Where McCain Went Wrong

Political wiseguys assumed McCain couldn't win honorably, and the Arizonan had once lost with honor

October 21, 2008 RSS Feed Print
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After almost two years of failing to settle on a single, consistent message for his presidential campaign, John McCain tried to find it in two other men: Joe the Plumber and Bill Ayers. In the final presidential debate, an aggressive McCain turned Joe's now infamous campaign conversation with Barack Obama—in which the Democrat said his tax cuts were a way to "spread the wealth"—into proof that Obama would engage in class warfare. (Translation: He's a big-spending socialist.) As for Ayers, an agitated McCain demanded to know more about "the full extent of that relationship" between Obama and the former radical leader. (Translation: We can't trust Obama.)

Oh, and there was one more person McCain decided to shout out: George W. Bush. As in: "Senator Obama, I am not President Bush. If you wanted to run against President Bush, you should have run four years ago." (Translation: Get this guy Bush off my back.)

In the end, McCain's last-ditch attempt to save his campaign fell short. Let's face it. This is not a good year to be a Republican: Unpopular president. Unpopular war. Unstable economy. Even so, the conventional wisdom about McCain had always been that if any Republican could win, he was the guy: a likable hero with a political brand untethered to the GOP. And a fighter, too. When McCain became the last man standing in the Republican primaries, there was a glimpse of his spirit. He had refused to give up when his campaign ran out of money last summer, firing his staff, hitting the road, and shocking everyone by winning the New Hampshire primary. It was a personal triumph.

GOP turmoil. But somewhere along the way, a certain unavoidable reality set in. McCain was presiding over a dysfunctional Republican Party on the verge of civil war—with divisions among the cultural conservatives, the tax cutters, the foreign policy hard-liners. Even the factions had factions. And in the past, McCain had antagonized almost every one of them, with relish. Now he had to make peace in the party to win the war. So he revised his (now virtually invisible) bipartisan immigration reform into a plan to "build the fence first." The deficit hawk found new affection for those Bush tax cuts. Hey, it worked.

After winning the nomination, there were still some glimpses of the old McCain—talking about poverty and Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans, visiting Memphis to confess he had been wrong when he voted against the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday. But hold on. The political wiseguys assumed McCain couldn't win that way. Not in the political party that Bush built—in which the leader caters to divisions, not consensus. No doubt McCain was also reminded (as if he had to be) that he once had lost honorably. Never again.

Besides, the general election was supposed to be mostly about national security—about Iraq and the best commander in chief. On that, at least, there was party unity. But as gas prices soared, the economy quickly became the top issue—and that's Democratic terrain. That's when the McCain campaign took a dark turn, deciding character was now the only key to the kingdom. Disqualifying Obama became its chief goal: The untested celebrity. The liberal. The novice. The unknown. And worse. When it came time to choose a vice president, McCain would have loved onetime Democrat Joe Lieberman. But the wiseguys once again advised that the party's base would revolt. So McCain blew the base a kiss: Sarah Palin. Those voters who always wanted to know more about how Obama spends his time "palling around with terrorists" were thrilled. The rest just wondered how McCain ever thought she was qualified for that job.

The nastiness was infectious. McCain himself started asking, "Who is the real Barack Obama?" and his crowds sometimes turned scary. But the rest of the public wanted to know more about its economic future, not Obama's past. When McCain finally came up with a plan for the economy, the vision thing was still overwhelmed by his inability to hide a genuine disdain for Obama. At every debate, the edge in his voice and grimace on his face were unmistakable. If this indignant McCain had a bubble over his head, it would no doubt say, "Can you believe I'm in the ring with this unqualified guy and he's beating me?"

Yes, we can.

Tags:
2008 presidential election,
John McCain,
campaigns,
politics,
Republican Party

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Dear Sir

I would like to add my perspective as a Canadian who has read the NY times and Wash Post daily for many years but will no longer do so. I also used to watch CNN and MSNBC regularly.

It was a habit I picked up when working as an engineering consultant in MD

I have been stunned by the blatant but successful attempt by the Print News reporters and TV news reporters and pundits to make anyone running against Obama look like a liar and

either an airhead or worse. This started in the primary with Clinton ( Liar ) next to McCain ( erratic and Liar ),and at least ended with Clinton and McCain when their negative poll rating grew but continues to a degree with Palin.

This has been one of the worst cases of demonizing someone I have ever witnessed. This was done by your news people

who looked for anything at all to put a public derogatory spin on, and made her look foolish as many times as possible.

Demonizing people without knowing them personally, oh their just stupid, shows the ethics of an alley cat and I am being unkind to cats.

All of this was done while putting a positive spin on anything connected to Obama and laundering anything not positive

such as long term associates, which is how we judge our politicians

This has been so wide spread and appears to cover everything but Fox so it does seem to be organized from somewhere

or someone so it must be corporate policy

How anyone but an ignorant already biased goof, can now rely on any American news reported by the American main stream media ,This would be to big a stretch for me so I now get my news from CBC or BBC at least they still appear to have some ethics and as should be the case in the US, Libel laws here and Britain cover cases of this kind just to keep this sort of

skummy behavior in check

This is a dangerous Pandora's box to open, and one thing I have always believed that there is always repayment for bad

things done to other people no matter who you are, and I now

actually hope that there will be an epedimic of fatal cancer among the main stream US press and TV personalities before the next election,

The press have went from a guardian of democracy to an undo influence and have forfitted their protection under the constitution.

It also shows that the 5th estate will now have to be regulated

because they have ditched their necessary dog watch role, and can no longer be trusted not to use their influence to unduely

effect the Democratic Process.

Thanks

Larry H of 5:33PM November 06, 2008

The McCain campaign has operated much like an out-of-control gyroscope -- spinning wildly at a high rate of speed, without any specific direction or guidance, bouncing-off whatever it may crash into, abruptly changing directions,and then wobbling aimlessly along a new, random, unplanned path. There's no control, just as John McCain has not controlled his campaign. McCain often says "I've already been tested." Yes John, you have been tested -- and you failed miserably. You failed to take charge of your campaign; failed to give it the leadership and direction it so desperately needed. Our country needs a leader that is unflappable and imperturbable; and John McCain has often looked very flapped and perturbed.

Douglas in Minnesota of MN 12:33AM November 02, 2008

Gloria Borger says nothing in this article except her views which are tainted by her love of Obama. She clams that some on the Republican side feel that Palin was not qualified to be vice-president. She fails to mention that 49% of American feel Obama is not qualified for the Presidency.

She puts quotes around the fact that Obama Pals around with terrorists. The fact is he does.

If the media had spent as much time investigating and vetting Barack Obama as they did Palin and Joe the plumber, then Obama would not have made it past Iowa.

Why doesn't Borger mention that Congress has an abysmal approval rating of 16%. This is significantly lower than President Bush's low ratings. Yet most of congress will win re-election.

With newspaper subscribers and television viewers at a seriously low level these fallacies that Borger and her type throw at us are not resonating as they once did

John Constantino of FL 2:16PM October 30, 2008

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