Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

McCain's Losing Message

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • McCain's Losing Message

    By Eugene Robinson
    Tuesday, February 19, 2008; Page A15

    The good news for Republicans is that they have a big head start in the Fiesta of Forced Smiles -- the post-primary, pre-convention phase of the presidential campaign in which former opponents and party elders pledge their support for the presumptive nominee in a photogenic show of unity.

    The bad news is that the likely nominee, John McCain, intends to run on positions that most voters reject.

    This inconvenient fact was evident yesterday in George H.W. Bush's gracious endorsement speech. The former president called McCain a worthy standard-bearer for the party's "conservative values" -- never mind that the elder Bush's credentials as a true "movement" conservative were often questioned -- and he gently suggested it was time for Mike Huckabee, who technically remains in the race, to wake up and smell the coffee.

    I say that Huckabee is only technically a candidate because jetting off to the Cayman Islands to give a paid speech is not generally considered the best way to win the Wisconsin primary. This is an odd political year, but not that odd.

    Poppy Bush's announcement of support for McCain at least seemed heartfelt -- as opposed to Mitt Romney's backing for his bitter rival, which was dutiful and correct. Are Republicans supposed to forget the startlingly un-Republican way the two men snarled at each other throughout the primary contests? Romney, you will recall, accused McCain of supporting higher taxes and "amnesty" for undocumented immigrants; McCain painted Romney as a chameleon who had "changed positions on literally every major issue."

    In his endorsement, Romney said that "in the ***** of the fight, it's easy to lose sight of your opponent's finer qualities." That translates roughly as: I'm smiling through gritted teeth and doing what I have to do, because I want to be the Republican nominee next time around. George W. Bush, whose errors and failures cast a pall over McCain's presidential bid, was much more genuine in offering support for a man with whom he has clashed repeatedly in the past. For the president, obviously, political ambition is moot. More than party unity is at stake: McCain is the last candidate standing who shares the Decider's vision of the Iraq war as an open-ended struggle still requiring a massive deployment of American military forces that would eventually lead to some sort of meaningful strategic "victory" for the United States.

    The Decider is eager to help McCain paint Democrats Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton as defeatists, instead of realists (which they are) who recognize that the Iraq invasion was a historic blunder, that the military achievements of Bush's troop surge have served only to partially mitigate the damage done to U.S. national interests by the war and that a permanent U.S. occupation of Iraq -- which is, essentially, the Bush-McCain policy -- will harm our nation's security rather than enhance it.

    The Democratic candidates are impolite enough to point out that the losses suffered by al-Qaeda in Iraq, which Bush and McCain love to cite, are really the vanquishing of a foe that could never have existed without the U.S. invasion. The Democrats also recognize that while U.S. forces are bogged down in Iraq, al-Qaeda is regrouping in Pakistan and plotting new attacks. They learned this from the Bush administration's own intelligence estimates.

    The war is only one issue on which McCain, as the all-but-certain Republican nominee, is out of step with voters. Health care is another: While Clinton and Obama have offered far-reaching proposals to make health insurance available to millions of uninsured Americans, Republicans aren't offering so much as a bandage.

    Or take the economy, which at present is the biggest issue in the campaign (and which McCain famously said he doesn't really understand that well). The Democrats have tapped into the widespread discomfort and insecurity that polls indicate many Americans feel, while McCain and the Republicans can only talk about more tax cuts and the eternal glory of free and unfettered markets.

    Message: We don't care.

    Huckabee, no doubt refreshed from his sojourn in the Caymans, was back on the campaign trail in Wisconsin yesterday. He vows to continue at least through the Texas primary on March 4, but the writing has been on the wall for some time. If I were a Republican pooh-bah and wanted to hustle Huckabee out of the race more quickly, I'd find a billionaire to bankroll a new syndicated talk show: "Huckabee!" One thing he has proved is that he's a master of the form, maybe even good enough to go toe-to-toe with Oprah.

    McCain, meanwhile, will be locked in his own battle -- against history and the public mood.

    The writer will answer questions at 1 p.m. today athttp://www.washingtonpost.com. His e-mail address [email protected].

  • #2
    The Republicans are even more divided than the dem's....Obama will win the WH with relative ease.
    $100/unit

    They are all booger eaters!!!

    Comment


    • #3
      Originally posted by KR-V3
      The Republicans are even more divided than the dem's....Obama will win the WH with relative ease.
      THEN AMERICA WILL HAVE A CHEERLEADER AS A PRESIDENT...........ALL FLUFF AND NO SUBSTANCE......................NEXT 4 YRS WILL BE EXCITING AS CONGRESS OUT EXPERIENCES THE PRESIDENT ON ISSUES................THATS OK BECAUSE CHANGE FOR CHANGE SAKE IS THE ANSWER IN 08..............

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by BUD GREGG
        THEN AMERICA WILL HAVE A CHEERLEADER AS A PRESIDENT...........ALL FLUFF AND NO SUBSTANCE......................NEXT 4 YRS WILL BE EXCITING AS CONGRESS OUT EXPERIENCES THE PRESIDENT ON ISSUES................THATS OK BECAUSE CHANGE FOR CHANGE SAKE IS THE ANSWER IN 08..............
        The last 8 years have been a disaster.

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by BettorsChat
          The last 8 years have been a disaster.

          Comment


          • #6
            Eugene Robinson is a newspaper columnist and assistant managing editor for The Washington Post. His columns are syndicated by The Washington Post Writers Group. In his columns he generally takes liberal positions and often criticizes President George W. Bush for his perceived domestic- and foreign-policy failures, especially the Iraq War.

            He has also learned as a writer that hip-hop and “American Idol” are as relevant to people’s lives, in their way, as the “serious” news that gets reported on the front page.
            He who wears diaper knows his shit - Confucius

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by insidethe8thpol
              Eugene Robinson is a newspaper columnist and assistant managing editor for The Washington Post. His columns are syndicated by The Washington Post Writers Group. In his columns he generally takes liberal positions and often criticizes President George W. Bush for his perceived domestic- and foreign-policy failures, especially the Iraq War.

              He has also learned as a writer that hip-hop and “American Idol” are as relevant to people’s lives, in their way, as the “serious” news that gets reported on the front page.
              Go figure

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by BettorsChat
                The last 8 years have been a disaster.
                YOU CAN'T FOCUS ON THE PAST, THE FUTURE IS THE KEY, OBAMA WANTS TO LEAD US IN THE FUTURE, OK, SHOW ME YOUR ACCOMPLISHMENTS TO DATE, SHOW ME HOW YOU ARE GOING TO "CHANGE" THE ERRORS OF THE LAST 8 YRS.........................THE ONLY THING HE CAN PRODUCE AT THIS POINT IS CHANGE FOR CHANGE SAKE, HE BELIEVES THAT YOUR DISSATISFACTION IS SO GREAT THAT YOU WILL OVERLOOK HIS SHORTCOMMING IN BEING PRESIDENT/COMMANDER IN CHIEF AND ELECT HIM. IT IS IRONIC THAT HIS APPROACH IS EXACTLY THE SAME AS BILL CLINTIONS WHEN HE RAN FOR PRESIDENT. WE CAN CHANGE, WE WILL CHANGE, I PROMISE HOPE FOR THE FUTURE, HAS BEEN USED NOW INSTEAD OF "I FEEL YOUR PAIN"

                ALSO OBAMA'S WIFE HAS BEGUN TO SOUND LIKE HILLARY WHEN BILL WAS RUNNING FOR THE WHITE HOUSE.

                CLINTON'S BEING BEATEN AT THIS POINT BY THE SAME APPROACH AT THERE OWN GAME MAKES THE ELECTION WORTHWHILE.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by BettorsChat
                  The last 8 years have been a disaster.
                  I agree. It will be a blessing for all of us WHEN Obama is President.
                  Good,Honest Handicapping. Florida Tebow 24-Oklahoma Bradford 14, Jan 09'

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by Powerplaypicks
                    I agree. It will be a blessing for all of us WHEN Obama is President.
                    What are you gonna do when the attacks hit your hometown?

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Originally posted by kbsooner21
                      What are you gonna do when the attacks hit your hometown?
                      That was a set up deal. And if it wasn't a setup deal, then I would persue who did it cough cough Afghanistan, and then take force there! Not go to Iraq for "Weapons of Mass Dest" on FALSE Pretenses and send this country back about 15 to 20 years.
                      Good,Honest Handicapping. Florida Tebow 24-Oklahoma Bradford 14, Jan 09'

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Originally posted by Powerplaypicks
                        I agree. It will be a blessing for all of us WHEN Obama is President.
                        Blessing for who? BS, Just another sharp talking crook with a different color

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          How could anyone w/ sane mind defend Bush at this point?

                          Our country is in deep shit for the next 10 years b/c of this Iraq scandal.

                          Bush's reason for going to Iraq:

                          1. They were involved in 9/11...FALSE
                          2. They had WMD....FALSE

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Originally posted by RECIO
                            Blessing for who? BS, Just another sharp talking crook with a different color
                            Now I know that Presidents and politicians alike can almost never deliver on all their promises, but how would you like it if Clinton won or McCain Bush Jr. won??? That would make it 24 straight years of a Bush, or Clinton in the White House, that sound more like a Monarchy than a democracy don't you think????
                            Good,Honest Handicapping. Florida Tebow 24-Oklahoma Bradford 14, Jan 09'

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Where has Budd Gregg been the past 8 years? gas is over $3 per Gallon, people are losing their homes and jobs. We are at War with a country that did not have anything to do with 9/11. We have a president that does not respect the Constitution. Tell me Budd Gregg please help me decide with whom to vote for. McCain a man that promises to give us the same thing that we been going through the past 8 years? Senator Clinton someone that cannot take responsibility for the vote for the war? Dude you need to read George Will's column this morning about our presidents and experience. Lincoln was a one term congressman and is considered one of our best presidents.... Dude dont drink the kool aide!!!!!! How dare you say that Obama is a cheerleader after 8 years of slogans from the Bush assministration(purposely misspelled) Do you remember "cutt in run?" or "If we dont fight them there we will fight them here"

                              Comment

                              Working...
                              X