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Sunday, June 15, 2008

McCain and the Bitter Conservatives

By Andrew Sumereau

John McCain is clearly the preferable option for conservative voters come November. Although liberal in his views toward immigration, government intrusion in free speech, environmental issues, campaign finance reform, health care, education mandates, and a host of other issues that run contrary to conservative orthodoxy, McCain is solid on two (alas, two) vital issues that make the difference; spending and judges. From the frustration of eight years of a Republican Administration that began with so much hope and promise it pains one to say it, but there it is.

Against the prospects of a President Obama, McCain wins.

A victim of circumstances and timing in many ways, Senator McCain carries the sins of Bush and the free-spending Republicans into the 2008 election minus any counter balancing virtues. The coming election has an eerie deja-vu feeling. The Democrat nominee is young, glib, dare one say it, slick; beloved by a media most happy to shield him from criticism. He is facing a cranky old Republican Senator with visible war wounds, famous for his temper, and viewed with apprehension by the religious right.

In addition, John McCain is detested, and deservedly so, by many Republicans of all types. Beyond issue and policy differences, and they are legion, his personality grates. His conceit of “straight-talk” and “maverick"-like independence so superficially applauded (up until now) by the mainstream media is almost Clintonesque in its narcissism. If only other politicians had his courage, he implies, things would be fixed straightaway. The big special interests have all the other elected officials in their pockets. Only Maverick-John tells it like it is! Yet the truth is that McCain could serve well as poster boy of the arrogant elitist beltway insider, friend of Hillary and Ted, foe of the unwashed. The party habit of selecting the next in line (e.g. Dole) has rarely produced such an unappealing candidate at such a critical time. In many ways he reminds one of Adlai Stevenson, who famously frustrated his supporters with his holier-than-thou ways during two failed contests against the popular broad-smiling Ike.

Despite what will surely be the focus of McCain’s campaign, foreign policy and experience will not decide this election for conservative voters. One may point to the war in Iraq as the defining issue come November and see a big advantage for McCain. Not necessarily so. History will decide the wisdom of our foreign policy over the last seven years, whether the Iraq and Afghanistan invasions were a legitimate response to the threat of organized terror, or the overreaction of predisposed warriors intent on using the events of 9/11 to democratize the Middle East.

It is clear, in the short term that a McCain administration will cling to the ongoing military effort. He is a very sure bet on a continuation of aggressive and largely unilateral foreign policy. But unlike domestic issues, Presidents, as Truman said, “ride the Tiger” in foreign affairs.  They are controlled by events and often forced into moves at odds with their original intentions. Bush came into office as a critic of nation building and yet leaves committed to the rebuilding of Iraq. Johnson’s Great Society fell victim to his own escalation of the Vietnam War. Clinton sent troops to Haiti. As Chief Executive of the federal branch they must protect our borders and command the military by constitutional decree. Democrats, even Carter, have found that once in office the requirements and prerogatives of military power seldom are resisted.

On domestic issues it is no better. He is with Kennedy on education and immigration, with Fiengold on campaign finance, with Gore on the environment. For the committed conservative, he speaks and acts as Bush-lite without the few rhetorical bones thrown in for appearance’s sake. Each day, it seems, he appears to make a pronouncement, or suggest a policy, or chastise an enthusiastic supporter, in order to please the main-stream media and send conservatives off wailing and gnashing their teeth. 

[...]

McCain is in a fight against the manufactured illusions of “hope” and history.  He needs every vote he can manage. Before he once again decides to berate conservatives, propose liberal policies, befriend the political opposition and (why?) laud the Clintons, he should perhaps better find a nice photogenic porch. Sit on the porch. Do this and conservatives on November 5th will surely hold their noses and pull the lever for what is best for the country.

An interesting analysis.  Read the whole thing.

Comments

Pretty good article, very accurate.


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goon on June 15, 2008 at 08:18 am
Avatar for Jack

...he should perhaps better find a nice photogenic porch. Sit on the porch. Do this and conservatives on November 5th will surely hold their noses and pull the lever for what is best for the country.

By your own admission conservatives care more about image than substance. Of course, everyone already knew that.

Jack on June 15, 2008 at 08:42 am

I don’t trust McCain on judges either.  He gave far from his best effort advancing Bush’s nominations.  He was more concerned about saving face for the Democrats.


What’s going to happen to US industry when the global warming extremists like John McCain double the price of electricity?  I would think all these factories will close and set up in countries where they aren’t scared of technology.


The Whistler's signature
The Whistler on June 15, 2008 at 09:06 am

He needs every vote he can manage. Before he once again decides to berate conservatives, propose liberal policies, befriend the political opposition and (why?) laud the Clintons, he should perhaps better find a nice photogenic porch. Sit on the porch.

Do this and conservatives on November 5th will surely hold their noses and pull the lever for what is best for the country.

Sumereau seems to be warning McCain against McCain acting like McCain.  How old is the Manchurian Candidate now?  72?  73?

I think he has done all the changing, evolving and growing that he is going to do in this life—which is a big problem, because McCain hasn’t been sitting on a porch.  He has stomped through the political minefield Sumereau warns him against, hittingeveryfreakinoneof those actions which send Conservatives’ blood boiling.

Sumereau tacitly acknowledges that McCain is this animal, and only by hiding, or at least making his faux-Conservative qualities less obvious, can the very necessary Conservative voters stomach throwing a lever for him.

This is a hell of a position for Conservatives to be in.  Sumereau’s hopes, I think, are but whistling through the graveyard.

Perhaps he remembers how Conservatives vote when they are underwhelmed by their Candidates: Ford, Dole, Bush #1, and a goodly portion of the early primary types—they don’t.

Just a little bit of history for those who forget such stuff.


...for great justice

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Move_Zig on June 15, 2008 at 01:17 pm
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