Louisianna - red state. Duck Dynasty endorsed the Republican nominee, Cruz endorsed the Republican nominee... Democratic nominee says he's going to expand Medicaid - Republicans refused to, because, Obama. Is this more evidence of how out of touch the Republican party has become with their extremism?
I've seen a couple other articles that blame his prostitution scandal for the loss - Hellloooooo, that was in 2007, and he's been elected as senator since then. I've seen mention that it's because people were anti-Jindal. Yet Jindal refused to endorse Vitter and the two did not get along at all. Not to mention, there were two other Republicans to choose from other than Vitter.
http://reverbpress.com/politics/louisiana-governor-race-vitter-edwards/Louisiana voters just told the Republican Party “hell no” with the blowout victory of Democratic John Bel Edwards over GOP favorite David Vitter. The runoff election results put Edwards ahead by almost 10%, a solid loss for the Senator Vitter’s bid to replace “Bobby” Jindal in the governor’s office.
This election season has been riddled with scandals. From prostitutes to an accused love child, the race had become little more than a circus at the end. But what likely made this race land in the Democratic camp was Vitter’s attempt to claim that Syrian refugees caused the attacks in Paris. The backlash against Vitter has now cost him, and his party, dearly at the polls.
Vitter had endorsements from Ted Cruz and Duck Dynasty’s Willie Robinson, he was supported by conservative voters, so being in the South, it should not have been a tough race, even with the scandals. But instead, celebrating victory is the Democrat.
Governor-elect Edwards has pledged to sign the Obamacare Medicaid expansion, giving medical coverage for an estimated half-million Louisiana citizens. Beyond this, he is showing a rejection of the Republican Party by the American voter. That he won so handily in a state which has been dominated for many years by Republican politics could reflect a weariness of GOP rhetoric, and a desire for new leadership.
The problem we find in politics is that when one party dominates, it becomes complacent. By having succeeded in the past, it rests on its laurels, and then fails to adapt as times, and voters change. The Vitter was running on a campaign which was more appropriate to 2005 than 2015. The past ten years have seen a dramatic shift in the electorate, as Baby Boomers began to die off and Millennials came of voting age. The reality is the GOP is continuing to campaign on the tactics engineered by Richard Nixon and Lee Atwater. Vitter’s attempt to implicate those fleeing a warzone as terrorists just does not work anymore.
If Vitter could not win in Louisiana, then what hope will the party have in the Presidential election next year?
I've seen a couple other articles that blame his prostitution scandal for the loss - Hellloooooo, that was in 2007, and he's been elected as senator since then. I've seen mention that it's because people were anti-Jindal. Yet Jindal refused to endorse Vitter and the two did not get along at all. Not to mention, there were two other Republicans to choose from other than Vitter.