, 46-44%. With
Florida being home to millions of "snow bird" retirees, the estimated $638
billion in Medicare cuts that Obamacare promises over the next ten years will be
a heavy load for Nelson to bear. Nelson and Obamacare will represent "raw meat"
for Tea Party activists.
Senator Debbie Stabenow,
of Michigan, a former member of the Michigan House and Senate, will complete her
second term in the Senate. Although several lesser-known candidates are
mentioned as potential opponents, the most prominent name mentioned is that of
former three term governor John Engler. During his three terms as governor, he
was best known for his
privatization
of state services, tax reduction, education reform, welfare reform, and a major
reorganization of
executive branch
departments…precisely what is most needed at the federal level. A March 2010
poll showed Engler leading Stabenow by one point, 42-41% with 10% undecided.
Given the economic basket case that is Detroit, Stabenow would have great
difficulty defending liberal social and economic policies against Tea Party
attacks.
Senator
Jon Tester, of Montana, is completing his first term in the Senate. In 2006, he
defeated Republican incumbent Conrad Burns with just 49.2% of the vote.
Tester has accumulated an unusually liberal voting record, coming as he does
from what is a reliably conservative state. His support for Obama's stimulus
program and for Obamacare, coupled with the fact that he left Washington without
voting to extend the Bush tax cuts, could prove to be major problems in his
reelection bid. He will be a favorite "target" of Tea Party activists.
Senator Jim Webb,
of Virginia, a Republican-turned-Democrat, is completing his first term in the
Senate. The former Secretary of the Navy defeated Republican incumbent George
Allen by a margin of just 0.6% in 2006. Not only does Webb represent a state
with a Republican governor and a Republican attorney general who are taking the
lead in suing the Obama administration over provisions of Obamacare, he may find
himself involved in a rematch against Allen in 2012. Webb is a leading candidate
to vote with Republicans on repealing Obamacare.
In addition to
these ten, Senators Mark Begich of Alaska, Michael Bennet of Colorado, and Mary
Landrieu of Louisiana are seen as potential converts to the Republican cause.
Begich and Bennet were both elected with less than 50% of the vote, while
Landrieu, one of the most conservative Democrats in the Senate,
won
reelection in 2006 with just 52% of the vote.
In spite of what
Fox's Bill O'Reilly and other uninformed pundits might assume from the
"conventional wisdom," it is entirely within the realm of possibility that at
least four of the senators listed above will vote with Republicans to repeal.
In the wake of
the 245-189 House vote to repeal, majority whip Eric Cantor has challenged Harry
Reid's claim that he has the votes to defeat the repeal effort. Cantor has
called Reid's bluff, challenging him to bring the repealer to the Senate floor
for a straight up-or-down vote if he is confident it will fail.
It represents a
major dilemma for Reid...perhaps the greatest dilemma of his Senate career. If
he refuses to bring the repealer up for a vote because he knows he doesn't have
the votes to defeat it, the public outrage will be such that he will invite an
even greater "humbling" in 2012 than the Democrats received in November 2010.
On the other
hand, if he takes the Republican bait and brings the bill to the floor for a
vote, chances are very slim that he could hold all 53 votes in the Democrat
caucus the Senate vote might easily approach 56-44 in favor of repeal, with
Bennet, Begich, Brown (OH), Conrad, Manchin, McCaskill, Nelson (FL), Nelson
(NE), and Webb voting with the Republicans.
Harry Reid came within a whisker of being defeated by a Tea Party candidate in
2010. If he is now seen as being responsible for leading a majority filibuster
against a Senate minority, or if he is responsible for the embarrassment of
sending a repealer to Obama's desk, approved by both the Republican House and
the Democrat Senate...leaving Obama to twist slowly, painfully in the breeze,
all by himself...it is hard to imagine that he will be able to continue in his
leadership position. It will be Harry Reid's "Waterloo"...if that's not too
harsh a term for Democratic sensibilities. |