Voting United States.
(Image by Wikipedia (commons.wikimedia.org), Author: Tom Arthur from Orange, CA, United States) Details Source DMCA
"Election Day" has become a fuzzy concept lately: Officially it falls on "the Tuesday next after the first Monday in the month of November," but most states offer early voting in person or by mail these days.
Millions of Americans have already cast their votes -- and the probability that we won't know all the winners and losers on "Election Night" is somewhere in the neighborhood of 100%. The US Senate race in Georgia may well go to a runoff. Some congressional races may come out close enough to justify a recount, and in some other races prospective sore losers have already announced their intention to litigate any result they don't like until the cows come home.
Also, even though I'm writing this on the Saturday before "Election Day," there's a good chance you won't see it until Wednesday or later. So now feels like as good a time as any for the "morning after" column.
So, how was it for you? Are you basking in the afterglow of "your team's" victories, or venting loudly about the unfairness of "your team's" losses?
Are you convinced that, after all the months of constant foofooraw leading up to "Election Day," anything substantial really changed between Monday and Wednesday?
It didn't. We've still got the same problems we had before, and we've still got the same people (minus a few old faces and plus a few new) who will spend the next two years promising to solve those problems if we'll all just VOTE HARDER ... next time.
The same people who've spent the last two years telling us that this is THE MOST IMPORTANT ELECTION EVER said the same thing about the previous election and will say the same thing about the next election.
Those of us who believe that VOTING HARDER will solve our problems will find reasons why VOTING HARDER didn't work this time.
Their team lost its Senate majority, or didn't gain one.
The House changed majority parties, or didn't.
The dog ate their ballots.
There was spit on that baseball or lead in that bat.
Whether we believe any of that or not, life will go on next week in much the same way it did last week.
Which, I guess, is better than the alternative.
I've worked full-time in politics for more than two decades and part-time for more than three. I can summarize what I've learned in six words:
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