The Jan. 6 hearings are a hit. Will they sway voters in the November midterms?
WASHINGTON — Rachel Paine Caufield was telling a conservative friend about her evening plans: catching up on the latest instalment of the hearings into the Jan. 6 Capitol Hill riots.
Sure, it’s not “Game of Thrones,” but the congressional spectacle has nonetheless made for riveting television thus far, and the Drake University politics professor wanted to be ready for questions about the potential impact on midterm elections this November.
“His response was very clear,” Caufield said, laughing at the recollection. “He said, ‘Has anyone called to ask you how $5-a-gallon gas is going to affect the midterms?'”
That, in a nutshell, is the problem for embattled Democrats: as campaign issues go, nothing — not abortion, not guns, not even a violent and potentially illegal effort to subvert the U.S. Constitution — trumps the political rocket fuel that inflation is giving their rivals.