Some are saying Sen. Evan Bayh dropped his bombshell on Monday because he feared he’d be trounced in the November election.
Maybe so.
But if that’s true, the two-term Hoosier Democrat had tea leaves that saw things far differently than most political analysts. As of Monday, Bayh had a huge lead over the leading Republican challengers in the polls. And he already had $13 million in his campaign war chest.
There are those who saw the Republican upset in Massachusetts and concluded that 2010 was likely to be a bad year for Democrats. After all, if the party can’t hang onto Edward Kennedy’s seat in the U.S. Senate, what seat can it keep?
Certainly, the polls might have grown tighter as November moved closer, and it’s entirely possible Bayh would have been faced with the race of his life.
Anything’s possible in politics. Few, after all, would have predicted that Bayh’s father, Birch, would have been run out of office by an upstart named Dan Quayle.
But what if Bayh made his decision for exactly the reason he cited? What if the political moderate gave up a 24-year career in public service because he found too few colleagues willing to look for middle ground?
“There’s just too much brain-dead partisanship,” Bayh said in a nationally broadcast interview.
He complained that too few individuals in either party seemed willing to reach across the aisle in the spirit of compromise. Partisanship and gridlock, he said, had simply made the job too frustrating.
The general public would seem to share that frustration.
An Associated Press-GfK poll last month found just 32 percent of respondents approving of how Congress was handling its job. People were split about evenly over whether they wanted their own members of Congress to be re-elected.
A CBS News/New York Times poll early this month found 81 percent saying it’s time to elect new people to Congress. Just 8 percent said most members deserve re-election.
Some have suggested that voters across the country are fed up with Democrats, but others have said they’re simply tired of politics as usual.
Bayh suggested on Monday that voters could deliver “a shock” to Congress by voting lots of incumbents out of office.
Maybe that’s just the sort of shock Washington needs.
Opinion
A message to Congress
- Opinion
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If you say so
In an opinion piece we published Thursday, state Rep. Mike Karickhoff announced why he voted against “right-to-work” legislation. His reason: The community told him to.
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Cheers and jeers - Saturday, Feb. 4, 2012
Karickhoff acted ‘cowardly’
The Rev. Robin Wentworth Mayer and Horst G. Mayer of Kokomo send the Jeer for state Rep. Mike Karickhoff’s silence during the “right-to-work” debate:
“Mr. Karickhoff, for someone who’s new to office, you’ve certainly learned the art of talking out of both sides of your mouth.
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Let’s drug test our lawmakers
Perhaps it’s appropriate that a measure passed by the Indiana House this week would ask not only welfare recipients but Indiana lawmakers to consent to a drug test.
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Editorial - Feb. 2, 2012: Peru delivers a message
The issue: Peru’s collection of $20,000 last year from property owners who failed to keep their yards mowed.
Our view: Aggressive enforcement can help a city’s finances, but the benefits go beyond dollars and cents.
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Karickhoff: Reason behind my ‘right-to-work’ vote
There is no doubt the “right-to-work” debate has brought mixed emotions, not only to our state but District 30 as well. There were only a handful of House Republicans who did not vote in support of this legislation. Let me explain why I felt it was necessary for me to vote in opposition to right to work.
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Heinig: ‘Right-to-work’ law to arouse continued resistance
I wouldn’t call Gov. Mitch Daniels a charismatic leader, but he does possess some leadership skills. If he didn’t, he couldn’t have brought us this far along the happy trail to his economic Valhalla.
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Applications made easier
This is an exciting time for the families of our community’s high school seniors. College acceptance letters are being distributed.
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Take charge for safety
A 36-year-old Kokomo man is due in court today. He is to be arraigned on two counts of murder and two counts of attempted murder.
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The next chapter for "Right-to-WorK"
Democrats did the right thing Wednesday by finally showing up to allow a vote on the so-called “right-to-work” measure.
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Cheers and Jeers Saturday, Jan. 28, 2012
‘True heart’ of the heartland
Tony Dungy, NBC football commentator and former coach of the Indianapolis Colts, sends this Cheer for the Super Baskets of Hope program for hospitalized children:
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If you say so








