The Grand Old Party's over.

AuthorGillespie, Nick

THE ONE GOOD thing you can say about midterm elections is that they are easier to ignore than the ones held during presidential years.

Which isn't to say they don't matter. Just a dozen years ago, the COP took full control of Congress for the first time in four decades. While the champagne was still flowing, Sen. Phil Gramm (R-Texas) crowed that voters "didn't send us here to raise taxes half as much as Bill Clinton, increase spending half as much as Bill Clinton, or increase regulations half as much as Bill Clinton."

At the time, everyone assumed that Gramm meant that Republicans would shrink the size and scope of government. These days that's not so clear. Since 2001, when the COP took over the executive branch along with Congress, inflation-adjusted federal outlays have increased a whopping 45 percent.

Gramm, of course, is long gone from office, as are most of the other architects of the "Republican revolution." Pollsters and even top Republican campaign officials (according to The Washington Post) are saying that the GOP will likely lose either the House or the Senate, maybe both.

Whether or not the Republicans actually end up in the minority, there's no doubt that after half a decade of controlling the legislative and executive branches of the federal government, the GOP has worn out its welcome with many voters. Indeed, a recent Gallup Poll found that 19 percent of Republicans "had no favorable views" of their own party. There are many reasons for this: The Mark Foley scandal (or more precisely, the response of the GOP leadership to that scandal), dirty dealings with felonious...

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