Thanks to Barack, as many as 12 Senate seats are winnable by the GOP

WashingtonTimesLogoFrom The Washington Times:

The long-shot bid by Republicans to retake control of the Senate is suddenly in play, as the prospect of high-profile Republican candidates entering the fray has pushed the GOP even or ahead in polling for 10 races.

The potential candidacies of former Republican Govs. George E. Pataki in New York and Tommy G. Thompson in Wisconsin are improving the polling fortunes of the party as it pursues seats long in the hands of Democrats, while the anti-government "tea party" movement has provided momentum to Republican challengers in states such as Florida, Arkansas and Pennsylvania.

And here is the Zogby kicker:

"If the election were held today, the Republicans could come close to winning back the Senate, if not actually win it," said pollster John Zogby.

Republicans are solidly ahead to take at least five seats now held by Democrats — in North Dakota, Delaware, Nevada, Arkansas and Pennsylvania. Five more are now considered winnable — Colorado, Illinois, Wisconsin, Indiana and even liberal New York. Two other races, in California and Washington, are tightening daily.

But here’s the rub for the GOP: no one wants the same kind of Republicans in office that we had rubber stamping George Bush’s big-spending agenda for eight years. They need to find true-blue conservatives.

Good luck with that.

HT: Rod D. Martin

Published Friday, February 05, 2010 6:19 PM by Right-Mind

Comments

# re: Thanks to Barack, as many as 12 Senate seats are winnable by the GOP

It'll be 1994 all over again and thank God.  The GOP will sweep into Congress in November and balance out the system with a healthy split of power.  Barack Obama will then handily win reelection in 2012.  It's amazing to me that neither party can figure out how to do the right thing (govern to the center) once they have consolidated power.  Instead they just try to push their own cockamamie agendas until things fall apart and they're voted out.

Saturday, February 06, 2010 1:34 PM by Scott