{"id":12718,"date":"2026-05-10T13:11:32","date_gmt":"2026-05-10T13:11:32","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/wpinitiate.com\/echo-test\/demo973e36f5\/2026\/05\/10\/rapid-changes-in-power-have-become-the-new-normal-in-american-politics-heres-why-cnn\/"},"modified":"2026-05-10T13:11:32","modified_gmt":"2026-05-10T13:11:32","slug":"rapid-changes-in-power-have-become-the-new-normal-in-american-politics-heres-why-cnn","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wpinitiate.com\/echo-test\/demo973e36f5\/2026\/05\/10\/rapid-changes-in-power-have-become-the-new-normal-in-american-politics-heres-why-cnn\/","title":{"rendered":"Rapid changes in power have become the new normal in American politics. Here\u2019s why &#8211; CNN"},"content":{"rendered":"<div data-editable=\"content\" itemprop=\"articleBody\" data-reorderable=\"content\">\n<p data-uri=\"cms.cnn.com\/_components\/paragraph\/instances\/cmox3ufj1001z27p73hffbnid@published\" data-editable=\"text\" data-component-name=\"paragraph\" data-article-gutter=\"true\">             President Donald Trump\u2019s <a href=\"https:\/\/www.cnn.com\/2026\/05\/05\/politics\/trump-approval-rating-analysis-vis\">tumbling approval ratings<\/a> are raising the odds that the 2026 midterm elections will extend one of the most powerful trends in 21st-century American politics.     <\/p>\n<p data-uri=\"cms.cnn.com\/_components\/paragraph\/instances\/cmoxcemif00003b6rlf0qj95j@published\" data-editable=\"text\" data-component-name=\"paragraph\" data-article-gutter=\"true\">             The president\u2019s steady decline in popularity has increased the chances that Democrats in November could recapture the House of Representatives, and maybe the Senate too.     <\/p>\n<p data-uri=\"cms.cnn.com\/_components\/paragraph\/instances\/cmoxceok300023b6rpel80lx1@published\" data-editable=\"text\" data-component-name=\"paragraph\" data-article-gutter=\"true\">             If Democrats flip either chamber, it will continue the <a href=\"https:\/\/www.cnn.com\/2023\/06\/20\/politics\/congress-butterfly-effect-fault-lines\">extraordinary run of volatility<\/a> that has seen control of the House, the Senate or the White House change hands between the parties in 11 of the 13 elections since 2000. By contrast, control of either congressional chamber or the White House flipped in just five of the final 13 elections of the 20th century and only seven of the last 20 stretching back to 1960.     <\/p>\n<p data-uri=\"cms.cnn.com\/_components\/paragraph\/instances\/cmoxceok300033b6rwsltzopf@published\" data-editable=\"text\" data-component-name=\"paragraph\" data-article-gutter=\"true\">             Each time voters recoil against the party in power, political analysts usually focus on the immediate choices made by the president and his party in Congress. But the pattern of rapid reversals has become so entrenched that it appears driven less by tactical decisions than by deeper forces in the economy, society and the electorate that show no sign of abating.     <\/p>\n<p data-uri=\"cms.cnn.com\/_components\/paragraph\/instances\/cmoxceok300043b6rq64gmse5@published\" data-editable=\"text\" data-component-name=\"paragraph\" data-article-gutter=\"true\">             \u201cFive or six years from now, if we are having this conversation, it will probably be 14 out of 16 elections with people voting for change,\u201d said Doug Sosnik, a former White House political adviser for Bill Clinton, who has tracked the trend<strong>.<\/strong>     <\/p>\n<p data-uri=\"cms.cnn.com\/_components\/paragraph\/instances\/cmoxceok300053b6rtdvsmobh@published\" data-editable=\"text\" data-component-name=\"paragraph\" data-article-gutter=\"true\">             Part of the explanation for this volatility is that whenever they do win power, both parties usually have only managed to scratch out small majorities. These smaller majorities leave them with little cushion for the midterm losses that have always been common for the president\u2019s party.     <\/p>\n<p data-uri=\"cms.cnn.com\/_components\/paragraph\/instances\/cmoxdk84x0000356rjvjwtf9z@published\" data-editable=\"text\" data-component-name=\"paragraph\" data-article-gutter=\"true\">              \u201cThe midterm loss phenomenon is not new to the 21st century, but often the party in power absorbed the losses\u201d and preserved its majority, said Brandice Canes-Wrone, a Stanford University political scientist and senior fellow at the conservative Hoover Institution. Now, she said, \u201cthe majorities are so tight\u201d that even small reversals flip control.     <\/p>\n<p data-uri=\"cms.cnn.com\/_components\/paragraph\/instances\/cmoxceok300063b6r4niwaemx@published\" data-editable=\"text\" data-component-name=\"paragraph\" data-article-gutter=\"true\">             A similar dynamic is evident in the White House\u2019s revolving door. <a href=\"https:\/\/www.cnn.com\/2025\/01\/22\/politics\/fault-lines-trump-25-states\">Each party has reliably locked down so much of the Electoral College<\/a> that small shifts in the handful of swing states now decide elections.     <\/p>\n<p data-uri=\"cms.cnn.com\/_components\/paragraph\/instances\/cmoxceok300073b6rnzf15yzc@published\" data-editable=\"text\" data-component-name=\"paragraph\" data-article-gutter=\"true\">             But while narrow congressional and Electoral College margins can explain the frequent shifts in power, that raises another question: What explains the narrow margins?     <\/p>\n<div data-image-variation=\"image_large\" data-breakpoints=\"{\"image_large--eq-extra-small\": 115, \"image_large--eq-small\": 300, \"image_large--eq-large\": 660}\" data-uri=\"cms.cnn.com\/_components\/image\/instances\/cmoxcjb7p00003b6ri26yw0vo@published\" data-name=\"04_GettyImages-621812840.jpg\" data-component-name=\"image\" data-observe-resizes data-original-ratio=\"0.6525285481239804\" data-original-height=\"1600\" data-original-width=\"2452\" data-url=\"https:\/\/media.cnn.com\/api\/v1\/images\/stellar\/prod\/04-gettyimages-621812840.jpg?c=original\" data-editable=\"settings\" data-article-gutter=\"true\">        <picture><source height=\"undefined\" width=\"679\" media=\"(max-width: 479px)\"  type=\"image\/webp\"><source height=\"undefined\" width=\"967\" media=\"(min-width: 480px) and (max-width: 767px)\"  type=\"image\/webp\"><source height=\"undefined\" width=\"860\" media=\"(min-width: 768px) and (max-width: 1023px)\"  type=\"image\/webp\"><source height=\"undefined\" width=\"860\" media=\"(min-width: 1024px) and (max-width: 1279px)\"  type=\"image\/webp\"><source height=\"undefined\" width=\"860\" media=\"(min-width: 1280px)\"  type=\"image\/webp\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/media.cnn.com\/api\/v1\/images\/stellar\/prod\/04-gettyimages-621812840.jpg?c=original&#038;q=w_860,c_fill\" alt=\"Supporters of then-nominee Donald Trump react to early election results in the 2016 presidential election, at the New York Hilton Midtown.\" onload=\"this.classList.remove('image_large__dam-img--loading')\" onerror=\"imageLoadError(this)\" height=\"1600\" width=\"2452\" loading=\"lazy\"><\/picture>     <\/div>\n<p data-uri=\"cms.cnn.com\/_components\/paragraph\/instances\/cmoxcezrk000b3b6rlz4rddtc@published\" data-editable=\"text\" data-component-name=\"paragraph\" data-article-gutter=\"true\">             In their book \u201cIdentity Crisis,\u201d UCLA political scientist Lynn Vavreck and co-authors John Sides and Michael Tesler, argued that the 2016 election culminated a long-term shift in the basic conflict between the parties from economic to cultural issues. Around polarizing questions including on immigration, racial diversity and LGBTQ rights, they wrote, Trump tilted the axis of political debate \u201cto competing visions of American identity and inclusiveness.\u201d     <\/p>\n<p data-uri=\"cms.cnn.com\/_components\/paragraph\/instances\/cmoxcfjqt000d3b6rvsso8z8b@published\" data-editable=\"text\" data-component-name=\"paragraph\" data-article-gutter=\"true\">             \u201cFor most of our lifetime, politics was contested over the New Deal issues \u2014the size and role of government,\u201d Vavreck said. \u201cThose days are so gone. We are not (primarily) fighting over the tax rate anymore. In 2016, Trump raised these identity-inflected issues (and) now \u2026 we are fighting about who deserves to be an American.\u201d     <\/p>\n<p data-uri=\"cms.cnn.com\/_components\/paragraph\/instances\/cmoxcfjqt000e3b6ryv43w7wf@published\" data-editable=\"text\" data-component-name=\"paragraph\" data-article-gutter=\"true\">             A political order grounded in such clashing visions of the nation\u2019s identity, Vavreck and her colleagues argued, makes it harder for most voters to envision shifting their support from one party to the other. When \u201cthe differences between the parties in the early 1990s\u201d centered on the role of government, more voters who leaned toward one party could imagine living in a country governed by the other \u201cand not hate it,\u201d she said.     <\/p>\n<p data-uri=\"cms.cnn.com\/_components\/paragraph\/instances\/cmoxcfjqt000f3b6rup76qjmq@published\" data-editable=\"text\" data-component-name=\"paragraph\" data-article-gutter=\"true\">             \u201cIt wasn\u2019t a personal and divisive existential crisis about what it means to be an American. So now that it is, it is harder for voters to make that crossover,\u201d  Vavreck said.     <\/p>\n<p data-uri=\"cms.cnn.com\/_components\/paragraph\/instances\/cmoxcfjqt000g3b6rwkvco9b7@published\" data-editable=\"text\" data-component-name=\"paragraph\" data-article-gutter=\"true\">             Amid these changes, political professionals largely agree that the combined share of the electorate immovably locked down for either party has grown through the 21st century to around 85% or even slightly more, reducing the number of swing voters. (In \u201cIdentity Crisis,\u201d the authors memorably called this the \u201ccalcification\u201d of American politics.)     <\/p>\n<p data-uri=\"cms.cnn.com\/_components\/paragraph\/instances\/cmoxcfjqt000h3b6r9yn8isai@published\" data-editable=\"text\" data-component-name=\"paragraph\" data-article-gutter=\"true\">             Paradoxically though, the large number of voters firmly anchored in either party has increased the clout of the smaller group that is not. Swing voters tend to be the Americans who place less priority on the cultural and ideological firefights between the parties than on their own immediate economic circumstances \u2014 about which they have been persistently negative for years.     <\/p>\n<p data-uri=\"cms.cnn.com\/_components\/paragraph\/instances\/cmoxdqtbq0002356r85klue78@published\" data-editable=\"text\" data-component-name=\"paragraph\" data-article-gutter=\"true\">             \u201cThat last 15% is dissatisfied, disengaged, not in the cultural wars, and are pretty much voting against whoever is in power,\u201d said Sosnik. Those disaffected voters, <a href=\"https:\/\/www.cnn.com\/2025\/08\/24\/politics\/swing-voters-2026-election-trump-biden-analysis\">as I\u2019ve written<\/a>, increasingly express their discontent not only by switching their vote, but also by whether they vote at all.     <\/p>\n<p data-uri=\"cms.cnn.com\/_components\/paragraph\/instances\/cmoxcfjqt000i3b6rl3c6zugl@published\" data-editable=\"text\" data-component-name=\"paragraph\" data-article-gutter=\"true\">             Micah Roberts, a Republican pollster who is part of a bipartisan team that surveys economic attitudes for CNBC, said voters who don\u2019t strongly identify with either party \u201care consistently pessimistic.\u201d     <\/p>\n<p data-uri=\"cms.cnn.com\/_components\/paragraph\/instances\/cmoxcfjqt000j3b6r7xv246vz@published\" data-editable=\"text\" data-component-name=\"paragraph\" data-article-gutter=\"true\">             \u201cThere is not a year since 2017 when independents were positive about the current state of the economy,\u201d Roberts said.     <\/p>\n<div data-image-variation=\"image\" data-breakpoints=\"{\"image--eq-extra-small\": 115, \"image--eq-small\": 300, \"image--eq-large\": 660}\" data-uri=\"cms.cnn.com\/_components\/image\/instances\/cmoxcpk4000093b6rlq0wv5ff@published\" data-name=\"GettyImages-2270016150.jpg\" data-component-name=\"image\" data-observe-resizes data-original-ratio=\"0.6666666666666666\" data-original-height=\"1600\" data-original-width=\"2400\" data-url=\"https:\/\/media.cnn.com\/api\/v1\/images\/stellar\/prod\/gettyimages-2270016150-20260508201557456.jpg?c=original\" data-editable=\"settings\">        <picture><source height=\"undefined\" width=\"679\" media=\"(max-width: 479px)\"  type=\"image\/webp\"><source height=\"undefined\" width=\"967\" media=\"(min-width: 480px) and (max-width: 767px)\"  type=\"image\/webp\"><source height=\"undefined\" width=\"1159\" media=\"(min-width: 768px) and (max-width: 1023px)\"  type=\"image\/webp\"><source height=\"undefined\" width=\"1093\" media=\"(min-width: 1024px) and (max-width: 1279px)\"  type=\"image\/webp\"><source height=\"undefined\" width=\"1316\" media=\"(min-width: 1280px)\"  type=\"image\/webp\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/media.cnn.com\/api\/v1\/images\/stellar\/prod\/gettyimages-2270016150-20260508201557456.jpg?c=original&#038;q=w_1093,c_fill\" alt=\"People shop at a local supermarket in the Sugar Hill neighborhood in the Manhattan borough of New York on April 9.\" onload=\"this.classList.remove('image__dam-img--loading')\" onerror=\"imageLoadError(this)\" height=\"1600\" width=\"2400\" loading=\"lazy\"><\/picture>     <\/div>\n<p data-uri=\"cms.cnn.com\/_components\/paragraph\/instances\/cmoxcfjqt000k3b6r41wihhdj@published\" data-editable=\"text\" data-component-name=\"paragraph\" data-article-gutter=\"true\">             Economists and political strategists agree that many voters, especially those without a college degree, feel it has become far more difficult to get ahead than it was for their parents, as income inequality has widened since the 1970s. Josh Bivens and two colleagues at the left-leaning Economic Policy Institute <a href=\"https:\/\/www.epi.org\/blog\/rising-inequality-is-the-root-of-affordability-problems\/?utm_source=cision&#038;utm_medium=email\" target=\"_blank\">recently calculated<\/a> that the incomes of average families would be as much $30,000 higher today if workers at the very top had not claimed such a growing share of total national income since then.     <\/p>\n<p data-uri=\"cms.cnn.com\/_components\/paragraph\/instances\/cmoxdt3hv0004356rlh4d545u@published\" data-editable=\"text\" data-component-name=\"paragraph\" data-article-gutter=\"true\">             \u201cRising income inequality is the main reason that affordability feels out of reach for too many U.S. families,\u201d they wrote.     <\/p>\n<p data-uri=\"cms.cnn.com\/_components\/paragraph\/instances\/cmoxcfjqt000l3b6r6cbskywy@published\" data-editable=\"text\" data-component-name=\"paragraph\" data-article-gutter=\"true\">             The slowdown in wage growth has frustrated working families for years and contributed to the 21st century\u2019s endemic political instability, most analysts agree. But the sharp spike in inflation after Covid-19 raised these concerns to a crisis level. Instead of treading water, many families now feel they are slipping beneath it.  Though other economic indicators such as the unemployment rate and stock market are positive, Roberts said, today \u201cthe only economic report that ordinary, everyday Americans pay attention to is the price on the gas station billboard or the price at the bottom of their grocery bill.\u201d     <\/p>\n<p data-uri=\"cms.cnn.com\/_components\/paragraph\/instances\/cmoxcfjqt000m3b6r4ealaxw0@published\" data-editable=\"text\" data-component-name=\"paragraph\" data-article-gutter=\"true\">             Those frustrations boosted Trump in 2024 when Democrats were in the White House, <a href=\"https:\/\/www.cnn.com\/2026\/04\/01\/politics\/cnn-poll-trump-approval-rating-economy\">but now that undiminished anxiety looms as the biggest 2026 threat for Republicans<\/a>.     <\/p>\n<p data-uri=\"cms.cnn.com\/_components\/paragraph\/instances\/cmoxdufw70006356r3uyhht17@published\" data-editable=\"text\" data-component-name=\"paragraph\" data-article-gutter=\"true\">             \u201cWe\u2019re a quarter of the way through the 21st century and neither political party has figured out how to satisfy voters\u2019 basics needs while we are playing on this new field,\u201d Vavreck said. \u201cThis is where we are going to be probably for the rest of my lifetime.\u201d     <\/p>\n<div data-image-variation=\"image_large\" data-breakpoints=\"{\"image_large--eq-extra-small\": 115, \"image_large--eq-small\": 300, \"image_large--eq-large\": 660}\" data-uri=\"cms.cnn.com\/_components\/image\/instances\/cmoxcjkwi00023b6ru47aph2o@published\" data-name=\"GettyImages-2246191807.jpg\" data-component-name=\"image\" data-observe-resizes data-original-ratio=\"0.6669445602334306\" data-original-height=\"1600\" data-original-width=\"2399\" data-url=\"https:\/\/media.cnn.com\/api\/v1\/images\/stellar\/prod\/gettyimages-2246191807.jpg?c=original\" data-editable=\"settings\" data-article-gutter=\"true\">        <picture><source height=\"undefined\" width=\"679\" media=\"(max-width: 479px)\"  type=\"image\/webp\"><source height=\"undefined\" width=\"967\" media=\"(min-width: 480px) and (max-width: 767px)\"  type=\"image\/webp\"><source height=\"undefined\" width=\"860\" media=\"(min-width: 768px) and (max-width: 1023px)\"  type=\"image\/webp\"><source height=\"undefined\" width=\"860\" media=\"(min-width: 1024px) and (max-width: 1279px)\"  type=\"image\/webp\"><source height=\"undefined\" width=\"860\" media=\"(min-width: 1280px)\"  type=\"image\/webp\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/media.cnn.com\/api\/v1\/images\/stellar\/prod\/gettyimages-2246191807.jpg?c=original&#038;q=w_860,c_fill\" alt=\"The dome of the US Capitol on November 11, 2025.\" onload=\"this.classList.remove('image_large__dam-img--loading')\" onerror=\"imageLoadError(this)\" height=\"1600\" width=\"2399\" loading=\"lazy\"><\/picture>     <\/div>\n<p data-uri=\"cms.cnn.com\/_components\/paragraph\/instances\/cmoxcfu9a000q3b6ri0e8o6ok@published\" data-editable=\"text\" data-component-name=\"paragraph\" data-article-gutter=\"true\">             Shifts in presidential strategy have also fed the persistent instability. With only occasional exceptions, the presidents since 2000 have centered their legislative agendas primarily on massive partisan bills (from Barack Obama\u2019s Affordable Care Act to Trump\u2019s One Big Beautiful Bill Act) that they typically pass through the special reconciliation process with little, if any, support from the other party.     <\/p>\n<p data-uri=\"cms.cnn.com\/_components\/paragraph\/instances\/cmoxcg2mn000s3b6rfgq3kuvp@published\" data-editable=\"text\" data-component-name=\"paragraph\" data-article-gutter=\"true\">             \u201cBoth parties now use the reconciliation process when they have full control of government to jam through their agenda on a partisan basis,\u201d said former Republican Rep. Charlie Dent, now executive director of the Aspen Institute\u2019s congressional program. \u201cIt\u2019s almost as if they\u2019ve given up on trying to pass big bipartisan bills.\u201d     <\/p>\n<p data-uri=\"cms.cnn.com\/_components\/paragraph\/instances\/cmoxcg2mn000t3b6r2i0hzpp1@published\" data-editable=\"text\" data-component-name=\"paragraph\" data-article-gutter=\"true\">             Whatever the policy merits of these highly partisan bills, the political impact has been to trigger intense opposition from the other party. Neither recent Republican nor Democratic presidents have followed a more incremental strategy of seeking to broaden their support by starting their terms with limited, bipartisan legislative plans. Even when presidents have pursued bipartisan compromises \u2014 as Biden did on his big infrastructure and semiconductor manufacturing bill \u2014 they have found that their partisan moves overshadowed that outreach.     <\/p>\n<p data-uri=\"cms.cnn.com\/_components\/paragraph\/instances\/cmoxcg2mn000u3b6r6q2u4avw@published\" data-editable=\"text\" data-component-name=\"paragraph\" data-article-gutter=\"true\">             Canes-Wrone pointed to another reason why new presidents now stir immediate backlash: They are deemphasizing legislation at all in favor of advancing their agenda through aggressive executive action. \u201cIt is very easy when you are operating more unilaterally to overreach,\u201d she said.     <\/p>\n<div data-image-variation=\"image\" data-breakpoints=\"{\"image--eq-extra-small\": 115, \"image--eq-small\": 300, \"image--eq-large\": 660}\" data-uri=\"cms.cnn.com\/_components\/image\/instances\/cmoxckagg00043b6rn3k08lto@published\" data-name=\"06_GettyImages-2215970270.jpg\" data-component-name=\"image\" data-observe-resizes data-original-ratio=\"0.6669445602334306\" data-original-height=\"1600\" data-original-width=\"2399\" data-url=\"https:\/\/media.cnn.com\/api\/v1\/images\/stellar\/prod\/06-gettyimages-2215970270.jpg?c=original\" data-editable=\"settings\">        <picture><source height=\"undefined\" width=\"679\" media=\"(max-width: 479px)\"  type=\"image\/webp\"><source height=\"undefined\" width=\"967\" media=\"(min-width: 480px) and (max-width: 767px)\"  type=\"image\/webp\"><source height=\"undefined\" width=\"1159\" media=\"(min-width: 768px) and (max-width: 1023px)\"  type=\"image\/webp\"><source height=\"undefined\" width=\"1093\" media=\"(min-width: 1024px) and (max-width: 1279px)\"  type=\"image\/webp\"><source height=\"undefined\" width=\"1316\" media=\"(min-width: 1280px)\"  type=\"image\/webp\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/media.cnn.com\/api\/v1\/images\/stellar\/prod\/06-gettyimages-2215970270.jpg?c=original&#038;q=w_1093,c_fill\" alt=\"President Donald Trump speaks to members of the media after signing executive orders in the Oval Office of the White House, in May 2025.\" onload=\"this.classList.remove('image__dam-img--loading')\" onerror=\"imageLoadError(this)\" height=\"1600\" width=\"2399\" loading=\"lazy\"><\/picture>     <\/div>\n<p data-uri=\"cms.cnn.com\/_components\/paragraph\/instances\/cmoxcg2mn000v3b6r5jc2gdzk@published\" data-editable=\"text\" data-component-name=\"paragraph\" data-article-gutter=\"true\">             Cycles of such sustained instability have been rare in American politics. In the 20 years before the Civil War from 1840 to 1860, ten of eleven elections produced shifts in control. Many political analysts find even more similarities to the period from 1876 to 1896, which saw eight change elections over eleven.     <\/p>\n<p data-uri=\"cms.cnn.com\/_components\/paragraph\/instances\/cmoxcg2mn000w3b6rrlw7gfrz@published\" data-editable=\"text\" data-component-name=\"paragraph\" data-article-gutter=\"true\">             Like today, that late 19th<sup> <\/sup>century stretch was defined by wrenching changes \u2014 the transition from an agricultural to industrial economy, fierce battles between management and labor, and rapid urbanization, all punctuated by a massive immigration wave. Then, as now, many voters saw the two parties as incapable of delivering economic and social stability amid the tumult.     <\/p>\n<p data-uri=\"cms.cnn.com\/_components\/paragraph\/instances\/cmoxcg2mn000x3b6rp60vualy@published\" data-editable=\"text\" data-component-name=\"paragraph\" data-article-gutter=\"true\">             What could break today\u2019s cycle? Bivens, like Sosnik, believes that politics is unlikely to stop shaking until living standards for average families more steadily improve. The catch-22, Bivens says, is that implementing policies that might generate such broadly based gains will require one side to hold power for a longer stretch than now seems possible.     <\/p>\n<p data-uri=\"cms.cnn.com\/_components\/paragraph\/instances\/cmoxcg2mn000y3b6rezfg8u79@published\" data-editable=\"text\" data-component-name=\"paragraph\" data-article-gutter=\"true\">             \u201cIn order to make the big policy change to get us out of the trap we\u2019re in \u2026 it would require a sustained period of governance, which would require a lot of popular support, and popular support on a sustained basis is really hard when you haven\u2019t solved the problem,\u201d Bivens said. \u201cHow to solve that timing problem is a real conundrum.\u201d     <\/p>\n<p data-uri=\"cms.cnn.com\/_components\/paragraph\/instances\/cmoxcg2mn000z3b6rc8drs5l8@published\" data-editable=\"text\" data-component-name=\"paragraph\" data-article-gutter=\"true\">             Canes-Wrone is more optimistic that a president who focused on incrementally building support with a moderate agenda intended to reassure and gradually solidify swing voters could construct a more lasting advantage. If a new president \u201cdidn\u2019t overreach, then we are in a different world,\u201d she said. \u201cThe question is whether once you are in office you can restrain yourself.\u201d     <\/p>\n<p data-uri=\"cms.cnn.com\/_components\/paragraph\/instances\/cmoxcg2mn00103b6r8sny6bcf@published\" data-editable=\"text\" data-component-name=\"paragraph\" data-article-gutter=\"true\">             Sean Wilentz, a Princeton University historian who specializes in 19th-century US politics, points toward a different possible endpoint. The eras of stability when one party established a lasting advantage over the other, he noted, have almost always come after a crisis that discredited the other side and allowed a new president to expand and solidify his coalition.     <\/p>\n<p data-uri=\"cms.cnn.com\/_components\/paragraph\/instances\/cmoxd15kg00173b6r0bsdrjb0@published\" data-editable=\"text\" data-component-name=\"paragraph\" data-article-gutter=\"true\">             The period of turbulence before 1860 ended when Abraham Lincoln and Republicans led the Union to victory in the Civil War; the late 19th-century upheaval gave way to sustained Republican dominance after the panic of 1893 undercut the Democrats then controlling Washington. Similarly, Franklin D. Roosevelt\u2019s vigorous response to the Depression powered 36 years of Democratic advantage in Washington. \u201cCrises help make presidents one way or another,\u201d Wilentz said.     <\/p>\n<p data-uri=\"cms.cnn.com\/_components\/paragraph\/instances\/cmoxcg2mn00113b6rd8yjdts7@published\" data-editable=\"text\" data-component-name=\"paragraph\" data-article-gutter=\"true\">             The financial crisis of 2008, Wilentz believes, similarly offered Democrats a chance to reorder politics. But, he argued, the reluctance of first George W. Bush and then Obama to hold Wall Street and the wealthy fully accountable \u201cblew up both parties\u201d and ignited the free-floating populist backlash against \u201celites\u201d and a \u201crigged system\u201d that elevated the tea party, Trump and Bernie Sanders \u2014 and has unsettled both coalitions.     <\/p>\n<p data-uri=\"cms.cnn.com\/_components\/paragraph\/instances\/cmoxcg2mn00123b6r6cirpbs9@published\" data-editable=\"text\" data-component-name=\"paragraph\" data-article-gutter=\"true\">             Now, Wilentz says, the political system may remain unstable until another crisis emerges that provides a future president another chance to build a more durable coalition. \u201cMaybe that\u2019s what we are waiting for \u2014 a shock like that,\u201d Wilentz said. \u201cIf I was betting about the next 10 years, I wouldn\u2019t bet against it.\u201d     <\/p>\n<p data-uri=\"cms.cnn.com\/_components\/paragraph\/instances\/cmoxcg2mn00133b6rg827nesv@published\" data-editable=\"text\" data-component-name=\"paragraph\" data-article-gutter=\"true\">             In the meantime, the safest bet is that voters will continue ricocheting between the parties, searching for answers neither seems able to provide.     <\/p>\n<\/p><\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>President Donald Trump\u2019s tumbling approval ratings are raising the odds that the 2026 midterm elections will extend one of the most powerful trends in 21st-century American politics. The president\u2019s steady decline in popularity has increased the chances that Democrats in November could recapture the House of Representatives, and maybe the Senate too. If Democrats flip [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":12719,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-12718","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-uncategorized"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/wpinitiate.com\/echo-test\/demo973e36f5\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/12718","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/wpinitiate.com\/echo-test\/demo973e36f5\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/wpinitiate.com\/echo-test\/demo973e36f5\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/wpinitiate.com\/echo-test\/demo973e36f5\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/wpinitiate.com\/echo-test\/demo973e36f5\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=12718"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/wpinitiate.com\/echo-test\/demo973e36f5\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/12718\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/wpinitiate.com\/echo-test\/demo973e36f5\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/12719"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/wpinitiate.com\/echo-test\/demo973e36f5\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=12718"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/wpinitiate.com\/echo-test\/demo973e36f5\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=12718"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/wpinitiate.com\/echo-test\/demo973e36f5\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=12718"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}