A deadlocked Senate will also throw more light on the House.
If it’s very close in the Senate it will be very clear why not much legislation is starting there. And the that will still draw attention the Republican’s style of Governance (or lack thereof)
and look they’re doing it already, they just voted to arm Syrian jihadis to fight the Saudi jihadi’s its the new bipartisan era already…lol
George McGovern lost 49 states. Ted Kennedy fared worse.
I’m sorry we’re not a liberal nation but Republicans are exponentially worse than moderates. Lawmakers don’t pivot to the center by coinkydink. The center is typically where most votes reside.
That’s not to suggest liberal voters can’t better position themselves to make demands. It’s just easier to make demands of moderates than extremists. Getting the opportunity to deal with moderates pretty much requires voting for them. They’re no more static than the electorate. As more liberals exercise their vote, more libs will be elected to office. These things come in trends, not waves. The only way the tea party “waved” more than a Gadsden flag was because of puny turnout.
Just think, if another one or two of every ten Democrats had voted in 2010, we wouldn’t be wasting time with teabillies.