The difficulties of assuming command of one of the branches of government of the world's only superpower, however, began to manifest themselves as soon as the new majority began to consolidate power in the weeks following the election. Unlike their colleagues in the Senate, who had tasted and tested majority leadership in the 1980s, not a single member of the new House Republican majority had ever served in the majority. Mistakes were made that were directly and obviously the result of having been completely shut out of the corridors of power in the House for four decades.
First and foremost among those mistakes, perhaps, was not recognizing the true nature of their victory. Many in the new House majority incorrectly concluded that their 1994 victory was a mandate for all they had campaigned on: dramatically smaller government, quickly achieved; significantly lower taxes; and a complete rollback of many policies instituted in his first two years in office by their nemesis, President Bill Clinton (whom we repeatedly underestimated).
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READ MORE: Atlanta Journal Constitution
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