Politics | Newt Gingrich 2010 Won't See Another Republican Revolution Parallels with 1994 are exaggerated By Rob Quinn Posted Sep 29, 2009 9:38 AM CDT Copied Former Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott, shares a laugh with Harry Reid, Bill Clinton, Newt Gingrich, and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell at the unveiling of Lott's portrait. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh) Hopeful Republicans are starting to play up the similarities between 1994 and 2010 but any talk of a second Republican Revolution is probably just wishful thinking, writes Ed Kilgore in the New Republic. The Republican capture of the House in '94 was made possible by retiring Democrats—some 22 of the 54 seats they picked up that year were open, while just four Democrat-held House seats will be open in "even vaguely competitive territory" next year, Kilgore writes. The Senate looks even less likely to fall to resurgent Republicans than the House, Kilgore argues, since it would require the Dems to lose 11 seats while not recapturing a single one. The GOP also won't be getting a bounce from redistricting the way it did in 1994, and President Bush's failure to win over Hispanics means just about every demographic trend is going against the party. Demographics do offer the Republicans one glimmer of hope, notes Kilgore: older voters are lot more skeptical about President Obama than their younger counterparts—and a lot likelier to vote in midterm elections. Read These Next Negative press coverage should get TV licenses yanked, Trump says. Here's what late-night hosts had to say about Jimmy Kimmel. Autopsy is in for Black student found hanged from tree at college. 'Jesus, Take the Wheel' writer dies in tragic crash at age 57. Report an error