Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Opinion

In His Speech, McCain Needs to Reassemble the Nixon-Reagan Conservative Coalition

Posted September 3, 2008

U.S. News asked speechwriters from past Republican administrations to weigh in with their thoughts on John McCain's acceptance speech. Curt Smith wrote speeches for George H. W. Bush.

A maxim says, "Dance with the one that brung you." Democrats waltz with leftist pressure groups, bowing and bartering. By contrast, the Republican card features Americanism vs. tribalism, general vs. special interest, and melting pot vs. manic pluralism. John McCain's acceptance speech must twirl this coalition of the winning.

For 40 years, the GOP has danced with the forgotten American, siring Richard Nixon's silent majority, the Reagan Democrat, and the emerging Republican majority. It thrived until George W. Bush's reverse Midas touch, which is McCain's acceptance problem: Whatever W touches, he destroys.

The speech is the Arizonan's last best hope to lure Main Street "and specifically," a writer said, "the people reviled in Main Street": middle-brow and -class, unhip and unboutique. As Ronald Reagan said, their "community of values" includes God, work, family, and reverence for everything American. McCain must apply a populist laying on of hands.

In 2004, for example, more evangelicals voted than all blacks and union members. Moreover—this is crucial—their view of secularism, multiculturalism, and border insecurity tracks millions of working-class Catholic, Orthodox Jewish, and Protestant non-"born-agains." Most believe, as Robert Hughes wrote, that "America is a construction of mind," eclipsing race, sex, or creed.

This belief helped Nixon and Reagan win 49 states. Nominees ignoring it lose: Gerald Ford, Robert Dole, 1992's George H. W. Bush. An ex-Navy man, McCain will show this week if he is out to sea about his nation's core. "To my opponent, America is clients whose support he must buy," he should say. "To me, America is individuals whose support I must earn."

Working on JFK's inaugural, Theodore Sorensen reread the Gettysburg Address. McCain ghost Mark Salter should absorb past Republican acceptances. In 1980, Reagan closed with silent prayer. In 1988, Bush etched "a thousand points of light." Above all, McCain should read Nixon's brilliantly written and delivered 1968 confessional: each a centrist conservative, trying to explain and bond.

Nixon's 1960 acceptance "rang every bell," the New Republic said. Nineteen sixty-eight's rerang them, swelling his Gallup lead over Hubert Humphrey from 2 to 16 points. To Lou Harris, it "swayed more votes than any [prior] polled acceptance." GOP-ers re-aired it on prime-time TV. In other ads, Milhous voiced passages over a montage of still photos. In Kennedy and Nixon, Chris Matthews hailed "a masterful address": the linchpin of a campaign.

Like McCain, Nixon sought to reveal "the whole man." His dance was cultural, twirling those who loathed the 1960s: "The great majority of Americans, the forgotten Americans." Ecumenical, quoting Lincoln: "The great God which helped him [George Washington] must also help me." It reassured, auguring détente: "We extend the hand of friendship...to all the people of the world." Prose trumped "Bomb, bomb, bomb Iran."

To be lyrical, a speech should be personal. Nixon drew an indigent child. "He is black. He is white. He is Mexican, Italian, Polish. None of that matters. What does matter is that he is an American child." He then saw another child who "hears the train go by at night and dreams of faraway places where he'd like to go. It seems like an impossible dream." A great teacher, "a remarkable football coach, an inspirational minister encouraged him on his way." Finally, voice changing, breaking: "Tonight, he stands before you, nominated for president of the United States."

Earth to Straight Talk: The Republican majority began that night. Like Nixon, McCain can seem cold, even dour. Worse, he is, Michael Goodwin wrote, "a wooden speaker at best." McCain chants, not explains, tone weak and thin. He must learn the teleprompter; be scrappy, as in Rick Warren's recent faith-a-thon; and grasp that the candidate in sync with the middle class wins. McCain must speak for them, seeming one of them. It won't be easy, since he's not.

Born to privilege, McCain owns at least seven homes, is worth $110 million, and has a daughter, Meghan, who likes "bad boys with tattoos," "bisexual dating TV," and The Big Lebowski, saying "I f*****g love that movie." Meghan won't play in Mayberry. How can Dad? Even Republicans tell Gallup they want "something different" vs. "more of [W's] the same": e.g., mom and pop issues the GOP ignores.

Here's how McCain bridges the divide: Mime Mike Huckabee, lashing those for whom summer is a verb. Mock Obama, as at a recent motorcycle convention: "A couple hundred thousand Berliners made a lot of noise for my opponent. I'll take the roar of 50,000 Harleys." Then, talk straight on culture. Eight in 10 voters back voluntary prayer. "I want radical judges out of our schools—and the faith of our fathers back in." A like number opposes preferences: "More than affirmative action, we need affirmatives lives." Bilingualism scars McCain's "[one] country first." He should ask: "If we can't understand one another, how can we help one another?"

The Iraqi surge disrobed Democrats. He should paraphrase Churchill: "Seldom have so many been so wrong about so much." Seven in 10 Americans back offshore drilling: "Let us speak not of shortages but of supply." Illegal immigration is McCain's albatross. He should shuck it. "My opponent says he is a citizen of the world. I'm a citizen of the United States. We will uphold our laws, preserve our sovereignty, and keep our borders secure."

Lyndon Johnson brooked a credibility gap. This speech can close a fervency gap. According to Pew Research, 24 percent of voters "strongly" support Obama vs. McCain's 17. McCain must goad the left's bicoastal intelligentsia, billionaires, trial lawyers, rock stars, atheists, and double-latte snobs. If they hate the speech, it worked.

Unlike Nixon and Reagan, McCain often seems a stranger in Main Street's foreign land. The acceptance can sway its still-hung jury. Recall who brings Republicans to the dance—and how liberal groups preach "vocal Darwinism—the survival of the shrillest." McCain can treat Americans as prostitutes and lose—or voters as middle Americans, and win.

Curt Smith wrote more speeches than anyone else for President George H. W. Bush, including the "Just War" and Pearl Harbor anniversary speeches and 2004 eulogy to Ronald Reagan. The New York Times calls his work "the high point of Bush familial eloquence." He is the author of 12 books, a GateHouse Media columnist, and senior lecturer, English, the University of Rochester.

  • Print  |
  • Subscribe  |
  • |
  • |
  • Sphere: Related Content

advertisement

Crossword Puzzle

Do You Like Crosswords?

We've added a new feature to our weekly digital magazine: an exclusive crossword puzzle!

advertisement

Cartoon Gallery

Editorial Cartoon

Political Cartoons

Check out our most recent cartoons.

Washington Book Club

Foreign Policy by Contractor

Allison Stanger discusses One Nation Under Contract.

What the 2009 Elections Tell Us About 2010

By Tom Davis

Seven lessons the parties need to learn from Tuesday's races.

The 2009 off-year elections in Virginia, New Jersey, and New York's 23d Congressional District offer a small snapshot of the current views and motivations of the American electorate. While there may be a desire to extrapolate the events of Nov. 3, 2009 into a prediction of what will happen on Nov. 2, 2010, that is impossible.

Healthcare Cartoon Gallery

Editorial Cartoon

We've assembled some of the best editorial cartoons on the healthcare debate. Check them out.

Thomas Jefferson St.

Alan Simpson on Guns and Jail for Kids

A bit of context for the Supreme Court hearings.

Congressional Term Limits

The introduced amendment would limit the amount of permanent politicians.

Google's Christmas Gift

Try it for free ... right up until you can’t give it up.

Recess Politics and Healthcare

Pelosi needed her votes before Veterans' Day break.

No More in Afghanistan

Don't stress the Army any more.

Clinton on Bush and the Berlin Wall

Clinton praises the first Bush for two pivotal decisions to keep peace in Berlin.

Men Have Same Workload As Women At Home

Assuming this will give women a fairer shot in the workplace.

Voters' Top Priority: The Economy

Obama Democrats should stop rushing healthcare reform and address more important issues.

Your Photos

President Barack Obama speaks about combat troop level reductions in Iraq as he addresses military personnel at Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune.

Obama in Your Town

Has the president visited your town? Send your photos to obamaphotos@usnews.com, and we'll post our favorites online.

Courtesy Greg Meinert

Thousands cheer as Obama becomes the 44th president.

Your Inauguration Photos

Thanks for sending us such great shots from this historic event.


A baby kissing an Obama poster for Washington Whispers.

Your Campaign Photos

We asked to see your personal election pictures and you delivered.

advertisement

Use of this Web site constitutes acceptance of our Terms and Conditions of Use and Privacy Policy.
Make USNews.com your home page.