Posted on 11/20/2006 9:30:29 AM PST by presidio9
. John McCain, casting himself as the embodiment of the Republican Party's future in the vein of Ronald Reagan, said Thursday the GOP has lost its way and must return to "common-sense conservatism."
"Though we suffered a tough defeat last week, we will recover if we learn our lesson well and once again offer Americans enlightened, effective and principled leadership," the Arizona Republican said in a speech that laid out his vision for the party's path forward and could set the tone for a potential presidential campaign.
The same day he launched a committee to explore whether to run in 2008, McCain invoked the legacy of Reagan, who won the presidency four years after leading the rebirth of a dispirited GOP following the Republican defeat in the 1976 presidential election.
"We can do it again if we lead and inspire as he did," the four-term senator told party loyalists. His remarks came a week after a sobering election in which Republicans lost control of Congress and suffered losses at all levels of government.
A maverick who has sought to mend a rocky relationship with the GOP base, McCain delivered his take on the current and future state of the party in a hotel conference room before more than 100 members of GOPAC, a conservative organization that helps elect Republicans. Earlier, McCain touched on some of the same themes before another conservative cornerstone the Federalist Society. He received standing ovations and hearty applause.
Fifteen months before the first 2008 presidential nominating contests, McCain is positioning himself as the GOP standard-bearer while President Bush takes on lame-duck status and dispirited Republicans search for a road to recovery.
Although the president was not mentioned, McCain's speech amounted to a criticism of the party under the leadership of Bush, whose popularity is at a low point amid chaos in Iraq and increasing federal spending at home.
"We lost our principles and our majority. And there is no way to recover our majority without recovering our principles first," McCain told both audiences as he reflected on the 2006 election.
No doubt mindful that the next GOP presidential nominee could end up carrying the burden of a Bush legacy, McCain contrasted the current state of the party with what he called common-sense conservatism. In doing so, he laid out a choice for Republicans: more of the same or a return to Reagan's ideals.
"Americans had elected us to change government, and they rejected us because they believed government had changed us," he said in a speech in which he cited Reagan, Abraham Lincoln and Teddy Roosevelt. "We must spend the next two years reacquainting the public and ourselves with the reason we came to office in the first place: to serve a cause greater than our self-interest."
After a dozen years of GOP rule on Capitol Hill, McCain said voters felt Republicans cared more about protecting their incumbency than they did about staying true to core conservative principles such as limited government, fiscal discipline, a strong defense, low taxes, free trade and family values. He urged a return to those tenets.
"Do the right thing, and the politics will take care of itself," McCain said.
McCain filed paperwork with the Federal Election Commission that will allow him to raise money and travel the country while weighing a bid. The committee's Web site www.exploremccain.com went online a day earlier.
Still, McCain says he will wait until after the Christmas holiday to decide whether to make a second bid for the White House. He lost to Bush in a contentious race in 2000, when the senator was the underdog. This time, McCain is widely considered the one to beat in a crowded field of potential candidates.
Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani has filed paperwork to test the waters for the GOP nomination, and Rep. Duncan Hunter of California has launched a long-shot bid.
McCain's other would-be rivals include Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist of Tennessee and New York Gov. George Pataki.
I thought that I should explain my statement for those who don't already know the facts behind it.
McCains wife was caught forging presciptions for pain killers that she was addicted to. She was taking so many downers that she had to also take uppers to keep going. she stole the presciption pads from doctors who worked for a charity that she ran.
"Vote for him at your own risk, but I simply won't."
Well that makes at least two of us.
McCain is EXACTLY the type of Republican we need LESS of.
Please tell me we have something better than McCain to offer up in the 2008 primaries......
John, one day you're going to fill these shoes!
Two things I'm pretty sure even McCain wouldn't try to do:
1) Ram socialized medicine down our throats.
2) Appoint three (and possibly as many as five) Ruth Bader Ginsberg clones to the SCOTUS.
McCain makes me want to hurl... I can only hope he has a similar effect on the vast majority of Republicans/conservatives out there.
You owe me a new keyboard. I just sat down from putting front brakes and rotors on my '98 Dodge Durango...wanted to kick back cuz I work overnights...cracked a brew...logged on to FR...read the headline and the Coors Lite came outta my nose and all over the keyboard.
At least it wasn't good beer, LOL!
prisoner6
How, by pissing into them?
Semper Fi
Mclaim is no Reagan.. Hes not even a John Kerry..
Kerry is for things before was he was against them.. McLaim is against things after he was for them..
He's a copycat traitor..
He's against free speech and he supports the rights of terrorists.
How does that make him like Reagan?
Why does'nt someone ask McCain "Senator, are their any legislative actions or votes sthat you took that that are in in line with conservative principals"?????????????
McCain - examine thyself first before you start talking about everyone else!
Even a mad, blind, anti-free-speech pig can find an acorn now and then.
I wouldn't trust him to come up with the specifics to fix this, though.
The Mad Hatter couldn't carry Reagan's hat.
Should I Stay or Should I Go?
The media is trying to turn John McCain into Ronald Reagan. Ain't gonna work.
In other words: "You can't polish a turd."
This will sell to McCain stooges like Sean Hannity but not many others.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.