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Friday
Oct222010

Would Obama Be Better Off If Dems Lose Control of Congress?

Photo Courtesy - The White House(WASHINGTON) -- Two weeks from now Republicans may wrestle control of Congress away from Democrats in the mid-term elections, a development that the White House would desperately like to avoid.

But might such a loss actually prove beneficial to President Obama in 2012?

The best-case scenario for Congressional Democrats appears to be narrowly holding on to control of the House and Senate, even just by the thinnest of margins.  A more realistic scenario is keeping control of the Senate, but losing the House.

Either of those scenarios would leave Democrats spending the next two years fighting an uphill battle to get any part of their legislative agenda through a deadlocked Congress, hardly an ideal situation for the president as he launches his re-election campaign.

On the other hand, losing the House and Senate could lead to numerous political benefits for the president in two years time.

For starters, the White House might gain a political boost on issue number one in the minds of voters: the economy. The party that controls the government in turn takes ownership of the economy.  If the government is divided -- with Democrats controlling the White House but Republicans at the helm in Congress -- then the president might not have to take all the blame for a sluggish economic recovery, should it not turn around in the next 24 months.

In addition, the White House would have an easier time contrasting its agenda with the GOP's.  If Republicans are in control on Capitol Hill, then they will have to propose specific legislation, rather than only blasting the Democrats' proposals.

For the next two weeks the White House will be doing everything in its power to prevent the prospect of spending the next two years battling a Republican Congress, but if it comes to that, there might be a silver lining for the president.

Copyright 2010 ABC News Radio

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