http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/nov/04/republicans-win-big-election-midterms
In the end, there was no Republican wave. Indeed, ideologically it
was barely a ripple. Unlike 2010, with the Tea Party, or 2006, when the
Democrats took over, there was no all-encompassing agenda or
over-arching theme. The Republicans won the US midterms – there’s no denying that – but they didn’t win as big as it first seems.
This election cycle included not only conservative-friendly states
but a disproportionate number of competitive states in which incumbent
Democrats were stepping down. Democrats have not won Louisiana or
Arkansas in a presidential election since 1996, Georgia since 1992 and
Alaska since 1964. A Democrat losing in these places is no great
surprise. They were low-hanging fruit, and Republicans expended a lot of
energy – and even more money
– trying to get to it. They were successful. Democrats fared better on
Tuesday night than they did in 2010, two years after which Barack Obama
beat Mitt Romney. States where Democrats fared worse, like Virginia, North Carolina or Florida (in the governor’s race), are swing states that are always in play.
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