Karl Rove's Political Predictions For 2014
By Karl Rove, December 28, 2013
It's
time to see how well I did with my predictions for 2013 and to offer
a set of 2014 forecasts.
I
got 10 predictions for this year right. President Obama's job
approval rating did drop—from 53% at year's start to 40% this week.
There was a new administration scandal, the most significant being
the IRS targeting of conservative groups. And ObamaCare's
implementation was indeed "ragged and ugly" and "a
continuing political advantage to Republicans" as forecast.
There
was no grand budget bargain with entitlement reform. Venezuela's Hugo
Chávez did die. New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie won handily and the
Virginia gubernatorial race was closer (2.6%) than many experts
predicted. House Judiciary Committee Republicans are working on
immigration reform while the comprehensive Senate bill backed by Mr.
Obama is stalled. Hillary Clinton is now the front-runner in 2016
polls while the Obama girls got a new puppy.
Four
predictions were wrong: unemployment hit 7% instead of 8%; Syria's
Bashar Assad remains in power; Fidel Castro is still alive and
President and Mrs. George W. Bush got a granddaughter, not a
grandson. In one instance, the results were half-right. The debt
ceiling was raised, but Mr. Obama wasn't forced to make spending cuts
in return.
So
what does my crystal ball say for 2014? Mr. Obama's Gallup
disapproval rating will end higher than this week's 53%. Republicans
will keep the House with a modest pickup of 4-6 seats. The GOP will
most likely end up with 50 or 51 Senate seats (in the former case,
keeping Vice President Joe Biden fully occupied for two years
presiding over the chamber). Control of the Senate may not be decided
until December's Louisiana runoff.
Propelled by union contributions,
Democrats will outspend Republicans overall in House and Senate
races.
Republicans
will lose a net of one or two of their 30 governorships. They'll add
to their numbers in statewide offices and state legislatures and see
more Latino, Asian-American, African-American and women Republicans
elected up and down the ballot.
Every
Republican senator and virtually every representative challenged in a
primary as insufficiently conservative will win. In reaction to
ObamaCare, GOP political divisions are giving way to unity. Tens of
millions more Americans will lose their coverage and find that new
ObamaCare plans have higher premiums, larger deductibles and fewer
doctors. Enrollment numbers will be smaller than projected and budget
outlays will be higher. The White House will blame insurers and
Republicans for the law's continuing failures.
At
year's end, Kathleen Sebelius will still be HHS Secretary. Support
for ObamaCare will drop below 30%, causing congressional Democrats to
clamber for major changes and delays. The administration will resist
most such ideas, except lifting the individual mandate penalty for
2014.
It
won't be all sweetness and light for the GOP, however. Republicans
will debate joining rebellious Democrats in gutting and delaying
elements of ObamaCare or leaving it alone.
The
White House will be even more hard-edged and partisan— and not just
because of John Podesta's addition as counselor. Mr. Obama will do
what he does when in trouble: attack. Expect more liberals to blame
criticism of his actions on racism. The president's willingness to
ignore or unilaterally alter provisions of laws on the statute
books—otherwise known as lawlessness—will be challenged by a
growing number of successful lawsuits.
Wisconsin
Rep. Paul Ryan will increase his already considerable influence in
the House, taking the lead on GOP antipoverty efforts and presenting
the most serious comprehensive health-care plan congressional
Republicans have offered.
Overseas,
the Syrian civil war will be to Mr. Obama what Rwandan genocide was
to the Clinton administration: a moral stain. Despite more American
concessions, the Iranian nuclear deal will collapse as that country
refuses to curtail its uranium enrichment. The administration will
resign itself to a nuclear Iran and shift to "containment,"
further eroding U.S. credibility with Middle East allies. The new
Afghan government will sign a Status of Forces Agreement, keeping Mr.
Obama from squandering progress there as he did victory in Iraq by
failing to get such an agreement (though Baghdad wanted one). North
Korea's Kim Jong Un will test another nuclear device.
Outside
of politics: "Duck Dynasty" will set another cable
viewership record. Miley Cyrus will fade as a cultural phenomenon.
Sandra Bullock will win an Oscar for "Gravity." Peyton
Manning will win a fifth MVP award and the Seattle Seahawks their
first Lombardi Trophy.
Instead
of writing New Year's resolutions, send me your 2014 predictions, in
care of The Wall Street Journal. Happy prognosticating!
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