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Op-Ed

Dick Morris: How To Defeat the Blue Wave

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Alarmingly, all recent polls that have measured “generic preference” by party in the coming congressional elections have recorded a Democrat margin — some by a lot.

In this survey question, voters are asked to choose between a hypothetical Democrat and a hypothetical Republican in their district for Congress. Ten polls in a row have shown a Democrat lead — eight by more than eight points and six by more than ten.

Republicans usually lose these polls — even if they go on to win the election itself — because of gerrymandering of House districts and the concentration of Democrats in certain lopsided districts. Also, these polls tend to test the opinions of registered voters as opposed to likely ones. (But these same polls indicate a greater enthusiasm about voting in the midterms this year among Democrats than among GOP voters).

The Democrat edge has clearly grown in the past two weeks and now is at about the level it was in 2006 when the Democrats took away both houses of Congress.

The question is: What should we do about it?

We need to lift a page from the Democrat strategy after they lost the election of 2010 when they vilified the Tea Party, demonizing it — unfairly — as racist and redneck.

Republicans should attack Democrats by wrapping them in the “Progressive” agenda first articulated by Sen. Bernie Sanders and later elaborated by other demagogues. While Democrat primary voters may be enthusiastic about Medicare for all, a $15 minimum wage, the abolition of ICE, a guaranteed annual income, and protests against the national anthem, most voters are not.

The mainstream of voters believe we cannot afford Medicare for all and trying it would destroy the financial soundness of Medicare, and that government funding would bring bureaucratic control over our health care.

They would like to see low wage workers make more, but correctly realize that requiring a $15/hour wage will spur automation and put millions of those we want to help out of work.

Do you think there will be a larger turnout of Republicans than Democrats in November?

They see a guaranteed annual income as welfare for all and believe it will bankrupt our country.

They oppose abolishing ICE and want stricter controls over the inflow of illegal immigrants.

And they do, most definitely, stand for the national anthem.

When a Republican raises these issues, he presents his Democrat opponent with an unsolvable conundrum: If he tries to distance himself from the “progressive agenda” he saps the enthusiasm of his base and decreases their likely turnout. But, if he embraces it, he appears like an extremist to the electorate.

But more than attacking their issue positions, the Republican candidates need to attack the “progressives” themselves. Nixon portrayed his opponents as leftist hippies by using the televised pictures of them burning draft cards and flags at rallies. He declared them outsiders in a nation filled with the “silent majority.” So now, modern day Republicans can use the televised footage of demonstrators trying to drown out the Kavanaugh confirmation hearings by catcalls and shouts to illustrate how outside the mainstream they and their candidates are.

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President Donald Trump, himself, needs to lead this crusade, denouncing his “progressive” critics as hopelessly leftist, socialist, and determined to kill the success he has brought to this country. He should say that they want to kill the goose that is laying the golden eggs.

You can’t win a national campaign by playing defense, particularly not if your president is Trump. Anyone can see the economic progress we have made due to his leadership and, if they can’t, no political campaign will enlighten them.

What will sway their votes is the prospect that a Democrat Congress would repeal all that has caused this economic miracle: the tax cuts, the deregulation, and reduced business levies. And the likelihood that the new Democrat Congress would destroy our health care system, ruin the financial viability of Medicare, and open our borders to drug dealers and criminals.

It’s time to play offense.

The views expressed in this opinion article are those of their author and are not necessarily either shared or endorsed by the owners of this website. If you are interested in contributing an Op-Ed to The Western Journal, you can learn about our submission guidelines and process here.

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Dick Morris is a former adviser to President Bill Clinton as well as a political author, pollster and consultant. His most recent book, "50 Shades of Politics," was written with his wife, Eileen McGann.




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