First, the basic recap:
So, for the GOP victory can be summarized as 3 points plus Iowa in the presidential contest, 3 House seats, 4 senators, no governors, and losses in the state legislatures. And this, despite the fact that the GOP had control over the entire national governing apparatus, and Bush was the incumbent, with all the advantages (bully pulpit and a two-year head start in building his field campaign over John Kerry) thereunto pertaining. Oh, and this is not to mention, as the national media chorus all seems to agree, that the Republicans are better strategically, tactically, and rhetorically; have better, leaner, meaner consultants and candidates with a tougher, clearer message; and the conservative movement has a more developed media echo chamber, think tank infrastructure, and field campaign apparatus.
The truth is 2004 was a fizzle, not a boom. Democrats didn't win, to be sure, but should the GOP really be rejoicing given how little they were able to budge the needle? Karl Rove claims that 2004 was just the next stage in a "rolling realignment." Maybe. But that rock seems to have rolled as far up the hill (or Hill) as possible, and is soon headed in the other direction.
Still, watch for the Democrats to win just as many Senate seats, far more House seats, more governors, and continue their progress in the state legislatures next week -- and it still will be depicted as the Democrats somehow having come up short.
--Tom Schaller