Top Items:
Wall Street Journal:
Now We Can Get Congress Going — Reform the tax code, redefine ‘full time’ as working 40 hours a week, move on the Keystone XL pipeline—there are plenty of tasks ahead. — Americans have entrusted Republicans with control of both the House and Senate. We are humbled by this opportunity …
RELATED:
Ron Fournier / National Journal:
Obama Isn't Listening to Voters He Claims to Hear — “I hear you,” the president says. But he doesn't. — Shellacked and thumped by an angry electorate, President Obama declared to every American who voted in Tuesday's elections—and to those who've checked out of the political process—"I hear you."
Discussion:
Philly.com and Ed Driscoll
Townhall.com:
Obama Has Called the GOP's Bluff. What Will the House Do Next? — SHARES — If you were looking for any acknowledgment from President Obama that he bears any responsibility for the massacre Democrats suffered at the polls on Tuesday, then you were probably very disappointed in his press conference yesterday.
Discussion:
Hot Air, The Federalist and Washington Post
Washington Post:
Transcript: President Obama's Nov. 5 news conference on midterm election results — President Obama held a news conference Nov. 5 at the White House to discuss the results of the midterm congressional elections . — PRESIDENT OBAMA: Good afternoon, everybody. Have a seat.
New York Times:
Mr. Obama's Offer to Republicans
Mr. Obama's Offer to Republicans
Discussion:
Power Line, Mediaite and John Hawkins' Right Wing News
Alec MacGillis / The New Republic:
Democrats Didn't Lose Governor's Races Because of a GOP Wave. They Lost Because of Bad Candidates. — I knew Democrat Anthony Brown was in trouble in the race for Maryland governor when every single voter I spoke with Tuesday—including several who voted for Barack Obama …
Discussion:
Washington Monthly, Baltimore Sun, Lawyers, Guns & Money, Weekly Standard and American Spectator
RELATED:
Libby Nelson / Vox:
Republicans now have historic majorities in state legislatures. That's a really big deal. — One Republican victory in the midterm elections has been mostly overlooked. Yes, Republicans took control of the Senate and a surprising number of governorships. But they also won a record number of state legislature seats.
Discussion:
ABC News
RELATED:
Jonathan Chait / New York Magazine:
The Democrats Have Two Choices Now: Gridlock or Annihilation
The Democrats Have Two Choices Now: Gridlock or Annihilation
Discussion:
Pew Research Center, Hot Air, Taylor Marsh, Vox, Bloomberg View, Washington Post, National Review, Hit & Run and Liberal Values
Ezra Klein / Vox:
9 takeaways from the 2014 election
9 takeaways from the 2014 election
Discussion:
JustOneMinute, National Review and The Dish
Catherine Thompson / Talking Points Memo:
C-SPAN Caller On Air: ‘Republicans Hate That N***er Obama’ (VIDEO) — A man who called into C-SPAN's “Washington Journal” Thursday morning referred to President Barack Obama as “that n***er” before getting booted off the air. — The caller, who gave his name as Anthony from San Diego …
Brendan Nyhan / New York Times:
What 2014 Elections Can Tell Us About the 2016 Ones: Not So Much — America has again embraced our long history of electoral overreaction. While it's true that Republicans won a major victory at the polls, the results tell us far less about future elections than some commentary has suggested.
Discussion:
The Mischiefs of Faction, msnbc.com and Washington Post
Dana Milbank / Washington Post:
Dana Milbank: Obama seems numb to this latest ‘shellacking’ of Democrats — “I hear you,” President Obama said to the voters who gave Democrats an electoral drubbing in Tuesday's midterm elections. — But their message went in one presidential ear and out the other.
Discussion:
Hot Air and Hinterland Gazette
Charles P. Pierce / Esquire:
CHARLES PIERCE LIVE BLOGGING: OPEN ALL NIGHT … 1:30AM — I think it was contemplating the fact that both Sam Brownback and Paul LePage both may have survived as governors that was the last straw for me tonight. Brownback has wrecked his state. Even Kansas Republicans believe that.
Discussion:
Althouse, The Mahablog, Common Dreams and ECHIDNE OF THE SNAKES
Hillel Italie / Associated Press:
Rare WWII Story By John Steinbeck Finally Being Published — NEW YORK (AP) — In July 1944, Orson Welles wrapped up one of his wartime radio broadcasts with a brief, emotional reading of one of the country's favorite authors, John Steinbeck. — The piece was titled “With Your Wings,” …
Discussion:
Raw Story
Josh Gerstein / Politico:
Barack Obama's case for himself has holes — President Barack Obama and his aides are arguing that the stinging defeat Democrats suffered at the polls Tuesday wasn't a rejection of the policies he's advocated over the past six years, citing evidence of popular support for his agenda even as voters turned against his party.
Discussion:
Hinterland Gazette and PoliticusUSA
Rebecca Leber / The New Republic:
Congratulations, Voters. You Just Made This Climate Denier the Most Powerful Senator on the Environment. — In handing Republicans control of the Senate on Tuesday, Americans effectively voted for the party's hostile plans against President Barack Obama's environmental legacy.
Discussion:
Raw Story, Firedoglake, Little Green Footballs and Hit & Run
RELATED:
Brad Plumer / Vox:
The biggest loser in this election is the climate
The biggest loser in this election is the climate
Discussion:
John Hawkins' Right Wing News, Grist, Mashable and Politico
Tom Brune / Newsday:
Steve Israel, outgoing Democratic House campaign chief, sees 2016 hope — WASHINGTON — The political climate for Democrats can only get better in 2016, said Rep. Steve Israel, chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, on the day after Republicans swept into power in the Senate …
Discussion:
The Hill, Politico, Talking Points Memo, susiemadrak.com, Hot Air, DownWithTyranny!, New York Times and Washington Post
Politico:
How to waste 10 million dollars — Embracing the irony of setting up a super PAC that would spend big money in order to fight super PACs and other groups that spend big money, Harvard professor Larry Lessig and GOP strategist Mark McKinnon went all-in on the idea voters would kick megadonors to the curb.
Discussion:
Washington Monthly and Gawker