The 2010 Midterm Elections: An Overview
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Andrew E. Busch
This paper addresses three key questions related to the midterm elections of 2010: What happened? Why? And what difference does it make? Republicans made historic gains in the U.S. House and in state elections while making strong gains in the U.S. Senate. They benefited from an economic and issue environment that strongly favored them; in the House they also benefited from the overexposure of Democrats. Republican Senate gains were limited partly because Democrats were not overexposed there and partly due to factors specific to individual races, particularly candidate quality. A number of key demographics moved against Democrats, and the elections were marked by the emergence of a new popular movement in the form of the Tea Party which helped mobilize Republicans and conservative independents. The election results are best understood as a repudiation of Democratic rule, though a simple economic explanation is not sufficient. The long-term importance of the 2010 elections will depend on the interaction of important contingencies with the underlying alignment of the electorate, the character of which remains uncertain.
©2011 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/Boston
Articles in the same Issue
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- Where Are We in History? 2010 in the Longest Run
- The 2010 Midterm Elections: An Overview
- The Midterm Landslide of 2010: A Triple Wave Election
- Advertising Trends in 2010
- The Tea Party at the Election
- The Year of the Outsider: Political Amateurs in the U.S. Congress
- The Citizens United Election? Or Same As It Ever Was?
- Voter Turnout in the 2010 Midterm Election
- The Dynamics of Voter Preferences in the 2010 Congressional Midterm Elections
- Healthcare Reform: A Prescription for the 2010 Republican Landslide?
- The 2010 Elections: Party Pursuits, Voter Perceptions, and the Chancy Game of Politics
Articles in the same Issue
- Article
- Where Are We in History? 2010 in the Longest Run
- The 2010 Midterm Elections: An Overview
- The Midterm Landslide of 2010: A Triple Wave Election
- Advertising Trends in 2010
- The Tea Party at the Election
- The Year of the Outsider: Political Amateurs in the U.S. Congress
- The Citizens United Election? Or Same As It Ever Was?
- Voter Turnout in the 2010 Midterm Election
- The Dynamics of Voter Preferences in the 2010 Congressional Midterm Elections
- Healthcare Reform: A Prescription for the 2010 Republican Landslide?
- The 2010 Elections: Party Pursuits, Voter Perceptions, and the Chancy Game of Politics