teapartysamurai
Gold Member
- Mar 27, 2010
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Ah, the cruelty. Veteran lawmakers who toiled for years in Congress waiting for a chance at political promotion have discovered an inconvenient truth: This election year, Washington experience is a career-ender.
Four House members who abandoned their seats to run for governor have failed to survive their party primaries, and the list could grow in the coming weeks. Tennessee Rep. Zach Wamp was the latest to stumble in Thursday's Republican primary.
Add these losses to the six incumbents who have been defeated in their re-election bids and it signals an electorate sour on Washington.
"People hate Congress," said nine-term Rep. Pete Hoekstra of Michigan, who was pounded by rivals' ads about Wall Street bailouts, money for district projects and rising debt in his losing bid for the GOP gubernatorial nomination. "It was a hurdle that had to be overcome, or it was some baggage that you had to carry."
Recent surveys have shown Americans hold lawmakers in particularly low esteem: Just one in four people said they approved of Congress' job performance in the most recent Associated Press-GfK poll. Job losses and spiraling debt have left a significant number of Americans certain the country is on the wrong track. The fierce partisanship in Washington has convinced many that a broken government can do little to solve the country's woes.
The disfavor is evident this election, and both parties have suffered from the anti-establishment sentiment. Four House incumbents and two senators have lost primaries to keep their jobs. Another five have lost bids for governor, including Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, R-Texas, who unlike her House counterparts didn't give up her day job.
Two former congressmenRepublican Nathan Deal of Georgia and Neil Abercrombie of Hawaiiare battling to win party nods for governor. Deal faces Karen Handel in Tuesday's runoff. Michigan's Hoekstra tried to emphasize his 15 years as a furniture company executive, but it was his 18 years on Capitol Hill that opponents used to pummel him in his second-place finish to Rick Snyder. While Hoekstra doesn't attribute his loss to the anti-Washington mood alone, he said it was a strong factor.
A lot more here:
Washington ties dash hopes for political promotion
Now here's the thing that the media is missing. It's not anti-republican, anti-democrat, it's ANTI-ESTABLISHMENT.
People are SICK of the RULING CLASS in Washington. Arrogant elitist Rinos and liberal Democrats who make it clear they think they know better than the American people how to run the country.
The only people who's numbers are rising are CONSERVATIVES.
Portman looks great. Paul looks great. Angel is pulling within the margin of error with Reid.
The establishment are left speechless. Trent Lott said he was troubled by the "Tea Party" and they would have to find a way to derail them if they ever win seats in Congress. This is the Washington elite view of the American voter.
They don't know what's good for them. If the voter has their way, it has to be derailed for "their own good!"
This is the attitude voters are FED UP with. It's wonderful to see. I hope this is a lesson that voters learn and keep learning.
Their "teach the Republicans a lesson" in 2006 ended up teaching THEM A LESSON. We all warned voters about it in 2006.
Make no mistake, the ruling class right now in Washington is DEMOCRAT. The liberal media keeps trying to make it out as both parites, but both parties aren't ruling right now. That's something to keep it mind.
Now maybe this country can get on the right track.

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