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Diary of a Political Scientist IV, Winter 2006–2007: Southern Politics, Sid Milkis, and 'Sixty-eight

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 July 2007

Michael Nelson
Affiliation:
Rhodes College

Extract

Tom Mann is, well, beaming. Five months ago he wrote a Sunday Outlook piece for the Washington Post arguing that “the prevailing view in Washington today”—namely, that “there's probably no way congressional Republicans can lose this fall”—is “wrong.” Tom was vindicated on Election Day when the Democrats won control of both houses of Congress, and here at the “America Votes 2006” conference in Little Rock, co-sponsored by the Clinton School of Public Service and the State Legislative Leaders Foundation, he is accepting the congratulations of, among others, me. Other elections prognosticators at the conference, such as Charlie Cook and the Washington Post's Chris Cillizza, have already moved on to speculating about what's going to happen in 2008, but Tom is rightly enjoying the moment.

Type
THE PROFESSION
Copyright
© 2007 The American Political Science Association

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