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Shaken by Massachusetts Loss, Democrats Regroup for November Election

ByRUSSELL GOLDMAN
January 20, 2010, 11:28 PM

Jan. 21, 2010— -- For the optimists in the Democratic Party losing the Massachusetts Senate seat Tuesday comes with at least one silver lining: It may have come early enough that Democrats have time to figure out how not to get crushed again in November.

In the single year since President Obama took office and Democrats secured a super-majority in Congress, the party has gone from symbolizing hope and change to representing incumbency and stagnation for many voters.

Though dazed by Martha Coakley's loss to Republican Scott Brown in Tuesday's special election, Democrats are not confused by what happened. After riding a wave of success and support for two years, Democrats have realized in recent weeks that 2010 will be a far more difficult slog.

Though candidates in each state face their own unique set of challenges, Democratic candidates nationwide face the same problem -- being in power. Their incumbency, strategists say, means voters hold them responsible for an historic recession and record unemployment.

Democratic politicians and pundits from New York to California are sounding the alarm: Learn the lessons from Massachusetts in January or be doomed to repeat them in November.

"Regardless of the outcome ... this should be a gigantic wake-up call to the Democratic Party -- that we're not connecting with the needs, the aspirations and the desires of real people right now," Gavin Newsom, the Democratic mayor of San Francisco, told the San Francisco Chronicle Wednesday.

Just weeks before the Massachusetts upset, some of the party's biggest names saw the writing on the wall when Sen. Chris Dodd, D-Conn., Sen. Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., and Democratic Colorado Gov. Bill Ritter announced they would not seek re-election. Rep. John Tanner, D-Tenn., and Rep. Dennis Moore, D-Kan., both of whom have served more than three decades in the House, also decided this seemed like a good year to pack it in.

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