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Home Current Affairs

What Did Not Happen

by Dana Blankenhorn
November 11, 2006
in Current Affairs, economy, energy, environment, futurism, Personal, politics
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While a lot has been written since
Tuesday about what happened in the U.S. Election, let me pause a
moment here to discuss some important things that did not happen.

Incumbents Won

Tom_reynolds
While this was not universally true,
the fact is that about 90% of those incumbents who chose to win
re-election won in the end.

Some of the worst slime in the universe
managed to win. William Jefferson of Louisiana didn’t win, but he
didn’t lose, either. Robert Byrd, who is often barely lucid, won
easily. (That was for the Republicans.) Tom Reynolds (left), who heard about
the page scandal and did nothing, won re-election, as did Dennis
Hastert, the House Speaker who should have taken responsibility and
did not. (That was for the Democrats.) So much for the dead girl or
live boy theory. If it’s in the neighboring bed it apparently doesn’t
count.

While voting patterns wee challenged,
these challenges were generally unsuccessful. People even the
Republicans hated, like Bill Sali in Idaho and Vern Buchanan in
Florida, actually won. 

Old habits did not break, in other
words.

But this was of secondary importance.

Issues Left Alone

Al_gore_2006_1
The most important thing that did not
happen was that the issues which define our future – global
warming, energy – were barely discussed, and were not decisive
anywhere.

After being feted around the country
for An Inconvenient Truth, Al Gore became as obscure as he was in
February 2001. Where are all the President Gore bumper stickers? Put
away.

Why? Because the truth, inconvenient as
it was, could still be hidden. Gas prices fell during the fall, and
are now down about a dollar a gallon from their peak. There were no
big hurricanes, and no one seemed to think it important that the
normal directional cycle of these storms seemed to reverse – Mexico
was hit repeatedly as storms spawned and turned around, and Atlantic
storms headed east whenever they could.

In addition, interest rates
conveniently fell in the fall. The housing bust has not yet happened.
It has been postponed, not prevented. The economy was barely an
issue, and where it was one the issue favored Republicans,
business-oriented Republicans in the homebuilding and real estate
investment industries. This was especially true in the South, where I
live.

Thus the exurbanization of America, a
process as environmentally disgusting as anything an Indonesian or
Brazilian subsistence farmer is doing in what’s left of the rain
forest, continues apace. Without objection. With an endorsement from
the voters.

This will not continue.

Here is the bottom line.  The crisis that will define the politics of the next generation has not occurred yet. Republicans lost power all on their own, with little help from the DCCC or the Netroots or anyone else. Just on sheer, bull-headed incompetence. It did not have to happen.

 

Chris_matthews_1
But the issues defining our time will not be put off forever. What most disturbs me about "pundits" is that they seem to live in a steady state universe, based on the last election returns. They let themselves be continually surprised by events, they never put 2+2 together.

This, too, will not continue. Change is coming — real, fundamental change. Not from Washington. And no one seems to even be discussing it, let alone preparing for it.

There are no levees. No big policy changes. No nothing.

But things will happen in the next two years. Big things. Bad things. The issue terrain will not be muddied in 2008. It will be as clear and serious as a heart attack.

The pundits who ignored it will nor survive, any more than the politicians.

 

 

Tags: 2006 electionAl GoreAn Inconvenient TruthChris MatthewsenergyenvironmentInternet politicsNetrootsTom Reynolds
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Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn began his career as a financial journalist in 1978, began covering technology in 1982, and the Internet in 1985. He started one of the first Internet daily newsletters, the Interactive Age Daily, in 1994. He recently retired from InvestorPlace and lives in Atlanta, GA, preparing for his next great adventure. He's a graduate of Rice University (1977) and Northwestern's Medill School of Journalism (MSJ 1978). He's a native of Massapequa, NY.

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Comments 2

  1. David Leigh says:
    19 years ago

    Interesting comments, and I’m sure they will indeed come to the fore next go-round.
    It’s also interesting to look at what ELSE didn’t happen this election. We were NOT treated to an endless round of whining cry-babies bringing hopeless lawsuits to complain about their losses.
    Say what you want about the Republicans, they are good losers. I’m certain that if Democrats had been as good losers in the previous election, they’d have a much wider margin today. The Republican congress spent two years doing little to justify their majority. I’m sure that the memory of past behavior kept many people from turning Democrat this year.

    Reply
  2. David Leigh says:
    19 years ago

    Interesting comments, and I’m sure they will indeed come to the fore next go-round.
    It’s also interesting to look at what ELSE didn’t happen this election. We were NOT treated to an endless round of whining cry-babies bringing hopeless lawsuits to complain about their losses.
    Say what you want about the Republicans, they are good losers. I’m certain that if Democrats had been as good losers in the previous election, they’d have a much wider margin today. The Republican congress spent two years doing little to justify their majority. I’m sure that the memory of past behavior kept many people from turning Democrat this year.

    Reply

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