ANALYSIS: Why I think John McCain's Presidential campaign is in big trouble now!


Hello Everyone:

It is my opinion that John McCain is going down hill very fast as being a serious "top tier" GOP Presidential candidate.  I have already documented last year that "John McCain has virtually no chance to become President in 2008" because he "is all over the board trying to be all things to all people instead of running on a consistent message which he does not have in my opinion:"

http://securingamerica.com/ccn/node/5563

ANALYSIS: John McCain has virtually no chance to become President in 2008!

Submitted by Mitch Dworkin on April 17, 2006 - 12:09am.

Rush Limbaugh and the extreme right wing of the Neocon GOP activist base have always disliked McCain and they are furious with him now for saying that ”I think that Donald Rumsfeld will go down in history as one of the worst secretaries of defense in history.”      

That is fully documented in the Rush Limbaugh transcript below titled "What's New? McCain Attacks Another Republican."  Rumsfeld is considered to be like a patron saint to GOP Neocons which is why they are taking this comment from McCain so hard!

Here are three short audio links where Rush Limbaugh mocks and makes fun of John McCain no differently than how he would to a Democrat who he does not like:

Parody: NSA Wiretap Catches McCain:

Parody: McCain Explains

Where Have All the Conservatives Gone?

What Rush Limbaugh and his followers think of John McCain is very important because Limbaugh and the 20 million plus extreme right wing GOP activists who he controls (which is about one third of the approximately 60 million people who voted for Bush in 2004) are the key people who are most involved in the 2008 GOP nomination process for President!

Here are 10 specific reasons in outline form talking about why extreme right wing Neocon GOP activists hate John McCain:

http://www.rightwingnews.com/category.php?ent=5365

The Conservative Case Against John McCain In 2008 

Below the Rush Limbaugh transcript and link that he references about McCain is the Countdown video link and transcript from Tuesday, February 20 where Keith Olbermann and Jonathan Alter tear John McCain apart for his "confusing war stance" and for several flip-flops!

Here is where Crooks and Liars go after McCain for pandering and flip-flops:

http://www.crooksandliars.com/2007/02/21/the-weekly-worst-in-mccain-pandering/

The Weekly Worst In McCain Pandering

By: Cliff Schecter on Wednesday, February 21st, 2007 at 2:07 PM - PST

So the conclusion that I come to is that John McCain cannot get any kind of firm support for his 2008 Presidential campaign from the extreme right wing or from liberal activists.  How ironic it is that disliking McCain is something that both extreme right wing activists and liberal activists can agree on even if they have different reasons for coming to the same conclusion that they do NOT like McCain!

I also do not see much serious support that McCain can get for an Independent run for President in 2008 because I do not think that there are enough people left to support him when he is so disliked by both the far right and by liberal activists and when the country is as divided as it is.  If McCain is thinking of a serious Independent run, then I think that Chuck Hagel would be far ahead of him in that department:

http://securingamerica.com/ccn/node/11144  

Chuck Hagel to decide within 2 weeks on running for President / Independent run?

Submitted by Mitch Dworkin on February 22, 2007 - 3:17pm.

McCain is already falling behind Giuliani in the latest polls:

http://media.www.dailyiowan.com/media/storage/paper599/news/2007/02/22/Opinions/Political.Play.Of.The.Week.Reality.Check-2735203.shtml

Political play of the week: Reality check

Indeed, almost all polls including the Marist, Time, and Newsweek show that Giuliani has moved from either a tied or slight edge against McCain to a commanding lead. I'm sure the McCain camp is in a tizzy over his falling numbers. (Although the senator likes to pretend he doesn't care about poll numbers.) The most recent Fox News poll had the former mayor with a whopping 25 point advantage over the senator.

So my conclusion is that because of McCain's obvious pandering and flip-flops and because he is hated by BOTH extreme right wing Neocon activists and by liberal activists, he had probably better get used to staying in the Senate for the rest of his political career short of some miracle happening in his favor!

Mitch Dworkin

http://www.securingamerica.com/

http://securingamerica.com/ccn/node/9898
Tell President Bush: Stop the Surge and change the strategy!
Submitted by Wes Clark on January 8, 2007 - 4:40pm.

http://www.securingamerica.com/ccn/node/7191
Listen to Gen. Wes Clark fight for Dems on Sean Hannity's radio program: An excellent example for all of us to follow and what we all need to be doing to help fight back against extreme right wing Neocon smear propaganda!  

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http://www.rushlimbaugh.com/home/daily/site_022107/content/01125107.guest.html

What's New? McCain Attacks Another Republican

February 21, 2007

BEGIN TRANSCRIPT

RUSH: Mr. Snerdley asked me this morning if I was outraged over the comments that Senator McCain made about former Defense Secretary Rumsfeld. I said I was not outraged. He was amazed that I was not outraged. I explained to Mr. Snerdley, and I explain to all of you that I am beyond being outraged by Senator McCain. This is typical Senator McCain behavior. Here he is running for the Republican presidential nomination, and he rips Rumsfeld. What's new about that? He has little to say about the Democrats. All he has said is that the resolution in the Senate is disingenuous. Besides that, other than that, he hasn't had much to say about the Democrats, Jack Murtha or any of these other people who are plotting happily for our defeat in Iraq. There he is on the Republican presidential campaign trail willing and ready to criticize Rumsfeld, who's not even there anymore. This is purely gratuitous, and it's obviously a play for the moderates and the so-called leaners, the sacred undecideds or what have you.



I don't know about you, but in a contest between Donald Rumsfeld and any Democrat other than Joe Lieberman, if you ask me, Rumsfeld was far more interested in victory and trying to secure it than anybody in the Democrat Party is today. Why in the world a Republican presidential candidate, at this stage, would go out and start trashing Rumsfeld is beyond me, other than it's typical. It sounds like it's a little bit personal. You know, it's obvious that the target out there is these great undecideds and so forth. Hating Rumsfeld is like hating Big Oil. People don't even know why they do. They've just heard, "Rumsfeld's bad, Rumsfeld's horrible" for so many years by the Drive-By Media. They just think Rumsfeld is the mistake; Rumsfeld is the bad guy; he's equivalent to Big Oil or any other liberal troll or goon out there. I don't know that it's desperate or whatever, but it just reminded me of all the times that Senator McCain has sucked up to the Drive-Bys out there by attacking members of his own party, members of the administration. So I wasn't surprised.

In fact, a couple audio sound bites here of Vice President Cheney. More with Jonathan Karl aboard the USS Kitty Hawk. The question: “Because Congressman Murtha and Nancy Pelosi made it clear that what they would like to do is they would like to stop the surge. Can they do it, do they have the power to stop the surge, Mr. Vice President?”

CHENEY: I think he's dead wrong. I think in fact if we were to do what Speaker Pelosi and Congressman Murtha are suggesting, all we'll do is validate the Al-Qaeda strategy. The Al-Qaeda strategy is to break the will of the American people. In fact, knowing they can't win in a stand-up fight, try to persuade us to throw in the towel and come home, and then they win because we quit.

RUSH: Yeah, that's exactly right. They win because we quit. And then the next question: “You probably heard John McCain again come out and say that your friend Rumsfeld was perhaps the worst secretary of defense ever. What do you make of that?”

CHENEY: I disagree with John. John said some nasty things about me the other day and then the next time he saw me he ran over to me and apologized. Maybe he'll apologize to Rumsfeld.

RUSH: Now, what does that say? I don't think the vice president is lying about this because if he were, McCain could go out there and say, (McCain impression) “I didn't apologize! I never apologized to anybody, you got that, sailor?” But he hasn't said that. So he went out there and ripped Cheney the other day and then after ripping Cheney goes to Cheney and apologizes. (McCain impression) “It’s the campaign, I gotta do these things, you understand, right? Huh, huh?” Enough said.

END TRANSCRIPT

Read the Background Material...

(Washington Post: Cheney Disagrees With McCain on Rumsfeld)

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/02/21/AR2007022101211.html

(Boston Herald: McCain: Rumsfeld was one of the worst)

http://news.bostonherald.com/politics/view.bg?articleid=184002

*Note: Links to content outside RushLimbaugh.com usually become inactive over time.

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http://www.rushlimbaugh.com/home/today.guest.html

Links from Rush's Stack of Stuff...

Just Don't Tell Us You're a Conservative, Senator McCain 

References this article:

http://www.hillnews.com/thehill/export/TheHill/News/Frontpage/022107/dewine.html

February 21, 2007

Dewine, Castle endorse Mccain
By
Elana Schor

Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) yesterday picked up a 2008 endorsement from Ohio’s former GOP senator, Mike DeWine, who maintains strong name-recognition in the quintessential swing state, despite losing his seat last year.

Rep. Mike Castle (R-Del.) also joined McCain’s 2008 bid.

Of the 17 House Republicans who voted with Democrats on last week’s resolution condemning the Bush administration’s plan to add troops in Iraq, five are public McCain supporters: Reps. Ric Keller (Fla.), Fred Upton (Mich.), Steven LaTourette (Ohio), Mark Kirk (Ill.) and Castle.

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http://video.msn.com/v/us/msnbc.htm?g=606CA7E1-34C0-4123-A409-F85E22D4EA60&f=00&fg=email  (06:41)

Feb. 20: Countdown Video link: McCain's confusing war stance

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/17258765/

'Countdown with Keith Olbermann' for Feb. 20
Read the transcript to the Tuesday show
 

Guests: Tammy Duckworth, Jonathan Alter

OLBERMANN:  There is more than one way for a presidential candidate to be both for and against the war in Iraq, and in our third story on the COUNTDOWN tonight, Senator John McCain may have settled on the most cynical one yet.  Choosing as his villain, as the quintessential representative of all that is wrong with the war, not the current commander in chief, but rather a man no longer in office, the former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld. 

Campaigning in South Carolina, Mr. McCain continued to express strong support for President Bush‘s troop escalation, but of the former secretary of defense he said, quote, “We are paying a very heavy price for the mismanagement—that‘s the kindest word I can give you—of Donald Rumsfeld of this war.  I think Donald Rumsfeld will go down in history as one of the worst secretaries of defense in history.”

Indeed, as far back as December of 2004, the senator said he had no confidence in Mr. Rumsfeld, though when Rumsfeld resigned last November, Senator McCain managed some kind words in a statement, quoting, “While Secretary Rumsfeld and I have had our differences, he deserves Americans‘ respect and gratitude for his many years of public service.”

But McCain‘s other stances on the war are not so easily finessed.  A little more than two weeks ago he managed to say, within the span of one minute, that judging the troop escalation would be possible in a few months‘ time, but it would not be possible in a few months‘ time. 

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

SEN. JOHN MCCAIN ®, ARIZONA:  It took us a long time to get in the situation we‘re in, and to say that we can somehow assume that in a few months things are going to get all better, I think, is not realistic. 

UNIDENTIFIED MALE:  How long are you going to give it to work? 

MCCAIN:  I think in the case of the Iraqi government cooperating and doing what‘s necessary, we can know fairly well in a few months. 

(END VIDEO CLIP)

OLBERMANN:  Senator McCain‘s emphasis on the word government notwithstanding, he may want to review his pronouncements about the war.  In an interview with the website the Politico last month, McCain said that if the escalation doesn‘t work, one option to consider would be, quote, to withdraw to the borders of Iraq to try to keep other countries from interfering, maintaining our bases in Kuwait and other places.  There are lots of scenarios. 

But less than a week later, when asked if there were any scenarios, under which withdrawing troops would be acceptable, the senator said, quote, not until we have the situation under control to the degree that the Iraqi government can exert its influence through most of the country. 

A reminder too, that Senator McCain said in 2002 and early 2003 that the war in Iraq would be won easily.  But early January of this year he said that he knew all along that the war, quote, would probably be long and hard and tough. 

Let‘s turn to “Newsweek‘s” senior editor and MSNBC political analyst, Jonathan Alter.  Jon, good evening.

JONATHAN ALTER, “NEWSWEEK”:  Hi Keith. 

OLBERMANN:  Since well before the midterms, it sure looked like Senator McCain was trying to reposition himself far to the right.  Does this latest stuff go a little further than that?  Is he now looking less like a self-redefining senator and a little bit more like a forgetful old man? 

ALTER:  Well, I don‘t know if I would go that far, but I think he‘s a maverick who‘s trapped in a straight jacket of his own making.  You know, he really wants to give reign to who he is, which is a guy who does not like President Bush very much.  That‘s been clear since 2000.  And wanted a much heavier footprint in Iraq. 

He really, from the start, wanted a lot more troops.  But instead of criticizing the policy all along, he would occasionally take little jabs at it, and because of his political ambitions, couldn‘t engage in full-throated opposition to the policy. 

OLBERMANN:  Clearly that creates a position where he‘s on a tight rope, maybe on a bicycle on a type rope, maybe a unicycle on a tight rope.  You support the president, you support the escalation, but you just damn the top president‘s top military strategist, the guy who was executing the war for hi, and you seem to try to preserve room to say later, hey, I would have ordered a greater escalation.

Is there a point at which he can no longer hold on to almost contradictory positions?  Is there a tipping points, an event that occurs, that knocks him off that tight rope? 

ALTER:  Well, I think you have to distinguish between his maverick credentials for the general public, which are in rough shape right now, and where he stands within the Republican party, where there‘s still a lot of support for this war.  You know, Chuck Hagel, who used to be a good friend of John McCain‘s has been saying that because McCain was a naval aviator and he wasn‘t really involved in ground combat in Vietnam, he doesn‘t understand what the quagmire is all about. 

So I think some of his lack of understanding of the whole situation,  even though he‘s steeped in military policy making history, is hobbling him now.  He really doesn‘t have a good handle on the whole thing and that‘s clear from all these conflicting statements that you‘ve shown. 

OLBERMANN:  What does the news from England, of Prime Minister Blair‘s plan to go to the House of Commons tomorrow and announce a series—a timetable of pullouts, what does that do, not to George Bush, but to John McCain? 

ALTER:  Well, you know, Blair was right there with President Bush, and if he‘s, sort of, parting ways with the surge policy, it might, in a funny way, make it a little bit easier for McCain to step up his own criticism, and maybe go to some of that idea of withdrawing back to Kuwait that you showed a moment ago.  There are a lot of other options that he could tact toward right now.

He still does have some running room on this.  It‘s on the social issues, the non-Iraq issues that he‘s in more trouble politically. 

OLBERMANN:  And we could go through all those, but I only signed a new four-year contract.  Let me just go through a couple of them.  It included whether Roe v. Wade should be overturned, a change on that, whether gay marriage should be allowed, Falwell and other elements of the religious right, are they agents of intolerance, tax cuts for the wealthy, are a good idea, maybe not, the torture detainees, which he opposed before he essentially gave the president free rein on it, South Carolina‘s use of the confederate flag, even elements of his own issue, campaign finance. 

Even if this is all deliberate, how much stretching can anybody‘s credibility take? 

ALTER:  Well, he‘s flopping around on the ship like a mackerel at moonlight.  You know, it‘s just not happening for him right now because he doesn‘t seem to have a consistent course on any of these issues.  And particularly on abortion and some of those other social issues that the rank and file of the Republican party doesn‘t trust him.  And as for the larger public, they have liked this maverick quality, but when they see him say opposing tax cuts in 2001, and now supporting them, when the country can afford them much less, when we‘ve got this war to pay for, it makes people wonder how much of that Straight Talk Express got derailed on route to the White House. 

OLBERMANN:  Yes, as we suggested, service has been suspended until we seek alternate routes.  Jonathan Alter, senior editor of “Newsweek Magazine,” great thanks for your time. 

ALTER:  Thanks a lot Keith.

Submitted by Mitch Dworkin on February 23, 2007 - 5:45pm.

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Conservative_Principles_and_Activism/message/75851

McCain Pain  

Traditionalists – people who believe in the Constitution as it was written – will find little to like in Senator John McCain.  Like Supreme Court Justice David Souter, he is an establishment, liberal Republican in the Nelson Rockefeller mode, so deeply imbued with the moral relativism of modernity that he no longer knows where to find home port for the Ship of State.

McCain is, after all, the ultimate chameleon, wearing his Republicanism as a badge when it serves him, yet pandering to the left when convenient.

The old adage of Never a Hero in Your Own Hometown seems to apply, since the elected precinct committeemen in McCain’s own district have actually voted to censure him...

Contributing to his pariah-like status is the fact that his former state director, Bettina Nava; deputy campaign manager for his 2002 bid, Wes Gullet; and consultant, Max Fose, were all prominently listed as Republicans for (Democrat Gov. Janet) Napolitano.

McCain’s much ballyhooed hug of President Bush concealed the dagger he was simultaneously sliding into George’s back. Their animus reaches back to 2000, when both campaigns were driving hard and fast. The underlying rancor swelled as he vocally opposed Bush’s tax cuts.

Recently, McCain has given the military grief over detainee interrogation techniques. In supporting gun control, he antagonizes Second Amendment supporters. Forging what he terms “bipartisan” alliances with Democrats Russ Feingold and Ted Kennedy does little to endear him to his political brethren.

As leader of the so-called Gang of 14, he drew criticism for his deal-making regarding judicial filibusters. Support of embryonic stem cell research and his repeated votes to block drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge,lessening dependence on foreign oil, rankle.

McCain supports a guest worker plan offering citizenship to those who flagrantly and illegally enter our country. He was denounced for advising Hispanic demonstrators to discard their Mexican flags while marching through American streets, lest they further inflame U.S. citizens. McCain has also taken refuge in the global warming camp, much to the chagrin of many in his party.

http://www.thomasbrewton.com/index.php/weblog/mccain_pain/

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McCain Pain McCain Pain
Traditionalists – people who believe in the Constitution as it was written – will find little to like in Senator John McCain. Like Supreme Court... Matt
nc1mrw
Nov 25, 2006
10:25 pm

Re: McCain Pain Re: McCain Pain
RE: McCain will get my gen. elcetion vote running on an "I'm not Hillary" platform! ... written – will find little to like in Senator John McCain. Like ...
bryan45777
Nov 26, 2006
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Re: McCain Pain Re: McCain Pain
In a message dated 11/26/2006 9:24:12 AM Pacific Standard Time, bryan45777@... writes: RE: McCain will get my gen. elcetion vote running on an "I'm not ...
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Nov 26, 2006
11:38 am

Submitted by Mitch Dworkin on February 23, 2007 - 5:50pm.

http://www.crooksandliars.com/2007/02/21/the-weekly-worst-in-mccain-pandering/

The Weekly Worst In McCain Pandering

By: Cliff Schecter on Wednesday, February 21st, 2007 at 2:07 PM - PST  

We–the humble folks trying to give you an accurate view of The Real McCain–summarize, because you're just too darn busy to keep up with every McCain flip-flop, sell out or new principle:

* John McCain's cool with missing a vote on his war, but he'll make sure to lecture South Carolina students on how taking really cold showers will allow them to forego sex outside of marriage. Unless you're McCain, it's the 1970s and you're cheating on your then-wife with your current one.
 
* John McCain thinks Roe v. Wade must absolutely positively be overturned. Except he said something very different in 1999. And the rules don't apply to his daughter. She has the right to control her body, unlike, say, everyone who's name is not McCain.

* McCain is a keynote speaker at The Discovery Institute on Friday, as it seems he has personally discovered how to change his position on evolution multiple times. The Discovery Institute thinks evolution is hoax, up there with gravity and electric stoves. They also think we should replace constitutional with Biblical government. Which is much different than what the Taliban wants. Much different.

* Iraq war debacle - Rumsfeld's fault. Even though not too long ago McCain was saying some very nice things about The Donald. I am just shocked McCain would change his mind!

* A tip from our loyal reader basheert: "Thune (who has endorsed McCain) told Capitol Briefing he extracted a promise from the Arizonan on judicial nominations. Thune said McCain told him he would appoint "guys like Roberts and Alito". That's a reference to Chief Justice John Roberts and Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito, both of whom were nominated by President Bush and were popular selections among Christian conservatives." The pandering continues.

* "What I have found out in my life, is that every time I have done something for political reasons and not the right reasons, I have paid a very heavy price for it — a big price.” Like your soul perhaps? But I digress, McCain said this, ironically enough, as he met with religious broadcasters in Orlando (of the Christian Right variety), you know, the kinds of folks he called "agents of intolerance" only a few years ago.

We hope you've enjoyed this week's edition. If we can make any promise to you, knowing John McCain's willingness to do anything to become president, it's that we'll be back next week!

 For more on this and other stories, please go to cliffschecter.com.

Filed Under: John McCain
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Submitted by Mitch Dworkin on February 23, 2007 - 5:57pm.

http://www.rightwingnews.com/category.php?ent=5365

The Conservative Case Against John McCain In 2008

There is no Republican up on Capitol Hill more disliked by his own GOP brethren than John McCain. That's why, despite the size of his fan club in the mainstream media, McCain seems rather unlikely to capture the party's nomination for President in 2008.

Here's a short, but sweet primer that may help explain why so many conservatives believe John McCain would be a very poor choice as the Republican nominee in 2008.


The Age Issue

John McCain will be 72 years old in 2008, which will make him 3 years older than Ronald Reagan was when he became the oldest man to ever be inaugurated as president back in 1981. In the Senate, where doddering fossils like Strom Thurmond and Robert Byrd can be elected over and over, McCain looks like a spring chicken in comparison. But, Reagan's age turned out to be a campaign issue and McCain, who would be 80 years old at the end of his 2nd term, would certainly have a lot of people questioning --with good reason -- whether he's up to the job. Were McCain to be the nominee, his age could be the deciding factor that puts a Democrat in office.

How Electable Is McCain Really?

The mainstream media loves John McCain and they regularly write fawning articles referring to him as a "maverick" and a "straight-talker." Because of this, McCain polls well among Democrats and Independents.

However, the reason McCain is so well liked by the media is because they're liberals and they love it when he trashes other Republicans. But, what would happen if John McCain actually became the Republican nominee? The same members of the mainstream media who gush over him today would turn on him in a Minnesota minute and once his great press ended, his poll numbers with Independents and Democrats would start to drop precipitously.

Moreover, it's no big secret that McCain is roundly despised by more than a few conservatives. The thinking there usually goes, "Well, what are they going to do, vote for Hillary?" No, they won't, "vote for Hillary," but will they contribute money to McCain, volunteer for his campaign, or defend him from attacks made by Democrats or the press? No, they won't.

More importantly, they may throw their votes away by voting Libertarian or for the Constitution Party in 2008. Given that the outcome of three of the last four elections may have been decided by these sorts of protest votes (for Perot in '92 and '96 and Nader in 2000), this is not an issue that should be taken lightly.

What's Wrong With Actually Having A Loyal Republican As The Republican Nominee?

One of the most galling things about the idea of having John McCain as the Republican nominee in 2008 is that whether he's a loyal Republican or not is a question that can't truly be answered. Back in 2001, there were rumors that McCain might, depending on how the election turned out, switch parties in order to help the Democrats retain the Senate. In 2002, there were rumors that McCain was considering switching parties and running for President as a Democrat. In 2004, "on several occasions," McCain talked with John Kerry about becoming his vice-president. Obviously McCain hasn't pulled a Jim Jeffords yet, but you have to wonder about where he really stands.

How Can You Be Pro-Life And Pro-Roe v. Wade At The Same Time?

Overall, John McCain does have a fairly solid pro-life voting record (The glaring exception is that he has gone off the reservation on embryonic stem cell research). However, McCain has specifically said, on more than one occasion, back in August of 1999, that he opposes overturning Roe v. Wade:

"I'd love to see a point where (Roe v. Wade) is irrelevant, and could be repealed because abortion is no longer necessary. But certainly in the short term, or even-the long-term, I would not support repeal of Roe v. Wade, which would then force X number of women in America to [undergo] illegal and dangerous operations."

"I would not seek to overturn Roe v. Wade tomorrow, because doing so would endanger the lives of women."

Has McCain also said he wants to repeal Roe v. Wade on many occasions? Yes. But, how can pro-lifers trust a man who has flip-flopped like John Kerry on Roe v. Wade to appoint the Supreme Court Justices who may end up deciding the issue? Simply put, we can't.


Kyoto By Any Other Name Would Still Smell As Rotten

John McCain has proposed a radical bill, the McCain-Lieberman Stewardship Act, that is not all that different from the Kyoto Protocol. McCain's bill would do cataclysmic damage to our economy. In the name of cutting greenhouse gas emissions by an insignificant percentage, that not even the biggest proponents of Kyoto believe would have a significant impact on the weather, here's the damage John McCain would be willing to do to our economy (from an article by Marlo Lewis in National Review):

"Proponents will undoubtedly argue, as they did last fall, that we need not worry about the bill's economic impact because Phase I (of McCain's bill) is just a "modest" first step in addressing global climate change. A recent Energy Information Administration (EIA) analysis suggests otherwise. According to EIA, Phase I would increase: gasoline prices by 9 percent in 2010 and 19 percent in 2025; natural-gas prices in the industrial and electric-power sectors by 21 percent in 2010 and 58 percent in 2025; and electricity prices by 35 percent in 2025."

Would you support a Republican candidate for President who pledged to sign America on to Kyoto Protocol? If not, then why support John McCain, who wants to do almost the same thing under a different name?


McCain Vs. The Bush Tax Cuts

Most conservatives believe the biggest domestic success of George Bush's first term were his tax cuts. John McCain voted against them, more than once, before finally flip-flopping and voting for them this year. Enough said.

McCain May Not Like Bush's Tax Cuts, But He Loves Illegal Immigration

McCain has teamed up with Ted Kennedy to propose a bill that rewards illegal aliens by allowing them to stay in the US permanently after they pay a modest fine, brings in hundreds of thousands of new guest workers as well, and does almost nothing to enforce immigration law or prevent new illegal aliens from entering the country. In other words, if you love George Bush's illegal immigration policy, John McCain is offering more of the same. On the other hand, if you believe we need to clamp down on illegal immigration, John McCain is not a candidate you should support.

The Gang-Of-14 Disaster

Just as Republicans in Congress were about to step in and put an end to the Democratic filibusters of judges once and for all, John McCain and the rest of the "Gang-Of-14" stepped in with a deal that kept the filibuster alive. This got John McCain and the other participants in the deal lots of favorable press, but the GOP paid a real price so that the "Maverick" could be in the spotlight again. Several GOP judges were thrown over the side and have, as of yet, never been allowed to get a vote.

Furthermore, the Gang-of-14 deal explicitly no long applies after the 2006 elections occur. So, if the Democrats gain seats in the Senate and decide to start filibustering again, it's entirely possible that this time, the GOP won't be able to muster the votes to stop them. That means that if a liberal Supreme Court Justice steps down during the last two years of Bush's term, because of John McCain and Company, it may not be possible to replace them with another Alito or Roberts. That's the price the party may have to pay so that John McCain can continue to be the New York Times' favorite Republican.

The McCain-Feingold Campaign Finance Reform Debacle

John McCain's signature piece of legislation is the McCain-Feingold Campaign Finance Reform Bill, which was one of the worst pieces of legislation to make it through Congress in the last decade. The idea behind this nightmare, which was a failure on every level, was that it was going to, "take the money out of politics." Well, not only did McCain-Feingold fail to, "take the money out of politics," more money was spent than ever before during the 2004 elections. Moreover, the bill unconstitutionally curbed free speech, protected incumbents, gave a fund raising edge to the Democrats, and opened up the door to regulating bloggers. If McCain says that he'll do for America what he did for campaign finance reform, it should be taken as a threat.

Conclusion

That should give you a pretty good idea of what some of McCain's biggest flaws are, but what you've seen so far is by no means a comprehensive list. Keep in mind that McCain opposed Bush's attempt to protect marriage by enshrining it in the Constitution, committed adultery in his first marriage, attacked the Swift Boat Veterans For Truth, endangered the lives of all Americans by handcuffing our military interrogators, had a meltdown over a boxing commission...you can go on and on like this.

The long and short of it is that John McCain is a deeply flawed candidate who's unlikely to capture the Republican nomination, unlikely to win the presidency, and is unlikely to be a good President even if he somehow makes it to the White House.

2006-03-15 10:30:28 | Comments | Link Cosmos | TrackBack

Joe's picture
Submitted by Joe on February 23, 2007 - 9:23pm.

And then he runs to Seattle to raise money. Smart move!

And following his speech McCain was scheduled to meet at Boeing Field with Christian conservative leaders and anti-abortion activists -- a voting bloc considered key to his chances to win the 2008 Republican nomination.

"He is making the right moves," said Joe Fuiten, pastor of Bothell's Cedar Park church and one of the state's top evangelical leaders. Fuiten said he likes what he's heard from McCain so far, but called the meeting "a coffee date, not a marriage."
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2003586396_webjbmccain23.html

joe@Clark08.US


Submitted by Mitch Dworkin on February 24, 2007 - 12:20am.

http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/story?id=2892621&page=1

McCain's Comments on Rumsfeld Miss the Mark

Rumsfeld's Management of Iraq War Was 'Magnificent,' He Didn't Stumble Managing War but in Managing Peace

OPINION By DEAN BARNETT

Feb. 21, 2007 — John McCain is hitting the campaign trail, and he's doing so with a predictable thud.

On Monday, the ever-eager-to-settle-a-score senator appeared in South Carolina and pronounced Donald Rumsfeld one of the worst defense secretaries ever. He went on to elaborate, "We are paying a very heavy price for the mismanagement — that's the kindest word I can give you — of Donald Rumsfeld, of this war. The price is very, very heavy, and I regret it enormously."

Substantively, McCain's critique might not be entirely without merit. Still, his commentary bears the typical McCain signatures of being childishly hostile and simplistic.

In truth, Rumsfeld's management of the war in Iraq was magnificent. In three short weeks, Rumsfeld's Pentagon toppled a hostile regime that had menaced world peace for decades.

If Rumsfeld stumbled, it wasn't in managing the war but in managing the peace. After the three weeks that led to Saddam's fall, the American government collectively made several errors that have left a lasting mark on both our country and Iraq.

Yet it is not at all clear how many of these disastrous mistakes were part of Donald Rumsfeld's portfolio. Paul Bremer, the witless wannabe viceroy who implemented a ruinous "De-Baathification" policy that crippled Iraqi society, was part of Colin Powell's shop at Foggy Bottom.

Who the decider was that decided not to secure the Iranian and Syrian borders remains unclear, but there's little to suggest that Rumsfeld was the culprit.

Merits (or lack thereof) aside, McCain's broadside against Rumsfeld is politically ill-advised. If the Senator had for some perverse reason been hatching a plan to remind the Republican base of what a nuisance he's been the Last seven years, he could scarcely have executed a more effective maneuver.

As a man, John McCain almost universally has the respect of Republicans. His biography is unique and powerful. But my co-blogger Hugh Hewitt long ago coined the shorthand for Sen. McCain that defines him perfectly for most conservatives. In Hugh's formulation, John McCain is a great man, a bad Senator and an awful Republican.

Dean Barnett is a columnist for Townhall.com and blogs daily at HughHewitt.townhall.com.

Continued1.   2.   3.   NEXT»

Submitted by Mitch Dworkin on February 28, 2007 - 10:39pm.

http://www.rushlimbaugh.com/home/daily/site_022807/content/01125104.guest.html

McCain and Hillary Down; Obama and Rudy Up

February 28, 2007

BEGIN TRANSCRIPT

RUSH: By the way, a little presidential politics here. I have to note that McCain is losing ground fast to Rudy Giuliani. Did you notice this out there? Big story here in the stack of stuff that Obama is picking up the black vote. Not good news for Clinton, Inc. I think back, if McCain had actually been a Reagan conservative and not a pretender, he could have won the nomination in 2000, I think, and he would be president today. But he found the media more seductive than Reaganism. That's going to cost him. I think that signals or shows, illustrates the biggest difference between Giuliani and McCain. Giuliani despises the Big Media, like the rest of us. The New York Times hates Rudy's guts, folks, but, you know, McCain has pandered to them. The biggest difference is that Giuliani has been running for the Republican nomination, McCain has been running for the presidency, been running for the White House, all along. That's what pandering and catering to the media has been all about.

BREAK TRANSCRIPT

Read the Background Material...

(CNN: Obama getting a cool reception from black America)
(WP: African American Voters Shift Support to Obama)
(WP: Do you have a favorable or unfavorable impression of...)
(WP: Women, blacks beat smokers, Mormons in US race: poll)
(LA Times: Redefining 'black' - Louis Chude-Sokei)
(LA Times: Occidental recalls 'Barry' Obama)
(LA Times: Is Obama the new 'black'?)
(NewsBusters: LATimes: Obama Not 'Black Enough'?)
(GMA Speculates on Obama & Race)
(TIME: Is Obama Black Enough?)
(NYDN: Obama: Growing up black, but African, too. He does not share our heritage)
(LA Times: Some wonder: Is Obama black enough?)
(KNS: Is Obama 'black enough' if his roots don't include slavery?)
(Salon: Colorblind. Barack Obama would be the great black hope in the next presidential race -- if he were actually black - Debra J. Dickerson)

Read Rush's Original Coverage...
(Left Obsessed with Obama's Blackness - 02.20.07)

*Note: Links to content outside RushLimbaugh.com usually become inactive over time.

Submitted by Mitch Dworkin on February 28, 2007 - 10:55pm.

http://www.drudgereport.com/flash2.htm 

NO JOKE: MCCAIN ANNOUNCES ON LETTERMAN!
Wed Feb 28 2007 20:41:28 ET

Sen. John McCain (R., AZ) announced that he will be a candidate for President of the United States in 2008 during tonight’s taping of the LATE SHOW with DAVID LETTERMAN. The interview will be broadcast Wednesday, Feb. 28 (11:35 PM-12:37 AM, ET/PT) on the CBS Television Network.

“The last time we were on this program, I’m sure you remember everything very clearly that we say, but you asked me if I would come back on this show if I was going to announce,” Sen. McCain told Letterman. “I am announcing that I will be a candidate for President of the United States.”

McCain said although this was the announcement of his candidacy, a formal announcement will be made in April. “This is the announcement – you know, you drag this out as long as you can,” Sen. McCain said to laughter from Letterman and the audience. “You know what I mean? You know, you don’t just have one rendition. You’ve got to go over and over…This is the announcement preceding the formal announcement.”

Letterman later asked Sen. McCain if he would consider “the possibility President/Vice President, that kind of a thing, you divide that sort of deal up. You’re not interested in splitting that?” Sen. McCain said Well, you may remember that in the last election there was some conversation about me being Vice President of the Untied States, it wasn’t clear which party,” which garnered laughter from Letterman and the audience. “And I was on one of the shows and the guy said, ‘Well, what’s this about you being Vice President of the United States?’ I said, ‘You know, I spent all those years in a North Vietnamese prison camp, kept in the dark, fed scraps – why the heck would I want to do that all over again?”

Submitted by Mitch Dworkin on March 1, 2007 - 12:08pm.

More nails in John McCain's Presidential campaign coffin in my opinion:

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070301/ap_on_el_pr/mccain2008_19

McCain says U.S. lives 'wasted' in Iraq

By LIZ SIDOTI, Associated Press Writer

57 minutes ago

WASHINGTON - Republican presidential contender John McCain (news, bio, voting record), a staunch backer of the Iraq war but critic of how President Bush has waged it, said U.S. lives had been "wasted" in the four-year-old conflict. Democrats demand the Arizona senator apologize for the comment as Sen. Barack Obama (news, bio, voting record) did when the Democratic White House hopeful recently made the same observation.

"Americans are very frustrated, and they have every right to be," McCain said Wednesday on CBS' "Late Show With David Letterman." "We've wasted a lot of our most precious treasure, which is American lives."

McCain, who repeated his assertion that U.S. troops must remain in Iraq rather than withdrawing early, made the "wasted" remark after confirming to Letterman what has been clear for at least a year or more — that he's in the running for the 2008 Republican nomination.

"I am announcing that I will be a candidate for president of the United States," he said — and added that he would officially enter the race by giving a formal announcement speech to that effect in April after a visit to Iraq.

Hours after the taped appearance aired, the Democratic National Committee called on McCain to take back the "wasted" lives remark.

"Senator McCain should apologize immediately for his callous comments," said Karen Finney, a DNC spokeswoman. "How is it that John McCain now believes American lives are being wasted, yet he so stubbornly supports the president's plan to escalate the war in Iraq and put more American lives in harms way?"

A message seeking comment was left with McCain's campaign.

In February, Obama described the lives of troops in Iraq as having been "wasted," but then later said he regretted the comment.

"We ended up launching a war that should have never been authorized, and should have never been waged, and on which we've now spent $400 billion, and have seen over 3,000 lives of the bravest young Americans wasted," Obama, D-Ill., said at a rally in Ames, Iowa.

Later, in an interview with a newspaper reporter, Obama said: "I was actually upset with myself when I said that, because I never use that term."

"Their sacrifices are never wasted," he said.

A four-term senator, McCain unsuccessfully ran for president in 2000 against Bush and has been laying the groundwork for a second run for more than a year. There had been little doubt that he would become a full-fledged White House candidate. He had been expected to make his candidacy official in the spring...

-------------------------------------------

http://www.washingtontimes.com/national/20070301-122231-3780r.htm

McCain rejects CPAC invite
By Ralph Z. Hallow
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
March 1, 2007

Sen. John McCain is the only major Republican presidential candidate who will not address the nation's premier gathering of conservatives this year.
Sponsors of the Conservative Political Action Conference, which begins today in Washington and brings together thousands of conservative leaders and grass-roots activists, say the Arizona Republican has "dissed" organizers by attempting to schedule a private reception for attendees after rejecting invitations to speak at the event.
"It was a classical McCain move, dissing us by going behind our backs," said William J. Lauderback, executive vice president of the American Conservative Union.
Convening through Saturday at a sold-out Omni Shoreham Hotel, the 34th annual CPAC will feature personal appearances and nationally televised speeches by every Republican presidential hopeful except Mr. McCain, said David A. Keene, chairman of the ACU, which, along with Young America's Foundation and Human Events, is a principal sponsor of CPAC.
Conservative activists have speculated that Mr. McCain did not want to be seen on television "pandering" to Republican "right-wingers" but wanted to court those same activists at a reception in the same hotel.
"He turned down repeated CPAC offers to speak but then tried to get around us by having his office call the hotel to rent a room for a reception for CPAC attendees -- without first seeking approval of CPAC organizers," said Mr. Lauderback.
By contrast, he said, other Republican presidential aspirants have called ACU to seek permission to hold receptions at the hotel during CPAC. Each of those candidates -- including Sen. Sam Brownback of Kansas, former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, former Virginia Gov. James S. Gilmore III and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney -- "called us a long time ago to arrange for a hospitality reception he will give for CPAC attendees," Mr. Lauderback said.
"We would have still allowed McCain to do something at CPAC, but by the time his folks approached the hotel, everything was in concrete and there was no facility available for what he wanted," Mr. Keene said...

Submitted by Mitch Dworkin on March 1, 2007 - 10:25pm.

in the Republican primary:

http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0307/2963.html

Santorum Says Anyone But McCain

By: Carrie Budoff

March 1, 2007 07:46 PM EST


Former Sen. Rick Santorum (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

Former Sen. Rick Santorum has drawn at least one conclusion about the Republican presidential primary field: Anybody but John McCain.

The Pennsylvania Republican, who signed a contract Thursday as a Fox News contributor, said that he has spoken with every GOP candidate except the senator from Arizona but that it’s still too early for him to endorse.

“The only one I wouldn’t support is McCain,” Santorum said during an interview in his office at the Ethics and Public Policy Center in Washington, where he is a senior fellow.

“I don’t agree with him on hardly any issues,’’ Santorum said. “I don’t think he has the temperament and leadership ability to move the country in the right direction.”

Responding, McCain spokesman Danny Diaz said McCain was a “well-known and respected conservative.”

Santorum lost his Senate seat last fall in a landslide to Democrat Bob Casey, but remains a prominent voice in the conservative movement – a voting bloc in search of a presidential candidate. 

Santorum's critical appraisal of McCain contradicts a seemingly cordial relationship, at least in the last year. McCain had headlined a fundraiser for Santorum, and they co-authored an ethics overhaul proposal.

Over the years, however, Santorum said they have clashed on campaign finance reform, environmental policy, tax cuts, immigration and other issues.

Santorum suggested that McCain also wasn’t as solidly anti-abortion as he would like. “He may be pro-life, but I served with him for 12 years, and I know how pro-life he is,” Santorum said.

Diaz said McCain favors overturning Roe v. Wade, the 1973 Supreme Court ruling that legalized abortion, and has picked up support from other conservative senators.

“He has been a lonely voice for fiscal discipline in the nation’s capital,” Diaz said, “and has fought to protect life and build a strong defense.”

Santorum has spent the last two months building a new life outside of Congress, where he served for 16 years in the House and Senate.

He will begin appearing soon on Fox News shows. He also is writing a book and producing a documentary on a theme he began pressing in the final months of his campaign: the threat of radical Islam on the nation’s security.

He said he’s weighing an offer from The Philadelphia Inquirer to write an op-ed column,and will start his own communications consulting business – but do no lobbying.

“That’s not me,” Santorum said.

Besides, he added, “I want to keep my political options open.”

Join The Conversation (read all 35 comments)

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

http://www.rushlimbaugh.com/home/daily/site_030107/content/01125103.guest.html

Rudy Surges; McCain on Troops "Sacrificed"

March 1, 2007

BEGIN TRANSCRIPT

RUSH: Audio sound bites number five, six, and seven. We have John McCain last night who announced on the Letterman show -- this is informal, by the way. He told Letterman that when he decided he's going to run for president he'd come back and do it on his show. His formal announcement is slated for sometime in April. But this is how it went last night on the Late Show with David Letterman.

McCAIN: I am announcing that I will be candidate for president of the United States.

LETTERMAN: Oh, boy. (Applause.) Good for you.

RUSH: Stop the tape. Who in the hell didn't know this? Would you listen to this dumb, idiot audience on the Letterman show? They think it's big news. Who in the world doesn't know this? Recue this to the top of the sound bite, Mister Broadcast Engineer. I don't know, folks. I'm in a sort of a little testy mood today. I don't know why, but when I get in these kind of moods, my fuse gets short when I'm confronted with idiocy. Here we are again.

McCAIN: I am announcing that I will be candidate for president of the United States.

LETTERMAN: Oh, boy. (Applause.) Good for you.

McCAIN: By the way, I will be making a formal announcement in April.

LETTERMAN: So this was not the formal announcement?

McCAIN: This was the announcement -- you know, you drag this out as long as you can.

LETTERMAN: I see.

McCAIN: I mean, you don't just have one rendition.

RUSH: All right, now, keep in mind this is a comedy show that McCain appeared on last night, and he said this about the war in Iraq.

MCCAIN: We are where we are now. And rather than review all the problems we had, if we withdraw early, literally every expert I know says it will descend into chaos, sectarian violence, and even genocide. So that's why, when I say this may be our last chance to succeed -- because Americans are very frustrated, and they have every right to be. We've wasted a lot of our most precious treasure, which is American lives.

RUSH: What's interesting about that -- aside from just the audacity of the statement that we have wasted "a lot of our most precious treasure, American lives" -- is that hours after McCain said this, the Democrat National Committee called on McCain to take back the wasted lives remark. Now, stop and think of that for a second. The Democrat Party, which is out there basically saying the same thing -- and Obama used the exact word and then did a big, fast backtrack. The Democrats are out there pretty much saying the same thing. That's the basis of their policy on pulling us out of there, and they are demanding that McCain take back the wasted lives remark.

"The statement from Karen Finney, a DNC spokeswoman: 'Senator McCain should apologize immediately for his callous comments. … How is it that John McCain now believes American lives are being wasted, yet he so stubbornly supports the president's plan to escalate the war in Iraq and put more American lives in harms way?’ In February, Obama described the lives of troops in Iraq as having been 'wasted,' but then later said he regretted the comment. ‘We ended up launching a war that should have never been authorized, and should have never been waged, and on which we've now spent $400 billion, and have seen over 3,000 lives of the bravest young Americans wasted,’ Obama, D-Ill., said at a rally in Ames, Iowa. Later, in an interview with a newspaper reporter, Obama said: ‘I was actually upset with myself when I said that, because I never use that term.’”

That's not me. That's not who I am.

Yes, it is! That's who you were. You said it. I love this latest excuse. “That's not me. I don't speak that way. I don't use that word.”

Anyway, McCain with a little grief. He's trailing Rudy Giuliani in the polls -- and there are a lot of people stunned about this. Tim Russert with Matt Lauer on the Today Show was discussing this, and it's got 'em stumped how Rudy is outpolling McCain right now Rudy Giuliani is, and they just don't expect this to be the case. That's because they're inside the Beltway types, and they don't clearly understand what's going on. People wonder why McCain is dropping in the polls? It's not a mystery right now. Last night on CNN, Anderson Cooper 360, talking to "The Forehead," Paul Begala, Cooper said, “Why is McCain falling behind?”

BEGALA: It's the war. It's all about the war. He has been the chief cheerleader for what most Americans think has been a disastrous war in Iraq. He decided a year or two ago to really yoke himself to President Bush, and now, you know, George W. Bush about as popular as Mel Gibson at a B'nai B'rith meeting. (giggle) People just don't like President Bush, and now there's John McCain being sort of the Bush heir apparent.

RUSH: (Laughing.) Everything is Bush's fault. It's not McCain's fault, it's Bush's fault. You just have to chuckle at this. Now, in a related story, Ralph Hallow today in the Washington Times: “Sen. John McCain is the only major Republican presidential candidate who will not address the nation's premier gathering of conservatives this year. Sponsors of the Conservative Political Action Conference, which begins today in Washington and brings together thousands of conservative leaders and grass-roots activists, say the Arizona Republican has ‘dissed’ organizers by attempting to schedule a private reception for attendees after rejecting invitations to speak at the event. ‘It was a classical McCain move, dissing us by going behind our backs,’ said William J. Lauderback, executive vice president of the American Conservative Union. Convening through Saturday at a sold-out Omni Shoreham Hotel, the 34th annual CPAC will feature personal appearances and nationally televised speeches by every Republican presidential hopeful except Mr. McCain, said David A. Keene, chairman of the ACU, which, along with Young America's Foundation and Human Events, is a principal sponsor of CPAC. Conservative activists have speculated that Mr. McCain did not want to be seen on television ‘pandering’ to Republican ‘right-wingers’ but wanted to court those same activists at a reception in the same hotel.”

Now that’s speculation, obviously. What if it's true? What does it say? McCain's embarrassed to be seen on TV with these guys but he'll gladly have a private reception that he hosts to be able to wine and dine them. As I said yesterday, one of the reasons Giuliani is doing better in the polls right now, for whatever it means at this early stage -- and we're still 9-1/2 months, ten months away from the first primary, but McCain has been out there running for president and Giuliani is running for the Republican nomination. There is a huge difference, and it shows.

Robert Novak today, in a column -- and this is fascinating -- writes: “New York-based political consultant Kieran Mahoney's survey of probable Republican participants in the 2008 Iowa presidential caucuses showed this support for the ‘big three’ candidates: John McCain, 20.5 percent; Rudy Giuliani, 16.3 percent; Mitt Romney, 3.5 percent. Astonishingly, they all trailed James Gilmore, the former governor of Virginia, who had 31 percent. How could that be? Because it was not a legitimate survey but a ‘push poll,’ normally a clandestine effort to rig the results by telling respondents negative things about some of the candidates. But Mahoney makes no secret that the voters he sampled were told of liberal deviations by McCain, Giuliani and Romney, as well as true-blue conservatism by Gilmore, who is Mahoney's client. Mahoney is trying to prove a point widely accepted in Republican ranks. None of the three front-line candidates is a natural fit for the nation's right-of-center party. Without question, there is a void. The question is whether Gilmore or anyone else can fill it. The most commonly mentioned potential void-filler is not Gilmore but Newt Gingrich,” who met with the editorial board of the New York Post yesterday. They write about it today.

He just launched into Hillary. He called her "nasty" and talked about their war room. He predicted that she's got the nomination. They're going to make mincemeat of Obama before this thing is finished. He knows exactly what Clinton, Inc. is. Clinton, Inc. is an organization that doesn't just try to defeat enemies. They try to destroy them, just get them out of the way and discredit them forever. Anyway, about this push poll in Iowa. You call up these voters and you push 'em.

You say, “Look, okay, what do you think about Romney? Romney, so far, wavered on this… What do you think about McCain? He's done this. He's sort of liberal. Giuliani?” Then you call and say, “We have this Gilmore guy. He's straight-down-the-line conservative,” and that's the guy that wins the poll. It buttresses the point that I've been making which is we're in danger here of redefining conservatism by claiming that these three front-runners, who really aren't conservative, are the new conservatism. There's no such thing as a new conservatism. It is what it is. If somebody's not a conservative, they're not. It's that simple.

BREAK TRANSCRIPT

RUSH: Gregg in Jacksonville, Florida. Welcome, sir. Great to have you on the EIB Network.

CALLER: I am a long-time fan of yours, Rush. It's great to talk to you.

RUSH: Thank you, sir.

CALLER: I'm a retired Navy captain, and I'm a classmate of John McCain.

RUSH: At Annapolis?

CALLER: At Annapolis, and while I have a lot of mixed emotions about John McCain's politics, he's a good guy, and I have a feeling you've interpreted his words perhaps a little too harshly. I think that when he said “lives wasted” in Iraq, I think he means that that would be the case if we were to cut-and-run. I don't think seeking he's saying they're wasted to date.

RUSH: All right, well, let's listen again together, shall we? Grab audio sound bite number six up there at broadcast central. Here we go. This is McCain about the war in Iraq last night on Letterman.

MCCAIN: We are where we are now. And rather than review all the problems we had, if we withdraw early, literally every expert I know says it will descend into chaos, sectarian violence, and even genocide. So that's why, when I say this may be our last chance to succeed, because Americans are very frustrated, and they have every right to be. We've wasted a lot of our most precious treasure, which is American lives.

RUSH: All right, he doesn't say, "We will have wasted." He says, "We have wasted."

CALLER: Well, I think the key phrase he says is “if we withdraw early,” and then he puts little words in there, but I put those two things together. If we withdraw early, we will have wasted those lives.

RUSH: Well, look, you are free to hear Senator McCain as you choose, as is everybody else. It's just a harsh word to use, and it's dangerous, because it's going to lead to people assuming that he thinks lives have been wasted to date in all this, and when he says, "We have wasted a lot of our most..." to me, as a literalist -- and I take people literally, and I don't think he's connecting it to if we leave as in "we would have." He said, "We have wasted" a lot of lives. Now, maybe he intended to do that. I don't know.

CALLER: Well, one of the things about John McCain that I think most people don't realize when they talk about how stupid Bush is, is that John McCain graduated about third from the bottom of his class. He has a little trouble with words at times, too, I think.

RUSH: Well, but see, he doesn't have a Harvard MBA. He doesn't have a Yale history degree, as Bush does. But see, that's the difference. Images are projected of people, and Bush's image is that he can't talk. That's why I've always told people, "Learn to read and write the English language the best you can, because it will convince people you're smarter than you even are." McCain does not have an image like that. The Drive-By Media has never once assumed that McCain has any intellectual screw loose. So the fact he graduated third from the bottom? You have a lot of people saying, “That means he's a real guy,” because third from the bottom of Annapolis is still Annapolis.

Look, as I have told everybody: At this stage of the game, I haven't endorsed anybody. I'm not choosing anybody. I'm just passing information off to you right now. It's too early. Too many things can happen. You can infer, and you can infer properly, that if I was gung-ho about one of these guys, you would know it. All right? That's about as much as I'm going to give you. I'm not, and why fake it? To prove I could move a candidacy forward? No. I couldn't care less about that. I'm not trying to be hard or easy on anybody here -- McCain, Romney, Giuliani, whoever else might get in the mix. I appreciate the call out there, Gregg.

RUSH: This is Matt, Lake Forest, Illinois. Your turn. Welcome to the EIB.

CALLER: Rush, it's an incredible pleasure to speak to you. Long-time listener.

RUSH: Thank you, sir.

CALLER: I want to talk to you about Begala’s comments. One brief recommendation, and that is you've been articulate on the global warming hypocrisy of Gore. You might consider having on an MIT professor. His name is Lindzen, and he completely debunks the entire issue of global warming manmade cause, okay?

RUSH: I appreciate that.

CALLER: Okay.

RUSH: Begala says --

RUSH: But remember.

CALLER: Yes?

RUSH: I am the expert on the issue.

CALLER: Ha-ha. Begala wrongly says that McCain is falling just because of Bush. Giuliani has had the exact same position on the war. He fully supports the surge. He fully supports the Iraq policy. So Begala is completely wrong. I also wanted to mention, Rush, that if you notice, guys like Begala -- and the media, the Drive-By Media -- constantly claim that prominent conservatives are stupid: Bush, Clarence Thomas, et al. You never hear them say a prominent Democrat is stupid. You can't name one.

RUSH: Well, of course not. That's part and parcel of the arrogance and the hubris of who they are. It's not just that conservatives are stupid. Conservatives are as alien as aliens are. In the liberal mind-set: a conservative is a circus freak. All else descends from that. They're not very bright and so forth. This is the arrogance that's constantly gotten them into trouble. They said this about Reagan. "An amiable dunce,” they called Ronaldus Magnus as he ran rings around them. Your observation about Rudy not suffering at all from the support of Bush, as McCain has vis-à-vis Begala. You have to understand the liberals and the Democrats have Bushitis. They have Bush on the brain. Everything is targeted and aimed at Bush. Whatever goes wrong, it's Bush's fault. Bush isn't running anymore. There is not another election which is going to be a referendum on George W. Bush, but they can't let go of it because of a personal animosity and an irrational hatred for the guy, dating back to the aftermath of the Florida 2000 election.

It's going to come back to haunt 'em. Folks, I am telling you -- and I hate to keep saying, “I'm telling you,” but I say this when I become repetitive. It may not happen in 2008, but these people on the Democrat side of the aisle are sowing the seeds of their eventual landslide defeat. The more prominent they are in the majority, the more prominent they are in the media, the more likely and the more obvious to me this huge landslide defeat is eventually going to take place. I know human nature. Whether this country is indeed in therapy or wants therapy, I do know that at some point people are going to tire of the irrationality of these people. They're going to tire of the hatred. They're going to tire of the doom and gloom and the negativism. They're going to get fed up with it at some point, particularly when it's inconsistent and when it is not accurate and when their predictions don't come true and so forth and so on. It may take some time. These things are cyclical.

RUSH: Rob in Greenville, South Carolina, you're next on the EIB Network. Hi.

CALLER: Rush, I'm a second-time, 24/7 caller. It's again my honor, sir.

RUSH: Thank you, sir. It's a pleasure to have you with us.

CALLER: I have a quick question, then I'd like I to pay you a compliment on your website if you'd give me the opportunity.

RUSH: By all means. I always accept compliments.

CALLER: Attaboy. My question is this --

RUSH: You know why?

CALLER: Please tell me.

RUSH: Because I'm not good at accepting them, and I need to work on it. They embarrass me. So I've been told, "Accept every compliment -- you can encourage them -- so that you can learn to get better at thanking people." So I'll be glad to hear the compliment.

CALLER: Well, good. Well, my question -- and I'll be happy to pay it -- my question is this. If (or more likely when) John McCain begins to realize that he might be falling off the presidential map, and given his personality, can you foresee him having one of those very public, Howard Dean moments?

RUSH: Why are you asking me this?

CALLER: Because I fear for the man. I anticipate a blowup.

RUSH: You're asking me, basically, if I think that somewhere down the line McCain is going to implode?

CALLER: Yes, sir.

RUSH: As though I'm an expert on people imploding?

CALLER: No, not at all.

RUSH: Now, you obviously think he might. The thought is in your head. So you want to ask me, the guru on politics and conservatism, if I agree with you. What do you think might cause this?

CALLER: Rush, I actually have precedents in my question. I saw John McCain have a very bad moment in Greenville, South Carolina during the 2000 election, and I worry that the small audience I was a part of is going to become a national audience in this election.

RUSH: Why do you worry about that? You don't want him to implode?

CALLER: No, I don't necessarily have a problem with that. I worry that he'll take someone else with him.

RUSH: Ohhhhh. Like who?

CALLER: Like another candidate that is running ahead of him.

RUSH: How would that happen? If McCain implodes, how can he take somebody else with him?

CALLER: Well, rants take on their own personality. A lot of times when you go on a rant, you rant about someone else, and the media will be more than happy to feed that rant if it serves their broader purpose.

RUSH: Yeah, but if McCain is imploding, and let's say he decides to take Giuliani with him, or is ranting on Giuliani, I don't know how that hurts Giuliani. Before we even delve into that, what is it about McCain...? You said the primary of 2000. But you wouldn't ask me if I expect Giuliani to implode. You wouldn't ask me if I expect Mitt Romney to implode, yet you're asking me if I expect McCain to implode. So there's obviously, as I read this, something inside you that thinks that he is going to.

CALLER: Yes. I absolutely do.

RUSH: Could you tell me how? Could you give me some scenario where you see it happening and what would cause it?

CALLER: Well, I believe John McCain is comfortable when he's in a preplanned environment and situation. When the environment goes off the cuff, I believe -- and when he's challenged, I believe -- he's exceptionally volatile.

RUSH: Well, he does have a temper. There is that reputation about him.

CALLER: I have told the story many a times in the past several years. When the Straight Talk Express came to South Carolina in 2000, I was an enormous John McCain believer. I went to a public forum and saw him speak, and saw the speech degrade into a rant about him being Luke Skywalker and how he was taking on "the empire."

RUSH: I never understood you people back in 2000 who thought that.

CALLER: Rush, it happened.

RUSH: I know it did.

CALLER: And I was in an audience, and we were all true McCain believers when he came into South Carolina, and when his speech was over, there was an audience full of people who just sat there absolutely stunned. We were in shock.

RUSH: At how good he was?

CALLER: No, at where he went. We all kind of looked at each other as if to say, “What in God's name did we just witness?”

RUSH: Well, what caused it? I have 20 seconds here, so, no time for the compliment. Too bad. What caused the implosion?

CALLER: My only interpretation was that he was under attack from George Bush when he came into South Carolina. He felt the pressure and went ballistic.

RUSH: If you think he's going to implode, keep a sharp eye on the Drive-By Media. If anything is going to cause him to implode, it would be the Drive-By Media abandoning him.

BEAK TRANSCRIPT

RUSH: It's too bad I didn't get to hear that guy's compliment, because I do need to work on receiving compliments. I've been advised to accept as many as possible and maybe even solicit them in order to get better at it.

BREAK TRANSCRIPT

RUSH: Susan in Colfax, Wisconsin, I'm glad you waited. Welcome to the program.

CALLER: Hi, Rush. I was asked to get right to the point, and it was about the word that was used, "wasted," in regard to soldiers. I just wanted to say how much that hurts people who have lost somebody in war.

RUSH: Oh, I totally understand. You're talking about Senator McCain last night on the Letterman show and his informal announcement for the presidency?

CALLER: Yes, and Obama also mentioned it. It's been mentioned by others, too, and it's so hurtful.

RUSH: I want to play devil's advocate with some people on this. I understand "wasted" hurts.

CALLER: Yes.

RUSH: But I want to give Senator McCain the benefit of the doubt. I think he misspoke and I think it was unfortunate. I think this is the way it happened. I can't speak for Obama. I think Democrats do think there is no such thing as valor in war because they're anti-war and anything that happens in war is bad, and I do think that about them. Now, McCain, he's been a supporter of the war, Susan, but he has been very publicly opposed to tactics. He's been very publicly opposed to the way that it has been waged. I think that's the context in which he meant wasted. I'm just guessing, but I think what he's saying is we haven't fought this thing to win it. We've been in sort of a stalemate for too long, and if we're going to commit to winning, let's go win it. That's why he's been supporting the additional troops for the surge -- which, according to Ralph Peters today in the New York Post, is working, big time.

CALLER: Yes. Do you have to be in a war that you win in order to be called a hero? Is it an unpopular war...? I mean, were the men at the Alamo wasted? Were their lives wasted? The term wasted is wrong, whether the tactics are bad or not.

RUSH: Well --

CALLER: These men answered the call to their country and if they put their life on the line for their country, you can't put that in the context of wasted.

RUSH: I'm not defending the use of the word, and I agree with you totally that it's misused when it's related to the deaths of military personnel in Iraq or anywhere else in combat.

CALLER: My idea of a wasted life is a life not well lived, and when you choose to live your life with valor and courage and commitment, you just can’t use that term, and that's why --

RUSH: Amen.

CALLER: -- it hurts so bad.

RUSH: Amen. I still think it was more a slam against the president than it was the soldiers.

CALLER: Oh, I'm so tired of the president being slammed. I love him.

RUSH: I got grief yesterday and last night, because I was perceived as slamming the president on the good neighbor policy with the Iranians. By the way, Susan, thanks for the call. You're dead-on right. I couldn't agree with you more and I appreciate the call.

CALLER: I'd love to compliment you but I guess I can't do that today?

RUSH: Sure you can, because I'm under orders to accept compliments to learn how to do it better.

CALLER: Oh.

RUSH: Because normally, see, when I get a comment I get all nervous. "No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no," and people have told me, “You're denying people who want to compliment you the pleasure it gives them to do so.” So I'm being told I need to learn how to receive better.

CALLER: Oh. Well, yeah. I can understand. You are humble, and you're a decent man, and that kind of flattery embarrasses you, and that's why we love you.

RUSH: Well, thank you! That's right. I don't consider myself anything special. That's why it embarrasses me. That's why when I get a present, a birthday president, I think, "I haven't done anything but live a year. Big deal."

CALLER: I also agree with you about Valentine's Day. I don't go for all that stuff either. So...

RUSH: Well, congratulations. That makes two of us.

CALLER: Yeah. It's just commercialism as far as I'm concerned, and if you love somebody, you tell 'em when it moves you to do so.

RUSH: Exactly. Exactly! No truer words have ever been spoken.

CALLER: Thank you.

RUSH: Tell 'em when you feel moved to.

CALLER: Yes.

RUSH: Not when they demand it.

CALLER: Exactly.

RUSH: That's the worst thing that can possibly happen.

CALLER: That's coercion. Love has nothing to do with that.

RUSH: Takes away the sincerity of it.

CALLER: Oh, I wish I could talk to you all day.

RUSH: I know. See, that's accepting a compliment. People think that's arrogance and egotistical, but it isn't. I appreciate it, Susan. Thank you.

CALLER: We love you, Rush.

RUSH: Thank you. I love you, too. I appreciate it. She's right about this. I understand exactly what she's talking about and how the word can upset especially people who have lost family members in combat -- in this war particularly.

BREAK TRANSCRIPT

RUSH: Posted today at 1:30 on The Hotline: “Last evening, I referred to American casualties in Iraq as wasted. I should have used the word, sacrificed, as I have in the past. No one appreciates and honors more than I do the selfless patriotism of American servicemen and women in the Iraq War. We owe them a debt we can never fully repay. And America’s leaders owe them, as well as the American people, our best judgment and honest appraisal of the progress of the war, in which they continue to sacrifice. As I have said many times, I believe we have made many mistakes in the prosecution of the war. With a new Commanding General and a new strategy, we are now trying to correct those mistakes, and I believe we have a realistic chance to succeed.

"That does not change the fact, however, that we have made many mistakes in the past, and we have paid a grievous price for those mistakes in the lives of the men and women who have died to protect our interests in Iraq and defend the rest of us from the even greater threat we would face if we are defeated there.” So I knew this was what it was. This is McCain apologizing for his use of the phrase "wasted lives" last night on Letterman with his informal announcement for the presidency. As I told somebody, he used wasted in the context that he doesn't believe the strategy up to now has been one oriented toward victory. But he has apologized for it. The Democrat National Committee demanded that he apologize. I'm sure others, in their discussions of this, raised consciousness in the McCain campaign. So there it is.

END TRANSCRIPT

Read the Background Material...

(NRO: Senator McCain Revised and Extends His Letterman Remarks)
(WT: McCain rejects CPAC invite)
(WP: For GOP, A Void on The Right - Robert D. Novak)
(NYP: Battling for Baghdad - Ralph Peters)
(NewsMax: Poll: Giuliani Crushes Hillary, Obama, McCain in N.J.)
(NRO: John McCain has a conservative record -Senator Jon Kyl)

*Note: Links to content outside RushLimbaugh.com usually become inactive over time.

Submitted by Mitch Dworkin on March 2, 2007 - 1:38pm.

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,256073,00.html

Friday, March 02, 2007

John McCain Wants to President

Last night on "David Letterman" Senator McCain announced his presidential run. It was interesting. While McCain is very hawkish on Iraq, Mr. Letterman, as you know, is not.

When I spoke with Dave last November it went like this:

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

O'REILLY: You want the United States to win in Iraq.

LETTERMAN: First of all, I don't see any.

O'REILLY: It's an easy question. If you don't want the United States to win in Iraq.

LETTERMAN: It's not easy for me because I'm thoughtful.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

Mr. Letterman went on to call me a bonehead and other stuff. So I expected Dave to challenge John McCain a bit on Iraq. Didn't happen:

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

LETTERMAN: OK. So the country of Iraq is stabilized, the government, as you described, is viable.

McCAIN: Functioning.

LETTERMAN: Yes. The violence is now significantly reduced. The net benefit to the United States, beyond Americans have stopped lose their lives there, is what?

McCAIN: Probably that we have a functioning democracy or a government that will become a democracy.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

Now Mr. Letterman's demeanor aside, Senator McCain was smart to announce on Dave's show, because he needs independents and liberals to support him. Most conservatives will not.

According to a brand new FOX News poll, the McCain campaign is slipping badly. Right now 39 percent of Republicans are supporting Rudy Giuliani. Just 19 percent like McCain.

Of course it's very early, but two things stand out so far. First, John McCain is so low energy, and you saw it there, it's tough to get excited by his candidacy. And second, his staff is very tough to deal with.

“The Factor” wants to give all the candidates in both parties a fair shot. And most of those running are respectful when we call to ask questions. But McCain's staff is not. They are nasty. And this is dumb. We're not their enemies. We simply want information.

Now I've praise John McCain'sWar on Terror vision and criticize him for being soft on border security. I believe he is a patriot. But I also believe he has no chance of winning unless he gets his fastball back.

He can hang around with Dave Letterman all he wants but unless he convinces traditional Americans that he is looking out for them and that he has the energy to do the job as president and that he is accessible to answer tough questions, he has no chance.

John McCain has a lot of work to do if he wants to be president. A lot of work.

And that's "The Memo."

Submitted by Mitch Dworkin on March 5, 2007 - 5:19am.

http://www.rushlimbaugh.com/home/today.guest.html 

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