Wednesday, October 6, 2010

POSITIVE VIEWS FOR NEXT MONTH

With the federal elections less than 30 days away, there have most recently been a series of prognostications that convey good news. The messages have been to expect the Republicans to carry so many of the races that the control of both the House and the Senate will shift away from the Obama supporters and to much more conservative pro-American legislative leaders.

In other words, political pundits are calling for a Republican victory next month.

In one article the author stated that the Democrats would get "whacked" in November with 11 of the 12 most closely contested races for Congress being won by Republicans. The only question that remained unanswered in the mind of that writer was just "how badly" the whacking would be. In reality it makes little difference if the conservative wins by 1% or 10% of the vote as long as he/she wins.

Citing an ever increasing trend of voters registering as independents rather than affiliating with a political party, a pollster found that this type of voter is currently pro the Republican candidate. This finding was primarily because these voters are anti-Obama and view his perceived allies, the Democrats, as individuals that must have their elected positions terminated. Think of the outcome of the Massachusetts Senatorial race and how the independent swayed that day for the Republican.

Another national poll has reported that 56% of the Republicans who were questioned indicated that they were "most likely" to vote in November. Of the questioned Democrats only, 38% gave the indication that they would "most likely" vote. The most favorable analysis of this data on these Democrat non-voters expressed that their intention to refrain from casting a vote was not an abandonment of the Democrat Party but was an expression that the voter could not and would not vote in a manner that could show pleasure with the Obama Administration.

Just today Dick Morris has announced that he believes that both the House and the Senate will be Republican controlled come January of 2011.

To make this change of power a little clearer, the old school Republicans, those who filled their pockets with tax payers' money and advanced their own selfish careers, are not going to last long. This year has removed and the next two Senate election contests will remove, some voluntarily and some by voter veto, the Republicans who did little when they had the majority and even less when the Obama allies took control.

Sharon Angle, the up-start Republican candidate from Nevada who could very well retire Senator Harry Reid, stated it well when she reportedly said the old GOP "lost their standards and lost their principles".

The new Republican Congressmen and Republican Senators will, with a little luck and lots of monitoring by voter groups like the Tea Party, not lose their standards and principle but rather promote only America and its best interests.

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