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Jill Buck

The Boss Quoted in Debra Saunders Piece on McCain

GOP – stronger or broader?
Debra J. Saunders
Thursday, January 31, 2008

Florida was big. Florida Republicans not only went for John McCain over Mitt Romney, but also, when you add the McCain vote (36 percent) to the now-withdrawn Rudy Giuliani vote (15 percent), you see a shift: A majority of Republican voters are straying outside the ever-pure conservative base. While conservative talk show hosts and a slice of the GOP base demand all-or-nothing from GOP candidates, Republican voters in general clearly understand that, in a democracy, the all-or-nothing equation has only one sure outcome: You get nothing.

Especially when your party does not represent the majority of voters.

In his gracious victory speech Tuesday night, Sen. McCain told Team Romney that "the margin that separated us tonight surely isn’t big enough for me to brag about or for you to despair."
Wednesday night’s CNN-hosted Republican presidential candidates’ debate was more combative. At the heart of it lies a divide on how far a party should go. Asked which type of Supreme Court justices he would nominate, McCain picked two of President Bush’s nominees, John Roberts and Sam Alito. 

Romney then trumped McCain’s mention of Roberts and Alito by adding two more combative conservative picks, Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas. Once again, Romney was conservative squared. 

Looking on were Republicans who don’t want to lose their iron grip on the GOP. Jon Fleischman, publisher of the influential conservative blog, the Flash Report, told me. Romney has to "define this race as a conservative versus a moderate" race. And for Fleischman, only the most conservative conservative wins.

But doesn’t Romney have to appeal to centrists? I asked Romney California campaign Chairman Tony Strickland before the debate. Strickland countered that Romney does appeal to voters outside the GOP. "He was governor of Massachusetts, which is not exactly a bastion of conservatism," said Strickland, reciting the Romney mantra that the Mittster would be the best nominee because he has shown he can win in a blue state.

I’ve heard Romnulans say that before. And it sounds great, if you forget that Romney was elected governor of Massachusetts when he was a pro-abortion, pro-gay rights Republican.
On the McCain side are Republicans who want to expand the GOP by reaching outside the party’s base. When he endorsed McCain before the debate, Giuliani praised McCain as a candidate who can help build "a stronger and broader Republican Party" that reaches out to new voters.
From the perch of the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library stirs a fond memory: Reagan Democrats.

McCain’s problem is that his rhetoric has served to inflame some conservatives, who see the Arizona senator as imperious and dismissive of their concerns. They don’t like the way he confronted Bush on tax cuts and Iraq troop numbers – and they especially don’t like the way McCain denigrated those who disagreed with his pro-amnesty immigration bill.

That doesn’t mean the McCainiacs are pushing McCain to make nice. Asked if McCain has to make it up to the base, McCain’s California campaign Chairman Bill Jones answered that McCain has to have a "consistent message." 

And: "If you don’t have their respect, you don’t get their vote." As it is, among a resentful segment of the GOP base, McCain has neither.

In part, the McCain haters resent mostly that McCain can work with Democrats. They would rather lose the election than see him win. 

Florida, however, shows that many Republicans have come to understand that when you aren’t willing to bend, when you view compromise as disgraceful – not a necessary part of democracy – when you insist on all or nothing, then you get nothing.

 

5 Responses to “The Boss Quoted in Debra Saunders Piece on McCain”

  1. seaninoc@hotmail.com Says:

    McCain is just another Bob Dole and if he wins the nomination he will fair the same.

  2. docktaphil@netscape.net Says:

    How is he another Bob Dole? Moderates, independent voters, some democrats and non partisans didn’t like Dole.

    Please enlighten us a little on that remark

  3. seaninoc@hotmail.com Says:

    Another long time Senator, war hero with a bad temper. We’ve been down this road before.

  4. cliftonyin@gmail.com Says:

    I think Mr. Loranger is in part alluding to Senator McCain’s age, but Ronald Reagan said it best (as he often did) to Mondale: “I won’t take advantage of my opponent’s youth and relative inexperience!”

    As for Senator McCain being “just another Bob Dole,” I think it’s more than a little disrespectful to make no distinction between the two. Regardless of what you think of them, they both have dedicated many years of their lives to public service, they both sacrificed blood for their country; simply lumping them together as “long time senators…with a bad temper” is pretty close-minded.

    Nor do I understand why Senator McCain is somehow fated to “fair the same” as Senator Dole. Am I missing something, or aren’t our times a little different than 1996?

  5. docktaphil@netscape.net Says:

    Similarities in the election is that they are both running against Clintons, but that’s about it. Even then, try to look outside the neocon world for a minute and you see a different America.

    Currently:

    *Economy is in the tank.
    *Current President is a Republican
    *Budget deficits skyrocketing
    *People in own party throwing ‘Liberal’ labels at him

    Essentially, Bob Dole ‘took one for the team’ as it was next to impossible to unseat Clinton once the economy took shape. He ran as a last hurrah, not as expecting to be in the oval office.

    Other differences:

    *McCain is a Third Way Republican, *Dole was far right.
    *Current President at lowest approval ratings ever
    *Clinton at highest of an exiting Pres
    *McCain is running AWAY from the Bush Legacy

    About the only similar thing between them is they were both running as Republicans. The climate in which they are running is that there is no incumbent Pres or Vice President running. Hillary is a legacy, but not currently in charge of the bully pulpit.