After Tuesday’s election results, Democrats say they’re queasy. Republican Glenn Youngkin’s gubernatorial victory in Virginia and Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy’s unexpectedly narrow squeaker in New Jersey have launched a thousand theories. Was it the hangover of President Biden’s sinking job approval nationwide? The confusing clashes between progressives and moderates over legislation in Washington? Are voters fed up with the economy, the pandemic and angst about their children and schools? Should House Democratic leaders race to put a bipartisan infrastructure bill on the floor to try to change the conversation? Is the progressive agenda too extreme to sell in the suburbs, among female voters, older voters and independents, or too pared-back by now to motivate party stalwarts to vote after last year’s rosy pledges? The Hill, Reid Wilson: Democrats feel new urgency on Biden agenda after Virginia rout. The New York Times: Democrats sound the alarm for 2022. Biden, who returned from Europe early Wednesday to a reeling Democratic Party, told reporters he wished his sprawling social policy agenda had cleared Congress before Election Day, when Democrat Terry McAuliffe, for whom Biden campaigned, lost his gubernatorial race in Virginia by more than 2 points, and Republican Jack Ciattarelli nearly defeated the incumbent New Jersey governor on Democratic turf. “I think it should have passed before Election Day,” the president said, referring to his $1.75 trillion Build Back Better agenda, which has become smaller over many months while still in limbo. “But I’m not sure that I would be able to have changed the number of very conservative folks who turned out in the red districts who were Trump voters, but maybe, maybe,” he added. Reminded that he was elected by 10 points in Virginia a year ago, Biden pointed to a distinction with a difference. “I was running against Donald Trump,” he said (The Hill). The Associated Press analysis: After tough election, Biden dismisses danger signs. Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) was urged by some pundits on Wednesday to knock heads in her caucus to swiftly pass the pending $1 trillion infrastructure package, supported by both parties. Her approach on Wednesday was to dig in again to try to move the Democrats’ $1.75 trillion spending agenda for middle-class families, but with paid family and medical leave back in as well as a state and local tax deduction sought by voters in high-tax Democratic states including New Jersey, New York and California. The Washington Post, Paul Kane: Congressional Democrats say passing their agenda is the only path forward. History says that might not matter for 2022. The Wall Street Journal: House Democrats add paid leave, state and local tax deduction. The Hill: House outlines immigration provisions in the latest Build Back Better package. House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.), exulting in Tuesday’s favorable outcome for his party, predicted that Republicans could flip 60 House seats next year (The Hill). “If you're a Democrat and President Biden won your seat by 16 points, you're in a competitive race next year. You are no longer safe,” he said. NBC News, The Hill and The Hill: Youngkin’s win in blue Virginia offers elated Republicans a 2022 road map. The New York Times, Lisa Lerer: Rough election night for Democrats exposes the party’s weakness. National Journal, Josh Kraushaar: Progressive fantasies hit political reality in Virginia. The Washington Post, Dan Balz: A sobering reality hits Democrats after election losses. The Associated Press: Divided Democrats call for a new strategy after disaster in Virginia. The Hill, Niall Stanage: In contrast with Trump in 2020, Youngkin (pictured below) performed strongly on Tuesday among women voters, younger voters and independents. He may have been the first prominent GOP figure to succeed with a post-Trump strategy. © Associated Press/Steve Helber One of the GOP’s big takeaways from Tuesday’s victories was that education remains a motivating issue among voters, including for Republican candidates. As The Hill’s Julia Manchester points out, Youngkin made education the hallmark issue of his campaign, focusing intently on parental rights in the ongoing battle against school boards, especially in Loudoun County. Education-related issues also appear to have played a role in the Garden State’s gubernatorial race and Ciattarelli’s unexpected nip-tuck race against Murphy. The political ramifications were also clear as day on Capitol Hill, as House Democrats are plowing ahead without buy-in from Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) and are gearing up to pass both the Build Back Better legislation and the bipartisan infrastructure package by the end of the week. Instead of waiting on Manchin to OK the massive social spending package, Pelosi and House Democrats are tired of waiting and are instead putting pressure on him to make a decision by putting it on the floor this week. In addition, Pelosi added back into the bill four weeks of permanent paid family and medical leave back in the proposal, which Manchin has notably declined to support (The Hill). “We’re gonna get ‘em done,” House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Gregory Meeks (D-N.Y.), a Pelosi ally, said of the pair of bills after leaving a 90-minute closed-door Democratic caucus meeting. “I think we’re together. I think there’s been a lot of progress. We’re gonna get it done.” The Hill: Democrats hit panic button after Virginia collapse. © Associated Press/J. Scott Applewhite |
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