We had an election yesterday in the United States (or, as Mencken sagely observed, an advance auction of stolen goods). Here are five things to keep in mind about the results.
First, the GOP did better than most people (including me) expected.
This tweet captures the zeitgeist of last night.
The Senate results were especially disappointing for the Democrats. It does appear the Kavanaugh fight worked out very well for Republicans.
Second, better-than-expected election news for the GOP does not imply better-than-expected news for public policy. Given Trump’s semi-big-government populism, I fear this tweet is right about the increased risk of a counterproductive infrastructure package and a job-destroying increase in the minimum wage.
For what it’s worth, I think we’ll also get even more pork-filled appropriations spending. In other words, busting the spending caps after already busting the spending caps.
The only thing that might save taxpayers is that Democrats in the House may be so fixated on investigating and persecuting Trump that it poisons the well in terms of cooperating on legislation.
Fingers crossed for gridlock!
Third, there was mixed news when looking at the nation’s most important ballot initiatives.
On the plus side, Colorado voters rejected an effort to replace the flat tax with a discriminatory system (in order to waste even more money on government schools), California voters sensibly stopped the spread of rent control, Washington voters rejected a carbon tax, Florida voters expanded supermajority requirements for tax increases, and voters in several states legalized marijuana.
On the minus side, voters in four states opted to expand the bankrupt Medicaid program, Arizona voters sided with teacher unions over children and said no to expanded school choice, and voters in two states increased the minimum wage.
Fourth, Illinois is about to accelerate in the wrong direction. Based on what happened last night, it’s quite likely that the state’s flat tax will be replaced by a class-warfare-based system. In other words, the one bright spot in a dark fiscal climate will be extinguished.
This will accelerate the out-migration of investors, entrepreneurs, and businesses, which is not good news for a state that is perceived to be most likely to suffer a fiscal collapse. It’s just a matter of time before the Land of Lincoln becomes the land of bankruptcy.
Interesting, deep-blue Connecticut voters elected a Republican governor. Given the state’s horrific status, I suspect this won’t make a difference.
Fifth, Obama was a non-factor. Democrats lost almost every race where he campaigned.
Though I should point out that he deserves credit for trying to have an impact in close races. Many top-level politicians, looking to have a good “batting average,” only offer help to campaigns that are likely to prevail.
That being said, this adds to my hypothesis that Obama was basically an inconsequential president.
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[…] the White House usually loses mid-term elections. For recent examples, Democrats won the House in 2018 and there were big victories for the GOP in 2010 and 2014during the Obama […]
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Andrew Yang is an interesting character (for a democrat…) he is spending time talking about issues rather than besmirching white males for their “white privilege”… or “toxic masculinity”… Yang is for UBI… and interested in tooling up for the coming tech revolution… very serious discourse… not at all the nonsensical BS of the the elderly Bern and the socialist left…
“The Top Twenty Mueller Report Memes”
BY MATT MARGOLIS MARCH 23, 2019
https://pjmedia.com/trending/the-top-twenty-mueller-report-memes/
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Reblogged this on Gds44's Blog.
I will have to simply shut off the TV for at least two years. I cannot stomach the though of listening to the likes of Sheila Jackson Lee, Maxine Waters and Nancy Pelosi. Two of whom live in the most gerrymandered districts you could ever see (look them up). I was especially disappointed to see how close the socialists came in our great state of Texas. Yah, Ted Cruz is boring, but a socialist? I fear Texas is slipping. What is our world coming to when people want to slide away from libertarian concepts of less government?
Of course it’s true that infrastructure boondoggles don’t help the economy, and nobody hates the minimum wage more than I do, but the point with the Demonic Rats is their fanatical obsession with “Gun Control,” and their hard core socialism. Orange Man is Bad, but the Marxist pinkos are infinitely worse on every factor that matters.
I just saw a clip of Pelosi promising that NOW, that Dems are back in House majority there will be “accountability and transparency”…apparently what they have been rabidly, consistently obstructing is now what they want? Yeah. Right.
Trump should short circuit that first thing tomorrow. Have a meeting with current House leadership informing them he will NOW sign an EO to completely declassify and release “in the wild” every single doc the committees have requested be declassified without redactions and they can all stand together as he signs that and they go forward in a bipartisan way to work for the American people.
That would do two important things:
Ensure we the people actually GET the truth finally and since the dems have never wanted anything remotely resembling transparency [would show their corruption], they would refuse not just that but would then obstruct all going forward–the gridlock you’re wishing for.
I’d rather they not be gridlocked but I’d rather that than they continue to kick our escalating debt further down the road and worse…add significantly to it with even more gov’t crony-spending, gov’t involvement in economy.