Archive for the ‘Republican’ Category

Republican win would worsen Obama's foreign policy pains

With an unpopular president and Republicans gaining momentum in the run-up to the US congressional elections, a conservative takeover of the Senate appears entirely possible. Analysts are divided over what a Republican victory would mean for President Barack Obama's ability to govern.

While some argue that Republicans - given their newly gained power - will be forced to finally cooperate with Obama, others think the party's conservative base will prevent that, especially in light of the 2016 presidential elections.

Republican control of Congress could have implications for domestic policy, such as trying to roll back Obama's health-care reform. But it could also make it much harder for Obama in the foreign policy arena as Congress has the so-called power of the purse and the Senate has to ratify international treaties.

DW asked two scholars to weigh in on how a Republican victory could affect five key international issues.

Fight against IS

"There will be a tougher line," said Julian Zelizer, professor of history and public affairs at Princeton University. Republican rhetoric would become harsher and criticism of the Obama administration's handling of the fight against "Islamic State" militants would increase - especially if things get worse in Syria and Iraq.

Both Bob Barker, the incoming chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee should the Republicans gain the majority and John McCain, the key figure on the Armed Services Committee in the Senate, have long supported sending more sophisticated weapons to the Free Syrian Army and to the moderate Syrians, said Norman Ornstein, residential scholar at the American Enterprise Institute.

"But that does not mean that you are going to see a significant drumbeat from Republicans in Congress for troops in the region as they say in the clichd boots on the ground," noted Ornstein. "That would be extraordinarily unpopular with Americans."

A Republican Congress could make a deal with Iran more tricky

Nuclear deal with Iran

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Republican win would worsen Obama's foreign policy pains

Perspective: A scorecard for election night

Will the Republican Party enjoy a wave election in 2014? Here are some metrics that can help you determine the answer as you follow the returns Tuesday night.

The GOP has the upper hand in this midterm election cycle because it's the sixth year of a presidency and a pretty unpopular one at that. Historically, parties that don't control the White House tend to chalk up a lot of gains in midterm elections such as this one.

Still, when measuring the extent of a wave election, it's important to keep a few things in mind. First, a party's electoral success in one realm say, congressional races might be undercut by failures elsewhere, such as in the governorships. And second, the true strength of a wave is measured less by victories in places where the surging party is already strong, but more by victories in states that are either competitive or that actually lean toward the opposing party.

The following 10 factors are designed to measure how broad a potential Republican wave turns out to be on a national scale not just in U.S. Senate and House races, but in governorships, state legislative chambers, state attorney general races, ballot measures and state Supreme Court races.

We've included a rating system to gauge how well each party did once the results are tallied. The questions are designed to gauge aspects of the election deeper than just the surface results. Are Republicans winning in Democratic-leaning areas rather than in solidly Republican areas only? Does a party win both national and state-level races in the same state, or do voters split their ballots?

After settling on 10 key questions, we set a baseline for what's "expected" based on current analysis by electoral handicappers and established a sliding scale that awards more credit to a party for exceeding the conventional wisdom once the ballots are finally counted. After the election, we'll add these all together and see how strong the wave ended up being. Fire up those calculators; here we go:

1. How many reasonably competitive Senate seats does the GOP win in states won by President Barack Obama in 2012?

Races are: Colorado, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Oregon, New Hampshire, Virginia.

0: Weak night for Republicans; 1: medium night for Republicans; 2: strong night for Republicans; 3: very strong night for Republicans; 4 or more: extremely strong night for Republicans.

2. By how many cumulative percentage points do GOP Senate candidates in competitive races exceed Mitt Romney's 2012 percentage in that state?

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Perspective: A scorecard for election night

Did Chris Christie react to the charge that he was using his power as chair of the Republican – Video


Did Chris Christie react to the charge that he was using his power as chair of the Republican
Did Chris Christie react to the charge that he was using his power as chair of the Republican Governors Association to undercut Scott Walker #39;s reelection bid?

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Did Chris Christie react to the charge that he was using his power as chair of the Republican - Video

Large Republican voter turnout expected – Video


Large Republican voter turnout expected
Mike Gousha says Gov. Walker #39;s supporters are some of the most reliable in the country, and will turn out in large numbers for him. Subscribe to WISN on YouT...

By: WISN 12 News

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Large Republican voter turnout expected - Video

Malzberg | Reince Priebus chairman of the Republican National committee | Part 1 – Video


Malzberg | Reince Priebus chairman of the Republican National committee | Part 1
chairman of the Republican National committee joins Steve to discuss The Washington Free Beacon article, " Hillary Clinton: Corporations and Businesses Don #39;t...

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Malzberg | Reince Priebus chairman of the Republican National committee | Part 1 - Video