Many political analysts concluded that the results of the election were based around President
George W. Bush's policies in the
War in Iraq and corruption in Congress. At a press conference given to address the election results, President Bush called the cumulative results of the election a "thumpin'" by the Democrats.
Democratic agenda Democrats promised an agenda that included raising the
minimum wage, implementing all of the
9/11 Commission recommendations, eliminating subsidies for oil companies, restricting lobbyists, repealing tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans, lowering interest rates on
college loans, expanding
stem-cell research, investigating political appointees for actions taken during and leading to the
war in Iraq, allowing current tax cuts to expire, and negotiating
Medicare prescription drug prices. They planned to legislate these issues within their first 100 legislative hours of power in January 2007. According to Brian Wright, president of Democrasource, LLC (an Ohio-based national political consulting group), "There's no question, the administration and Iraq set the tone for this year. This new balance of power can be a true catalyst to get the country back on track."
Six-point plan Prior to the election in July 2006 Democrats unveiled a six-point plan they promised to enact if elected with congressional majorities. The plan was billed the "Six for 06 agenda" and officially called "A New Direction For America" and compared to the 1994 Republican "
Contract with America". The six-points of the plan include: "honest leadership and open government, real security, energy independence, economic prosperity and educational excellence, a healthcare system that works for everyone, and retirement security". • Real security • In regards to "real security" they propose a "
phased redeployment" of U.S. forces from Iraq, doubling the size of U.S. military
special forces to capture
Osama bin Laden and destroy terrorist groups such as
al Qaeda, and implementing the 9/11 Commission proposals to secure the national borders of the United States and screen every container arriving at U.S. ports. • Economic prosperity and educational excellence • Democratic plans for economic prosperity include ending the congressional pay raise until the federal
minimum wage is raised and withholding tax breaks from U.S. companies that
outsource jobs to foreign countries. Within education they plan to cut college loan rates, expand federal
grants, and ensure that funds used for college tuition are not taxed. • Energy independence • The Democratic plan for achieving an end to American dependence on foreign countries for
oil consists of repealing tax incentives given to oil companies, higher penalties for
price gouging gasoline products, increasing tax incentives and funding for the research and development of technologies intended to improve fuel-efficiency and creating viable alternative fuel supplies such as
biofuels.
Domestic Donald Rumsfeld With apparent reference to the impact of the Iraq war policy, in a press conference held on November 8, Bush talked about the election and announced the resignation of
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld. Bush stated, "I know there's a lot of speculation on what the election means for the battle we're waging in Iraq. I recognize that many Americans voted last night to register their displeasure with the lack of progress being made there." Prior to the election, Bush had stated that he intended to keep Rumsfeld on as Secretary of Defense until the end of his presidency. However, Bush then went on to add Rumsfeld's resignation was not due to the Democratic victories on November 8. Rumsfeld's job reportedly had been on the line for several months prior to the election, and the decision for him to stay until after the election, if he was going to be let go at all, was also reportedly made several months earlier. All this led to his resignation.
Republican leadership On the same day, then
Speaker of the House, Representative
Dennis Hastert of the 14th Congressional District of
Illinois, said he would not seek the
Minority Leader position for the
110th Congress.
Voting trends In the aftermath of the election
The Weekly Standard published a number of articles highly critical of how the Republican Party had managed the United States Congress. It called the electoral defeat for the G.O.P. "only a little short" of "devastating" saying the "party of reform ... didn't reform anything" and warned that the Democratic Party has expanded its "geographical sphere of Democratic power" to formerly Republican-held states such as Montana, Colorado, Arizona, Wyoming, Pennsylvania, Indiana, Ohio, Michigan, Wisconsin and Minnesota, while it solidified former swing states like
Illinois as Democratic strongholds. In the New England region, popular Republican Senator
Lincoln Chafee of
Rhode Island was defeated, despite having approval ratings near 60% and Republicans now only control a single district, the CT-04 seat held by
Chris Shays, out of 22 congressional districts. The Democrats also became the clear majority in the
Mid Atlantic region as well. Two Republican incumbent Congressmen were defeated in
New York state and the Democrats picked up a Republican open seat, all from Republican regions upstate, and four Republican Congressmen were defeated in
Pennsylvania. Democrats picked up seats in all Northeastern state legislatures holding elections, except
Rhode Island, which remained unchanged (and Democrats clearly in the majority), winning a
supermajority in both the Connecticut House and Senate, and winning both houses of the New Hampshire legislature for the first time since 1874. Democrats kept both vulnerable Senate seats in
Maryland and
New Jersey, winning them by wider margins than predicted, and they won the heavily contested Senate seats in
Missouri and
Virginia. The Democratic expansion into Indiana, Virginia and Ohio has "seriously diminished the chances for future Republican success" it claimed. The paper, which has been described as the "quasi-official organ of the Bush Administration" also stated that more people would have to "bendover" to get anywhere in a political office and has called on Republicans to move to the center for the sake of the party's future viability saying "conservatives won't want to hear this, but the Republican who maneuvered his way into the most impressive victory ... won ... after moving to the center" and that "the South is not enough space to build a national governing majority".
International Asia • The government of the
People's Republic of China was said to be nervous about the effect a Democratic-led Congress might have on its exports to the United States market and the possible controversy that could result because of the country's
human rights record.
Nancy Pelosi, who became the Speaker of the House, is a noted critic of Chinese policy. Concerns likely to be raised include the
undervalued Chinese currency, blamed by some for the recent losses in the American manufacturing industry, and issues such as
internet censorship,
piracy, limited market access within China itself for companies based in the U.S., and
religious freedom. The
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu stated that she hoped the United States would play a "constructive role" in maintaining "sound, healthy and stable relations between China and the U.S.". • France's
Minister of Defence Michele Alliot-Marie said that her American counterpart,
Donald Rumsfeld, had "taken the consequences" of an election in which voters punished the government over the war in Iraq. •
Labour Party Member of Parliament John McDonnell, a critic of United Kingdom
Prime Minister Tony Blair, said, "the message of the American people is clear – there needs to be a major change of direction in Iraq. Just as in Britain, people in the U.S. feel that they have been ill advised, misled and ignored." McDonnell, who became the first Labour Party MP to announce that he would stand for
leadership in 2007, also said, "These election results have not only damaged Bush, they mean that Blair is now totally isolated in the international community." • In a letter to the American people released on Wednesday, November 29, 2006, via Iran's Permanent Mission to the
United Nations in New York City,
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad wrote: == Notes ==