Tomorrow, Tomorrow. You’re Only a Day Away!

The final USA Today/Gallup measure of how Americans’ plan to vote tomorrow in the Midterm Elections shows Republicans continuing to hold a huge lead over Democrats among likely voters, a lead large enough to suggest that regardless of turnout, the Republicans will win more than the 40 seats needed to give them the majority in the U.S. House.

The results are from Gallup’s Oct. 28-31 survey of 1,539 likely voters. It finds 52% to 55% of likely voters preferring the Republican candidate and 40% to 42% for the Democratic candidate on the national generic ballot — depending on turnout assumptions. Gallup’s analysis of several indicators of voter turnout from the weekend poll suggests turnout will be slightly higher than in recent years, at 45%. (I’m thinking they’re a little low with their estimate.)  This would give the Republicans a 55% to 40% lead on the generic ballot, with 5% undecided.

There are some more numbers that I want you to consider today as you prepare for the biggest Midterm Elections in our lifetimes.

America is more Conservative today than we were when Newt Gingrich and the Freshmen Class of 1994 swept into Congress.  54% of likely voters proclaim Conservatism.  This is not very good news for President Barack Hussein Obama (mm mmm mmmm) and the Progressives.  Would you like some more proof?

Yesterday, in Cleveland, Obama could only manage to draw a crowd of 8,000 for the Democratic National Committee’s Moving America Forward’ rally at Cleveland State University’s Wolstein Center, a hall where the capacity is 13,000. The rafters were largely empty.  Organizers whined in explanation that the president was competing on a Sunday afternoon with church, football and Halloween.  Obama drew a huge crowd of about 35,000 when he was in nearby, Liberally run Columbus, Ohio, in an earlier October rally.  The thrill is gone.

Even Democratic campaign professionals are admitting that the House is gone.  The only question that remains is how many seats they will lose.

While few of them have the courage to come out on the record for fear of  losing their jobs or depressing what meager Democrat turnout, that there will be, every one of nearly a dozen Democratic House consultants and political strategists surveyed expect a GOP majority to be elected Tuesday.  Their consensus was that Democrats would lose somewhere between 50 and 60 seats.

A senior party consultant who was on the low end with his predictions said the party would lose between 40 and 50 seats. On the high-end, one Democratic consultant said losses could number around 70 seats.

Dave Beattie, a Florida-based Democratic pollster who is working on a slate of competitive House races wrapped up the Democrat viewpoint very succinctly:

It s*cks.  I’m resigned to the fact that it s*cks.

On the Republican side, two Republican leaders told it like it is on yesterday morning’s talk shows.

Mississippi Governor Haley Barbour, Republican Governors Association chairman, said on NBC that “the midterm election is a referendum on Obama’s policies” and predicted that the Republicans will take over the House.

Sarah Palin, former Alaska governor and Republican vice presidential nominee, said on “Fox News Sunday”:

It’s going to be a political earthquake and the message will have been sent to the left that they blew it.

 Yes, ma’am.  Perhaps it was a moment like this that blew it for the Dems:

Or maybe it was a moment like this:

But, hey, we can always count on Obama to put Americans first:

And, if the Domestic issues and Scooter’s arrogance aren’t enough to get you fired up about tomorrow, chew on this from Breitbart.com:

The United States will come under the spotlight at the UN’s top human rights assembly’s for the first time over the coming week along with other countries that face scrutiny by the Human Rights Council.

The 12-day session of the 47 member council starting on Monday will include regular “universal periodic reviews” of 16 members of the United Nations, including the United States on November 5.

Some 300 US civil liberties and community groups in the US Human Rights Network on Monday called on the Obama administration to bring “substandard human rights practices” in the United States into line with international standards.

The United States only agreed to join the Council in May 2009, after the Bush administration had shunned the body which replaced its similar though discredited predecessor, the UN human rights commission, in 2006.

The Network produced a 400-page report criticising “glaring inadequacies in the United States? human rights record,” including the “discriminatory impact” of foreclosures, “widespread” racial profiling and “draconian” immigration policies.

[Among the] UN member states scheduled for review in this Council session will be Andorra, Bulgaria, Croatia, Honduras, Jamaica, Liberia, Libya, Lebanon Malawi, Maldives, the Marshall Islands, Mauritania, Micronesia, Mongolia, and Panama.

The greatest, most charitable nation in the world is under Human Rights review by a bunch of under-developed Third World countries?  We can all thank our anti-American President, his entire idiotic administration, and the Far-Left controlled Democrat Progressive Party for this.   As we look forward to a glorious, righteous election day tomorrow, I wish to leave you with a reminder from Mr. Ray Stevens.  God Bless America!

5 thoughts on “Tomorrow, Tomorrow. You’re Only a Day Away!

  1. Crimefyter's avatar Crimefyter

    Here’s an idea…after the moving vans remove the defeated “darlings” from DC, they can swing on over to the UN and move them out of the Country!

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  2. d1carter's avatar d1carter

    The sleeping giant is yawning and stretching. He will be wide awake tomorrow and voting. Hang on to your hats, it’s gonna be a tsunami.

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