US Midterm Elections 2010

DOI10.1111/j.2041-9066.2011.00059.x
Date01 April 2011
Published date01 April 2011
Subject MatterIn Focus
What a difference two years makes. In
2008, the Democrats were riding high.
Barack Obama entered the White House
offering a recession-hit and war-weary na-
tion hope and can-do rhetoric, captured in
his campaign mantra ‘Yes We Can!’. The
Democrats also extended their control over
both houses of Congress. The scene seemed
set for a prolonged period of Democrat po-
litical dominance.
But these expectations were dashed by
the 2010 midterms. In the House of Repre-
sentatives, the Democrats lost 63 seats and
their majority. While they retained overall
control of the Senate, they lost six seats, cut-
ting their majority to just six Senators. By
any standards, this was a serious reversal.
The turnaround in the House is one of the
largest in modern times, bigger, even, than
Bill Clinton’s 54-seat drubbing in 1994.
Where, Obama’s team might ask, did it
all go so wrong? The geography of the 2010
House election (shown in the map, which
adjusts for varying populations) gives some
clues. Republicans made substantial gains
in the Midwest, the north-eastern rustbelt
and in the South, largely reversing the
Democrats’ gains in the preceding two
House contests.
Several factors underlie the result. The US
economy is weak, the def‌icit mountainous,
the sub-prime mortgage crisis threatens peo-
ple’s homes, jobs are vulnerable. As the map
reveals, many of the Democrats’ losses are
where America’s economic diff‌iculties cut
deepest. Prior to the midterms, the Demo-
crats held 127 of the 200 House seats with
median incomes below $50,300: they lost
40 of these seats, two-thirds of their overall
losses. To a large extent, therefore, the ex-
planation is still ‘the economy, stupid’.
Public anxiety over America’s trajectory
was channelled by the Tea Party movement
into visceral opposition to ‘big government’.
In many House districts, Tea Party activists
gained the Republican nomination. How-
ever, while the Tea Party has been highly
vocal and visible, its electoral impact has
been more mixed. Tea Party-endorsed Re-
publicans were more common in Demo-
crat- than in Republican-held seats. But
Republicans defeated Democrat incumbents
in only 33 out of the 129 seats with Tea
Party candidates (only marginally better
than Republican successes where the Tea
Party was not present). And in some races
(most notably in Delaware), the Tea Party-
endorsed candidate proved a substantial
liability with the wider electorate.
Finally, but importantly, the US political
system is famously designed to produce
‘checks and balances’ on government. There
is a long tradition of midterm reversals for
the incumbent president’s party. After the
1994 midterms, for instance, Bill Clinton
faced a Republican Congress.
But checks and balances work both ways
and presidents who face deep midterm de-
feats can recover strongly. Obama’s 63-seat
House shellacking is at least comparable
to Clinton’s and Truman’s 54-seat defeats
in 1994 and 1946, respectively, and bet-
ter than Roosevelt’s 72-seat reversal in
1938. All three went on to be re-elected.
Much depends on how the political battle
between president and Congress plays out.
The 2010 midterms may prove to be the
point at which Obama became a one-term
president, or (as with his predecessors), it
may be just a temporary setback. All will
be revealed in 2012.
US Midterm Elections 2010
In Focus
In Focus was compiled by Charles Pattie, Benjamin Hennig and Danny Dorling, University of Sheeld.

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