Looking forward to November?

Big Money

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It looks like the Democrats are gong to take some losses, but who knows with the turmoil in the Republican party these days. Clearly the Republican gains wont be as big as the could have been.

We will see.
 
Clearly the Republican gains wont be as big as the could have been.


How's that, Counselor?


In recent years voters have gone against a president’s party in large and consistent ways when they disapprove of him: more than 80 percent of disapprovers vote for the opposing party's candidates.


In the last midterms, six in 10 voters said their congressional vote was partly to either express “support for” or “opposition to” Obama.


Today the president’s approval is 46 percent in the most recent CBS News poll.





http://www.cbsnews.com/news/how-presidential-approval-can-make-or-break-a-midterm/
 
Then there's this:


Obama is finding that Democrats are increasingly opposing him on issues to better position themselves against challenges from the GOP, which many Washington insiders expect will take control of the Senate in November.


There are wide-ranging and variable issues on which Democrats are opposing Obama, whose coattails are getting shorter and shorter as his public opinion ratings drop to all-time lows.


Senate Democrats such as Louisiana’s Landrieu, Arkansas’ Mark Pryor and Kay Hagan of North Carolina are desperate to distance themselves from the still unpopular Obamacare, with Hagan citing a conflicting schedule as she avoided being seen with Obama when he visited her state last month, according to Time.com.






http://atlantablackstar.com/2014/02/04/midterm-elections-approaching-obama-finds-support-waning-congress/
 
Even Hillary Clinton, the former secretary of state and Democratic presidential heir apparent, is carefully differentiating her position on Iran with that of the administration.


As she has urged her former Senate colleagues not to pass new sanctions, she is touting her toughness on Iran during her tenure in the president’s cabinet, giving the impression that she is tougher on the Islamic republic than her successor, John Kerry.


In a letter Clinton sent to the Senate last week, she subtly points to differences between her foreign policy outlook and that of the administration she served.


“It could rob us of the international high ground we worked so hard to reach, break the united international front we constructed, and in the long run, weaken the pressure on Iran by opening the door for other countries to chart a different course,” Clinton wrote.




http://atlantablackstar.com/2014/02/04/midterm-elections-approaching-obama-finds-support-waning-congress/
 
From your post in this thread. Are you saying the Democrats cannot take the House and hold the Senate?

Hell, this low IQ dunce has already pretty much claimed the Presidency for the Hildebeast. Republicans, according to buffoons like Comrade Dimwit and Jarod the dunce, can ONLY win by......becoming Democrats.

LMAO
 
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