Tuesday, November 20, 2018

LIBERAL DELAWARE: BRUTAL MIDTERM ELECTION NIGHT SHOWS A REPUBLICAN CAN'T WIN DELAWARE

LIBERAL DELAWARE: BRUTAL MIDTERM ELECTION NIGHT SHOWS A REPUBLICAN CAN'T WIN DELAWARE 
NOTICE: WRITTEN BY LIBERALS FOR A LIBERAL NEWS COMPANY
BY Matthew Albright, Delaware News Journal  
republished below in full unedited for informational, educational and research purposes:
 
News Journal Engagement Editor Matthew Albright.
Jennifer Corbett, The News Journal
Tuesday was a brutal night for the Republican Party in Delaware.
All five of its statewide candidates lost their elections. Their margins of defeat ranged from "decisive" to "humiliating."
The one that hurts the most is the one that was closest — Treasurer Ken Simpler, the party's clear rising star, lost his re-election bid to first-time candidate Colleen Davis, 46-52.
Simpler was almost universally seen as the Republicans' next — maybe only — potential candidate to make a serious run for governor in the next few years. Not only does Simpler's loss mean there won't be any statewide Republicans next year, it strongly suggests that the party won't be able to compete in such races for the foreseeable future.
The numbers: See the results of Tuesday's statewide elections
If any Republican could win a statewide, it would be Simpler. He had plenty of campaign funds, he earned widespread praise for his work in office and he cultivated a reputation as a moderate consensus builder, which could have theoretically helped him win independent and even Democratic voters.
But it wasn't enough. Maybe it was rage at President Donald Trump, maybe his message got lost in the noise, but Simpler just couldn't overcome the huge registration advantage Democrats enjoy in Delaware.
Republicans are used to being outnumbered in Delaware, but their plight is getting worse. Not only are there 135,000 more Democrats than Republicans, the majority party is adding voters at a significantly faster rate than the GOP.
So the gap is wide, and getting wider.
The GOP used to overcome its registration disadvantage by running candidates like Mike Castle, who was fiscally conservative but socially moderate or even liberal. That made him capable of winning independents and Democrats.
These days, Republicans seem to be relaying more heavily on candidates like Rob Arlett — Trump-supporting, family-values conservatives. These candidates might excite Sussex County conservatives, but they don't have much out-of-party appeal. And simple math says Republicans can't win a base election.
Even Republicans with crossover appeal — like Simpler, who Castle enthusiastically endorsed — are struggling these days. Not only are Republican voters drifting further to the right, but Democrats are less and less likely to cross party lines, particularly while Trump is in office.
There was more bad news for Republicans in the races for the General Assembly. Republicans lost a seat in the House and a seat in the Senate, which doesn't sound bad — until you hear who was defeated.
Rep. Deborah Hudson and Sen. Greg Lavelle were both longtime lawmakers and top leaders in their caucuses. Lavelle in particular was probably the single most effective legislator in opposing Democrats' agenda.
There is a reason why Democrats threw the kitchen sink at him — Republicans are going to sorely miss Lavelle in Dover.
There are some points of consolation for the GOP.  While elected New Castle County Republicans are an increasingly endangered species, they aren't totally extinct — the GOP successfully defended two Pike Creek-area House seats despite steep registration disadvantages and energetic Democratic challengers.
Republicans can also take comfort in the knowledge that their grip on the southern end of the state is now near-absolute. Democrats were excited about many of the candidates they ran in Sussex County, particularly Don Allan, but they all got crushed — outside of liberal enclaves at the beaches, no Democratic candidate broke 40 percent.
It's clear that Delaware's two political parties are increasingly entrenching themselves in their geographic strongholds — Democrats are locking down New Castle County while Republicans tighten their grip on Sussex.
Unfortunately for Republicans, there are far more people upstate than there are downstate. And until they find some way to break out of this mold, they will be firmly limited to minority status.
I'm convinced this is a bad thing for Delaware.
As a moderate, I worry that Democrats will be inevitably be pushed to the left once their main concern is winning a primary election. But regardless of your ideology, there's reason to want competitive general elections.
When the primary election is the vote that matters, and when only Democrats get to vote in that election, then only Democrats really get a say in who leads our state. Less than half the state gets to pick who governs all of us.
Related: Delaware's closed primary elections disenfranchise independent voters like me
That's just undemocratic. It's a potential recipe for complacency and corruption. And the only way it's going to change is if Republicans stop playing base-obsessed hard-right-wing politics and claw their way back into relevance on the statewide scene.
Unfortunately, I don't see that happening anytime soon.