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Is Scott Brown's Senate election an omen of the possible resurgence of the moderate Northeastern Republican?Legions of disaffected moderates are hoping so.We as a party need to recognize that one-size-does-not-fit-all when it comes to campaigns. It shouldn't be an earth-shattering revelation. But the fact of the matter is that the type of candidate and campaign that can win Alabama is not going to be the same type of candidate or campaign needed to win in New Hampshire. Voters in the Northeast respect political independence and expect their elected officials to focus on finding solutions to the challenges facing the region and out country, not just on red meat rhetoric.
GOP leaders need to understand this as they usher Scott Brown into the Senate. If Brown breaks ranks with them on some issues, they can marginalize him by giving him weak committee assignments or denying him campaign funds in his first run for a full term. They can exclude him for failing to toe the party line on social issues. But they risk quashing a resurgence of support from moderates and independents in New England and the northern mid-Atlantic.
Right now Republicans are benefiting from a steep drop in President Obama's popularity. Pollsters predict losses for Democrats in Congress in November, some as great as 50 seats in the House. But support for the GOP is a mile wide and a millimeter deep. If the economy picks up (as the most recent jobs report indicates it will) those projected gains will diminish.
Senator-elect Brown espouses the moderate GOP version of pro-choice, as did these women. He does not approve of using government money to fund abortions for poor women. But he believes government plays no legitimate role in the decision whether to carry a pregnancy to term. For that sin, conservative activists among the Republicans will likely try to pound him into submission once he takes office, although they certainly rejoiced at his special election victory in January.
Senator-elect Brown espouses the moderate GOP version of pro-choice, as did these women. He does not approve of using government money to fund abortions for poor women. But he believes government plays no legitimate role in the decision whether to carry a pregnancy to term. For that sin, conservative activists among the Republicans will likely try to pound him into submission once he takes office, although they certainly rejoiced at his special election victory in January.
Senate Minority leaders should welcome Brown and his broad-spectrum, self-proclaimed independence. Americans keep telling pollsters they are sick of uber-partisanship and want to work together and fix the country's problems.Accepting Brown, liberal views and all, is a good first step toward making the kind of progress voters demand.
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