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Mitch McConnell and the 24 year itch
“Tell me you're trying to cure a seven-year ache
See what else your old heart can take.”
-Rosanne Cash
Kentucky Senator (and
Republican Minority Leader) Mitch McConnell is in a tight race for re-election
with challenger Bruce Lunsford.
If you look at history, that is not surprising.
McConnell was first elected to the Senate in 1984. He has been re-elected four times since
then.
According to the classic political science book, U.S Senators and Their World, by Donald
Matthews, it is harder for a Senator to get re-elected for a fourth or fifth
term, than to be re-elected after one.
Matthews showed that 80% of all Senators got re-elected
after one term, and that number increased to 84% for a second term and 88% for
a third. The re-election odds drop to
57% for those seeking four or more terms.
Matthews wrote his book in 1960 but I doubt that the theory has
changed.
I did a study of Matthew’s book when I was in graduate
school at Vanderbilt. The logic is
surprisingly simple. When someone has been
in the Senate for 24 years or more, the group of supporters that first got them
elected have died or lost interest in politics. Along the way, the Senator is building up
enemies.
Enemies have longer memories. People might forget a favor but never forget
something done to them.
Thus, human behavior favors a challenger.
The revenge factor is a problem for a candidate like
McConnell. McConnell ran aggressive and
polarizing campaigns in his four bids for Senate and in his earlier races for Jefferson County
(Louisville)
Judge Executive.
His elections were hotly contested, including a 1996 defeat
of current Governor Steve Beshear. Thus,
he has a sitting Governor waiting in line to take him down.
Unlike many other senators, McConnell has played an active
role in Kentucky
politics at every level. He was instrumental
in electing former Governor Ernie Fletcher that cooled after Fletcher’s
election.
The internal participation could benefit McConnell as he developed
a strong group of allies but, going back to Matthew’s theory, McConnell’s
involvement developed another group of enemies that could spring out if a
challenger has a chance to defeat McConnell.
Matthews noted
the blessing of seniority could also be a curse. Senators with increased
seniority take on more responsibility and important assignments within the
Senate.
Matthews said “in
the vocabulary of social psychology, his ‘reference groups’ change, he becomes
more concerned with Senate, national and international problems and devotes
less time and attention to the ‘folks back home”.
McConnell is the Senate’s highest ranking Republican and a
staple on the Washington
Sunday morning talk shows. He has had
to promote the political agenda of an unpopular president.
President Bush was an asset when McConnell ran for his
fourth term in 2002. Bush was at his
peak of popularity after September
11, 2001. McConnell was
running against a relatively unknown challenger.
In 2008, the situation is different. John McCain, the Republican nominee, goes
out of his way to differentiate himself from the President.
McConnell can’t “untie” his association with President
Bush.
His role as Minority Leader does not give him personal
political flexibility. A good example was Bush’s proposal for a $700 bailout
for Wall Street.
McConnell’s fellow Kentucky Republican, Senator, Jim
Bunning, took the politically popular position of opposing a bailout. Bunning had previously opposed President
Bush’s selection of Alan Greenspan and later Ben Bernanke as Chairmen of the
Federal Reserve Board. His opposition
was consistent with his stated philosophy.
As Minority Leader, McConnell does not have the luxury of
choosing philosophy over party.
The other reasons that Matthews cites, age and not spending time at home, don’t apply
to McConnell. Only 66, McConnell works hard at staying in
touch.
The next month will show whether McConnell can break the
“four term curse.” Lunsford is not the
strongest candidate the Democrats could have fielded. He has
never held office and lost two consecutive bids for Governor.
Some of officeholders mentioned were Auditor Crit Luellan,
former Attorney General Greg Stumbo, former Treasurer Jonathan Miller, current
Attorney General Jack Conway and Lt. Governor Daniel Mongardo. All would have been strong candidates but
only Lunsford answered the call.
According to the research of Professor Matthews, that call might result in Lunsford changing his name
from Citizen Lunsford to Senator Lunsford.
Don McNay
is the author of Son of a Son of a
Gambler. You can read his award
winning, syndicated column at www.donmcnay.com
or write to him at www.donmcnay.com McNay is the Treasurer for the National
Society of Newspaper Columnists.
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