The stakes could not be higher for the GOP and President Trump. If they cannot show results to the American people, there will be a political bloodbath in the 2018 mid-term elections.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has been a disaster for the Republican Party and has been a totally ineffective partner for President Trump in passing critical legislation. After failing on the vitally important bill to repeal Obamacare, McConnell and his Republican colleagues face a major test in the tax reform bill.

If they fail again on tax cuts, Democrat voters will be energized, and Republican voters will be disenchanted in the mid-term elections

The American people entrusted the GOP with full control of the White House and Congress. A mandate was given by the American people for the Republican Party to follow through on its campaign promises. Unfortunately, those solemn promises have not been kept. After eight years of vowing to repeal Obamacare, the Republican Senate failed it keep its word to the American people. The bill failed by a single vote, courtesy of Senator John McCain (R-AZ).

If they fail again on tax cuts, Democrat voters will be energized, and Republican voters will be disenchanted in the mid-term elections. Without a signature legislative achievement, there will be a national repeat of the disaster in the Alabama Senate race this week. In the showdown that resulted in a Democrat winning an Alabama Senate for the first time in 25 years, voter turnout in Democrat precincts was much higher than in Republican areas. After losing in a deep red state like Alabama, Republicans should be petrified about the 2018 mid-term election prospects.

The only way to turnaround their fortunes is to start following through on their campaign promises to the American people. This is why the tax cut vote next week is so important. Until now, Congress has delivered nothing except rhetoric. The real culprit has been the U.S. Senate. In fact, the House has passed hundreds of bills that have not even been considered by the Senate. In other cases, such as the Obamacare repeal bill, reform measures that passed the House have failed in the Senate, which has become the graveyard of good legislation.

While the President has been very successful on his own issuing executive orders, cutting red tape, eliminating useless regulations and taking unilateral actions, the Congress, particularly the Senate, has been an abysmal failure. Next week the U.S. Senate can begin to redeem its rather poor reputation. The bill is the most significant tax reform legislation since the Reagan tax reform measure of 1986.

While there is little doubt it will pass in the House, there is still some concern about its fate in the Senate. Currently, several Senators are in the hospital, while others have been demanding additional changes to the bill.

If the Republican led U.S. Senate cannot pass the tax reform legislation, it should just abdicate power and allow Democrats to take control. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell may as well turn over his position to Democrat Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY).