Midterms promise political headache for president, but possible reprieve for Canada
WASHINGTON — It’s conventional political wisdom that’s as old as the hills in the United States: the party that controls the White House seldom does well in the midterms.
But Glenn Youngkin’s convincing Republican win in November’s gubernatorial contest in Virginia, paired with his party’s stronger-than-expected showing in New Jersey, has some Democrats on Capitol Hill all but manning the lifeboats in advance of the 2022 elections.
And some observers are even wondering whether Joe Biden, who hasn’t even spent a full year as president yet, has become a serious liability.
“Even if this were a typical midterm election cycle, we would expect the Republicans to pick up a significant number of seats in Congress,” said Mark Rozell, a political-science professor at George Mason University in Arlington, Va., just across the river from Washington, D.C.