If Americans Are Dissatisfied, Why Are Incumbents Poised for Re-Election?

The latest Gallup poll confirms that Americans believe unemployment and dysfunctional government are the nation’s most important problems, followed closely by the economy. Independent voters are more dissatisfied than are partisans and consider government dysfunction, poor political leadership, corruption and abuse of power the country’s biggest problems.
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Modi’s Victory and India’s Change Election

India’s election is a resounding call for change. More than half a billion Indians, a record 66 percent of eligible voters, cast ballots at some 930,000 polling places. Results released Friday show the conservative Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and its controversial leader, Narendra Modi, on course to win more than half the seats in parliament, the first time in 30 years a single Indian party has won enough seats to rule without coalition partners.
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The Case for Nonpartisan Election Overseers

The Wall Street Journal’s Beth Reinhard reports that secretary-of-state positions are the latest front in election war. Both parties see an advantage in controlling the offices that oversee election law and voting, especially in swing states such as Ohio, Colorado and Iowa. The 2000 presidential election, which came down to questionable and very partisan vote counting and legal challenges in Florida, is a perfect example of why election administration should be nonpartisan.
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Voter Enthusiasm Is Down, But Republicans Still Have an Edge

Given our dysfunctional government, it’s no surprise that most voters are not very excited about the midterm elections. Gallup polling released Monday found 53 percent of registered voters are less enthusiastic about voting this year than in previous elections. No group of voters is especially interested in the midterms, but Republicans do have a significant edge that bodes well for their electoral prospects.
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GOP Support for the Tea Party Is Down. Here’s Why It Still Has Influence.

A Gallup poll out Thursday reveals that just 41% of Republicans and Republican-leaning independents support the tea party–down significantly from the 61 percent who were tea-party supporters in November 2010. Among this group, opposition to the tea party has doubled, to 11%. Among all Americans, support for the tea party stands at 22%, down from 32% in November 2010
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Why Voters Don’t Care About the Monica Lewinsky Affair

John Feehery argued in a Think Tank post Wednesday that one of the many reasons Republicans “hated” Bill Clinton was because he stole their ideas. But the point of governing is reaching consensus, using the best ideas, and actually accomplishing things such as balancing the budget and welfare reform. It shouldn’t just be about taking positions so you have talking points for the next campaign. That’s what most politicians in Washington seem to have forgotten but what disaffected voters know all too well.
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Monica Lewinsky and Moving On

Monica Lewinsky writes in Vanity Fair that she chose this moment to reemerge because she is fearful of becoming an issue in the 2016 presidential campaign. After her sexual relationship with President Bill Clinton was revealed, Ms. Lewinsky became a cudgel for Republicans trying to topple the Clinton presidency; a “scapegoat” for Democrats trying to blame her; and a subject of scorn, ridicule and endless jokes.
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If Ruth Bader Ginsburg Retires, How Would the Court Shift?

Many in Washington have argued that Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, the court’s oldest member at 81, should retire. But there is an angle to this debate beyond the much-discussed potential difficulties any Obama nominee–particularly a liberal one–would face if Republicans win a Senate majority this fall.
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Ignoring Moderates Is a Dangerous Strategy

WSJ’s Peter Nicholas today details the decline in Barack Obama’s popularity with independent voters – with his approval rating down ten points in four years to just 29% in the latest WSJ poll. Independents, who now represent a larger share of the electorate than either Democrats or Republicans, are deeply disaffected not just with the Obama presidency but also with Congress. They may prefer Republicans at this point but it isn’t with great enthusiasm.
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