Although he ran one of the most despicable campaigns in Senate history against decorated war hero and triple-amputee Max Cleland back in 2002, Saxby Chambliss has not been among the worst Republicans serving in Congress in recent years. While his voting record has earned him miserable ratings from liberal groups and sterling ratings from conservative ones, Chambliss has at least sought to work constructively on some issues and hasn’t been much of a bomb-thrower. In the aftermath of the failure of the Bowles-Simpson commission, for example, Chambliss joined the Gang of Six, a group of senators who sought compromise on deficit reduction and were willing to concede the need for new revenue as part of any deal. More recently, he voted for the New Year’s Eve fiscal cliff agreement, earning the enmity of the Tea Party. Perhaps, unsurprisingly, Chambliss has decided he doesn’t need the headache of taking on the crazies in his own party and has decided not to seek reelection.
In today’s GOP, it is not enough to have an A+ rating from the NRA, a 100% rating from the National Right to Life Committee and Americans for Tax Reform, and a 0% rating from NARAL and the Human Rights Campaign. That is not conservative enough, so Chambliss is calling it quits.
This, of course, creates an open seat in the 2014 election and, sadly, one of the Democrats best pickup opportunities of the cycle. On the Republican side, there will be a crowded field of some of the most unhinged and mentally challenged lunatics in the entire country.
If you are not familiar with the maniacal stylings of the Georgia congressional delegation, you will need to get up to speed quickly. One hardly knows where to begin with these people. Rep. Tom Price, for example, thinks the government is going to take away your Bibles because they’re offensive to gay people. Rep. Lynn Westmoreland joined Michele Bachmann and Louie Gohmert in their deranged attack on State Department employee Huma Abedin, earning a rebuke from Speaker Boehner. Rep. Paul Broun could be the craziest man to ever serve in Congress. Among other things, he thinks the Big Bang Theory was created by Satan. Meanwhile, his colleague Rep. Phil Gingrey, an OB-GYN, thinks that women have difficulty conceiving when they are under stress, so Todd Akin wash’t that far off the mark with the whole rape thing. Rep. Rob Woodall likes to explain to constituents that they don’t need Medicare and they should just take care of themselves. Rep. Tom Graves would rather shut down the government than allow any federal funding for Planned Parenthood. Rep. Austin Scott is a domestic drone conspiracist whose first bill in Congress aimed at destroying the entire Legal Services Corporation in order to protect agricultural interests that discriminate against American citizens in favor of guest workers. And, this, despite running as a big opponent of Latino immigration.
That’s just a primer on the type of people Georgians have chosen to represent them. One of those fools will more likely than not become the next senator from Georgia, but we cannot despair. Of all the states that Obama lost, he only came closer to winning North Carolina than Georgia. It is not as strongly Republican as it seems. We can win this seat if we can find someone reasonable with a little cross-over appeal. Hopefully, that person will not be John Barrow.
Paul Broun is the craziest member from Georgia ever to serve in Congress. Louis Goehmert still IMHO had the lock on the craziest ever despite Broun’s nipping at his heels and NC’s own Virginia Foxx coming in third, just ahead of Michele Bachmann.
Watch out for Herman Cain and Allen West. The fever has not subsided.
But who will the Democrats put up? They have a really shallow bench for statewide office. There’s Max Cleland, Jimmy Carter, Zell Miller, Sam Nunn, and who else?
Most obviously, there is John Barrow.
Now, I admit that Gohmert is nuttier than a PayDay bar, but I don’t think he has Broun beat.
Zell Miller left the party back when he went nuts. Jimmy Carter has better things to do.
Jim Marshall might be interested. I’d look to the business community and find a non-politician.
John Barrow is going to win statewide? Right!
And just what Dems need–another Blue Dog Senator.
well, one theory is that the best way to win seats like this is to nominate a very conservative Democrat. John Barrow may be taking it to the extreme, but it’s a bit like running Ben Nelson or Jim Webb or Zell Miller or even Fritz Hollings. It has worked and it can continue to work.
another theory is that, especially in a low turnout midterm election, it is important to really mobilize the base with a candidate that they can get excited about. This can also work. Last year had presidential coattails, but Tammy Baldwin and Sherrod Brown did quite well, with enthusiasm making up for whatever loss there was with crossover appeal.
either theory can be successful in Georgia as long as the party doesn’t split over two candidates from diametrically different wings.
another test would be Ashley Judd in Kentucky. She would certainly have trouble winning over coal country or making any inroads with Republicans, but she might excite the base and win over a lot of women who would otherwise stay home.
I don’t think there is just one way to win a seat, and while I’d prefer to test the progressive theory, I’d take a Ben Nelson type in Georgia over any of the crazy alternatives.
Not exactly like Fritz Hollings. But certainly like the others.
I’m not sure there are two different wings of the party in Georgia.
And I was thinking more of the implications for governing than for winning the election.
TD: whatever happened to that guy Jim Martin who Saxby beat in 2008? Didn’t progressives like him? Where is he these days?
Late to this post but note that no one answered your question. Jim Martin is out of politics and has never won a state wide office nor served in the state legislature. Good guy, but not very charismatic. We need a younger fresher face. He or she is gonna have to be created out of whole cloth. The state Democratic party has gotta start that process sometime and it might as well be for a Senate seat that is up for grabs.
So it goes. Thanks for the info. I wonder if it’s possible to get a good African-American candidate out of Atlanta.
What the hell, I’m going to go ahead and predict a Democratic pickup if the Republicans nominate one of those numskulls. The reason is that they’re going to give the Democrats a gigantic amount of ammunition to use with their votes in the 113th Congress. For instance who knows how many times they’ll have voted to eliminate Medicare, Social Security, the EPA, the Smithsonian, the Post Office, and Sesame Street by November 2014.
Also, it’s hard to predict what kinds of crises and emergencies will erupt in the meanwhile, but it is possible to predict some of them, and to predict that the Republicans will be on the wrong side of everything. Sadly, I feel quite safe in predicting that there will be more mass shootings, and more severe weather events.
Georgia’s in the hurricane zone, isn’t it? Well, if it wasn’t before, it is. It’s going to be increasingly difficult to persuade people that climate changes is some kind of jedi mind trick that Al Gore is trying to play on them.
Are there any potential Republican senate candidates in Georgia who aren’t currently in the House? At least they’d have a cleaner slate. As for the Democrat, Georgia must have some potential Ashley Judd’s, don’t they? I don’t know what liberal musicians, actors, athletes, whatever live in Georgia, but there must be a few to choose from.
Roll Call:
One more prediction: Obama campaigns heavily for the Democrat. Republicans accuse him of politicizing the election.
Mmmmm. Reid vs. Cain (or West)
That would be worth watching.
Georgia on my mind . . .
http://www.rickross.com/reference/snake/snake4.html
Kingston GA
Zell Miller-Nathan Deal country.
One name I haven’t heard is Ralph Reed, if he isn’t running who will he get behind, before the primary?
He is still a player, especially in Georgia, and an open senate seat is just too tempting for him not to try to get who he wants.