“Must adapt.”
That was the message from a former top aide to House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-VA), reacting to his party’s poor performance among Hispanics, women and young voters Tuesday night. While all parties are forced to re-evaluate following a big loss, this time, pressure may finally force the GOP to avoid the allure of social issues that led them astray in 2008 and 2012.
Tuesday’s election marked a turnaround from 2004, when President George W. Bush successfully attached constitutional amendments defining marriage as between a man and a woman to eleven state ballots in order to boost turnout.
This cycle, conservative candidates found themselves largely on the defensive when it came to such issues as same-sex marriage and women’s reproductive rights. Maine and Maryland both passed same-sex marriage by popular referendum Tuesday, becoming the seventh and eight states to allow it, while in Minnesota voters blocked a constitutional amendment seeking to ban it. Washington State also looked set to pass it into law, though official results are not yet finalized.
President Obama received a hefty 71% of the Latino vote — a 4 point increase from his 2008 total and a number so staggeringly imbalanced that several Republicans said the party could no longer ignore the demographic realities wreaking havoc on their future electoral prospects.









