5 Takeaways From a Wild Election Night

5 Takeaways From a Wild Election Night
The U.S. Capitol building in Washington on Nov. 9, 2022. Samuel Corum/Getty Images
Jonathan Miltimore
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Commentary

Election Night has come and gone, but the makeup of the Congress is still far from clear.

Votes in several tight races are still being counted. In the House, the GOP is inching toward enough seats to retake the chamber with a slim majority. As the dust settles, there will be endless discussion and analysis over the results. Here are five things we already know.

1. Biden Defies History

While Democrats had hoped to hold control over both Chambers of Congress, that appears unlikely to happen. Nevertheless, the much-discussed Red Wave never appeared, defying the recent historical trend. Midterm elections are usually bruising for the political party of a first-term president. Democrats lost 52 House seats in the 1994 midterm elections during Bill Clinton’s first term and 63 House seats during Barack Obama’s. Republicans, meanwhile, lost 40 House seats in Donald Trump’s first term. (George W. Bush, like Biden on Tuesday, defied the midterm trend, actually winning eight seats.)
Considering the economic climate—40-year high inflation and a bloody stock market—the modest loss of House seats and a push in the Senate (which appears likely) would be a win for Biden.

2. DeSantis Shines

One of the only people in America who may have had a better night than Biden was Ron DeSantis. The Florida governor cruised to reelection, beating former Republican Charlie Crist by nearly 20 points.
Florida became a mecca for citizens fleeing lockdowns, and on Tuesday voters rewarded DeSantis, who was excoriated by the media for reopening the Sunshine State in the summer of 2020 and accused of leading “his state to the morgue.” The so-called death march never happened, however. Even without adjusting for age, Florida’s COVID mortality rate today is lower than lockdown states such as Michigan and New Jersey.
The popular governor emerged last Tuesday as the favorite to be the next president, and the praise DeSantis received appeared to irritate Donald Trump, who attacked the Florida governor the following day even though the former president had stumped for DeSantis days earlier.

3. Drug Legalization Remains on the March

The drug legalization trend in the United States continued, as voters in Missouri and Maryland passed initiatives legalizing possession of marijuana. In Maryland, the legal amount is 1.5 ounces; in Missouri, it’s 3 ounces. (Voters in the more conservative states of South Dakota, North Dakota, and Arkansas rejected marijuana legalization proposals.)
Drug legalization didn’t end there, however. In Colorado, voters took up Proposition 122, which would decriminalize psilocybin mushroom possession. The initiative passed by a comfortable margin—52.3 percent to 47.7 percent.
All in all, it was a good day for drug legalization, which would have pleased the philosopher Lysander Spooner, who famously noted that “vices are not crimes.”

4. Education Freedom Was a Winning Message

One of the biggest issues coming into Tuesday was education, which many in the liberty movement argue is the most pressing issue in the country. Public school satisfaction has fallen in recent years, polling shows, and confidence in schools has plummeted.
A 2022 Gallup poll found that just 9 percent of U.S. parents said they had a “great deal” of confidence in public schools, down from 18 percent prior to the pandemic and down from 30 percent when the poll was started in 1973. Just 28 percent answered “a great deal” or “quite a lot.” Confidence in public schools isn’t the only thing plummeting. ACT test scores among high school graduates recently hit a 30-year low.

All of this might explain why school choice became an election focal point, with many blaming teachers unions for extended school closures and the embrace of gender ideology and critical race theory (CRT) in public schools.

“I ran this campaign ... for parents who just want to choose the school that’s best for their child,” said Texas Gov. Greg Abbott.

Like DeSantis, Abbott cruised to victory on Tuesday, trouncing challenger Beto O'Rourke by more than 10 points. Abbott’s victory was no mirage.

As the left-leaning New Yorker glumly reported, school board and superintendent candidates across the country who hammered against CRT and teachers unions “fared depressingly well.”

5. Young People Decided the Election

One of the GOP’s goals in recent years has been to broaden its appeal to women and people of color, and data suggests they have. CNN exit polling shows Democrats lost substantial ground with women (-11) and people of color, particularly Latino voters (-14 women, -21 men).
Young people (18–29), however, remain closely aligned with Democrats. They turned out in large numbers—27 percent, the second highest rate in recent decades, according to CIRCLE, a Tufts University election initiative—and voted for Democrats by an impressive margin (+28).
Why younger voters voted for Democrats is not yet clear. Perhaps it’s because they still associate the GOP with Trump, who is an unpopular figure with young people. Perhaps it’s because young people trust Democrats more on issues important to them, like the environment. Some speculated that the impressive turnout might have stemmed from Biden’s executive order that seeks to “cancel” massive amounts of student debt.
“I thought student debt relief was bad policy and bad politics. I still think it bad policy—but looking at the youth vote surge, hard to deny its political impact,” mused David Frum of The Atlantic.
We don’t yet know if Biden’s $500 billion student debt forgiveness scheme—which was struck down by a federal court on Thursday—is why young people voted for Democrats; but if it is, it’s cause for alarm. Organizations like mine (the Foundation for Economic Education) exist to teach young people that there’s no such thing as a free lunch, and the debts piled up today will ultimately be paid down the road—by them.

The great French economist Frédéric Bastiat once said government is “that great fiction by which everyone tries to live at the expense of everyone else.”

Living at the expense of others is how the national debt has climbed to $31.27 trillion, nearly $250,000 per taxpayer. If younger generations are beginning to believe that more government spending is the solution to their financial problems, we need to do a better job of showing them this is actually the road to serfdom.
Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.
Jonathan Miltimore
Jonathan Miltimore
Author
Jon Miltimore is senior editor at the American Institute for Economic Research (AIER) and former managing editor of FEE.org. His writing/reporting has been the subject of articles in TIME magazine, The Wall Street Journal, CNN, Forbes, Fox News, Washington Examiner, and the Star Tribune.
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