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McCain Didn’t Close the Deal ... (faces a real quandary)
Human Events ^ | Wednesday 02/06/2008 | Jed Babbin

Posted on 02/06/2008 4:53:34 AM PST by IrishMike

John McCain’s strong showing in the February 5 primaries wasn’t enough to close the deal. He could have done it by winning enough delegates to be the prohibitive favorite or -- conversely -- by Mitt Romney making so poor a showing that he would be unwilling to fight on.

Before sunrise Wednesday, this is how it lined up:

McCain won ten of the twenty-one Republican primaries and caucuses, including five winner-take-all contests, resulting in a total (according to the Associated Press count) of 610 delegates of the 1191 needed to clinch the Republican nomination. The strong showing in WTA states of Missouri and New York were a substantial part of McCain’s total. McCain apparently also won delegate-rich California (though returns are not yet final, and California is not a WTA state).

Mitt Romney’s showing was poor, scoring only 266 delegates. Mike Huckabee came in third at 190. (These totals will vary as the California results become final.)

McCain came close, but may not have achieved the prohibitive favorite status that would guarantee Romney’s exit. Despite Gov. Mike Huckabee’s early (about 10:30 EST) declaration of a two-man race -- him and McCain -- Mitt Romney isn’t quitting. Romney said – only a few minutes after Huckabee’s pronouncement that, “This campaign is going on.”

It’s hard to see, though, how long Romney can continue. Now that McCain has momentum, Romney needs a probable path to the nomination to remain credible in the next round of primaries. Since the 1970s, Republicans have won the White House when they have solidly seized the southern states. But when the returns came in, Romney placed third in Alabama, Arkansas, Tennessee and Georgia. His wins -- in Utah and Massachusetts primaries, and Alaska and North Dakota caucuses – are too scattered and small to provide a realistic foundation for a nomination.

Mike Huckabee’s showing yesterday was stronger than many had imagined. Winning in West Virginia’s caucuses early in the day, Huckabee partnered with McCain to block Romney. Later, in Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia and Tennessee, Huckabee proved he could boost a national ticket from the vice presidential slot.

A McCain-Huckabee ticket now appears a real possibility. The two get along better than either does with Romney. If they are strong in the remaining February primaries -- DC, Maryland, Virginia, Washington and Wisconsin -- Romney’s chances may evaporate before month’s end.

Tomorrow, both McCain and Romney will address the Conservative Political Action Conference in Washington, DC. (Huckabee will appear on Saturday morning). The speech McCain will give could be the best opportunity McCain will have to reach out to conservatives and bring them into the fold before the September 1-4 Minneapolis Republican convention.

One source told me last night that McCain is planning an all-out push at CPAC. At 3 pm tomorrow, McCain is scheduled to address the crowd expected to number over 6,000 activists. And McCain plans a very special introduction.

According to my source, McCain has prepared a video featuring President Ronald Reagan to make the introduction. If McCain uses this video, it is very likely to backfire badly. This is the group before which Ronald Reagan said in 1975 that, “A political party cannot be all things to all people. It must represent certain fundamental beliefs which must not be compromised to political expediency or simply to swell its numbers.”

Very few of the 2008 CPAC crowd will see McCain as the successor to Reagan and Reagan’s principles. McCain has sacrificed conservatives’ fundamental beliefs throughout his Senate career. If McCain uses this introduction, the boos will be very loud.

McCain faces a real quandary. If he fails at CPAC -- and doesn’t win the CPAC straw poll (he finished dead last in 2007) -- the word will be out that the conservatives are off his team this year. The results of the poll will be announced at about 2 pm Saturday. McCain can do a few things at CPAC that could help.

First, he could throw away the Reagan video introduction. If he uses it at CPAC -- a house that Reagan built -- he could alienate a large portion of the conservatives he needs.

Second, he could say a lot more than he has so far on three key issues: Supreme Court appointments, the war and illegal immigration.

By January 2009, more than half of the Supreme Court justices will be over the age of 70. It’s likely that the next president will have four or five nominations, especially if he (or she) is a two-term president. After the reports of McCain’s dismissive remarks about the conservatism of Supreme Court Justice Sam Alito (reported last week by Bob Novak and John Fund) McCain must convince conservatives that the justices he would try to appoint would be of the same judicial temperament as Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Samuel Alito. McCain must say clearly and concisely that he would only appoint justices whose views are strict constructionist and that he would fight to get them through a Democrat-dominated Senate.

On the war, McCain needs to say more than just repeat his commitment to the troop surge. The surge is already ending and by late spring, most of the combat power committed to the surge will have to be withdrawn because we lack the troop strength to sustain it. What comes next is vital to success, and McCain needs to describe what he intends to do. He needs to say something like what Rudy Giuliani said throughout his aborted campaign: that America will remain on offense against terrorists and the nations that support them.

Third, and most importantly to many conservatives, McCain must argue convincingly that he really did learn the lessons conservatives taught him at great pains to both sides. He has said that he knows border security must come first, but his answers to questions both on Meet the Press and in the CNN debate before the Florida primary were evasive. Will he sign legislation that establishes a path to citizenship for the 12 to 20 million illegals already here? If he doesn’t commit to rejecting that idea, he will not win over the conservative community he needs to win in November.

Presidential campaigns are like the life of a pilot: hours of boredom punctuated by moments of sheer panic. They have become a seemingly-endless marathon punctuated by sprints like the one preceding Super Tuesday. But this week’s sprint isn’t over. For John McCain, the finish line is at CPAC, after his Thursday speech. McCain has to finish first at CPAC or risk a disunited party this fall.


TOPICS: Editorial; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: 2008; aliens; congress; elections; gop; illegals; immigrantlist; johnmccain; mccain; mcmexico; msm; schadenfreude; talkradio
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To: Just mythoughts
something is mentally off with more than McCain.

He's a sadist who verbally abuses folks who disagrees with him.

21 posted on 02/06/2008 5:26:43 AM PST by syriacus (McCain promised to transfer all Gitmo prisoners to Ft. Leavenworth on his first day as president.)
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To: IrishMike

According to my source, McCain has prepared a video featuring President Ronald Reagan to make the introduction. If McCain uses this video, it is very likely to backfire badly. This is the group before which Ronald Reagan said in 1975 that, “A political party cannot be all things to all people. It must represent certain fundamental beliefs which must not be compromised to political expediency or simply to swell its numbers.”


Wow. IF McCain is, in fact, foolish enough to try this stunt- he will incur even greater wrath from the right. That he’s even THINKING about it- shows his complete misunderstanding of who conservatives are. A transparent attempt to pander using Reagan as a symbol will fall flat- and ensure our continuing dislike and distrust of the man.


22 posted on 02/06/2008 5:26:59 AM PST by SE Mom (Proud mom of an Iraq war combat vet)
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To: IrishMike
The best speeches at last years CPAC were Coulter and Romney. McCain skipped it, since he's not conservative, of course. Hopefully the young College Republicans there shout down McCain tommorrow.
23 posted on 02/06/2008 5:27:50 AM PST by Rameumptom (Gen X= they killed 1 in 4 of us)
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To: gridlock

A McCain-Huckabee ticket now appears a real possibility.

Just when you thought it could not get any worse...

###

He’ll have to have someone of that ilk on the ticket. I don’t think he can get a conservative to run with him. Other possibilities could include Ted Kennedy, Diane Feinstein, and Harry Reid, all share his liberal views and are corrupt.


24 posted on 02/06/2008 5:28:31 AM PST by SUSSA
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To: aft_lizard
SO what do we do? Vote 3rd party? Stay home? Either way, we'll be letting the dems have it all.

Last week somebody said, "I'd rather the country go to hell under the democrats than the republicans. It took a Carter to give us a Regan." Perhaps it's time to let it go.

25 posted on 02/06/2008 5:29:42 AM PST by Marie (Why is it that some people believe everything that happens is the will of G-d - except Israel?)
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To: Mean Maryjean

While some will say that McCain’s 70-odd percent rating from the ACU makes him ok more often than he’s not, it’s that 25%+ that gives conservatives heartburn!


26 posted on 02/06/2008 5:30:42 AM PST by IrishMike (Liberalism is Jihad from within)
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To: All

Just want to say that although I didn't support Thompson I do respect how he has avoided endorsing McCain. It would be easy for him to go along with the herd mentality of idiots like Gov. Perry but he hasn't.


27 posted on 02/06/2008 5:32:59 AM PST by Mitt Romney (Romney 2008)
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To: SE Mom
IF McCain is, in fact, foolish enough to try this stunt- he will incur even greater wrath from the right.
.
.
.
Perhaps that’s the goal, make more of us stay ‘home’.
He knows he cannot get the conservative vote.
28 posted on 02/06/2008 5:34:29 AM PST by IrishMike (Liberalism is Jihad from within)
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To: alicewonders
My God, how many times are Republicans going to go back to this abusive relationship? I’m not - I’m getting a divorce. I’m out of the marriage.

Perfect analogy--an abusive relationship--or even "Stockholm Syndrome"--"loving" the Republican establishment even though it holds conservatives hostage.
29 posted on 02/06/2008 5:34:37 AM PST by mrsmel
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To: alicewonders
My God, how many times are Republicans going to go back to this abusive relationship? I’m not - I’m getting a divorce. I’m out of the marriage.

Perfect analogy--an abusive relationship--or even "Stockholm Syndrome"--"loving" the Republican establishment even though it holds conservatives hostage.
30 posted on 02/06/2008 5:34:53 AM PST by mrsmel
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To: Marie

“I’d rather the country go to hell under the democrats than the republicans. It took a Carter to give us a Regan.” Perhaps it’s time to let it go.
.
.
.
.
Sadly, I’m leaning that way.


31 posted on 02/06/2008 5:36:04 AM PST by IrishMike (Liberalism is Jihad from within)
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To: IrishMike

McCain might regret this gig before its over.


32 posted on 02/06/2008 5:36:56 AM PST by Sybeck1 (So senator, we can't be "mavericks" now?)
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To: Marie

Kind of makes you depressed, but I guess sometimes its for the greater good.I am just going to have to prepare myself for the worst and hope for the best.


33 posted on 02/06/2008 5:38:00 AM PST by aft_lizard (born conservative...I chose to be a republican)
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To: Marie

“SO what do we do? Vote 3rd party? Stay home? Either way, we’ll be letting the dems have it all.”

It would be ideal if like-minded people could all agree on a true conservative for a protest vote. Maybe Hunter as an example, (or write in Ronald Reagan). Simply not voting for the top line sends no information to the worthless pukes who now run the republican party.


34 posted on 02/06/2008 5:38:34 AM PST by jack308
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To: Vigilanteman
McCain (R-AZ)

McCain la-(R-AZ)-a

35 posted on 02/06/2008 5:40:08 AM PST by N. Theknow (Kennedys: Can't drive, can't fly, can't ski, can't skipper a boat; but they know what's best for us)
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To: N. Theknow

McCain is not simply a RINO like Hagel, Snow, and Specter et al. He’s a “maverick”. He ENJOYS sticking his finger in they eye of conservatism. He doesn’t just VOTE for bad legislation, he COMPOSES AND SPONSORS it!


36 posted on 02/06/2008 5:42:32 AM PST by IrishMike (Liberalism is Jihad from within)
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To: IrishMike; All

The senile seniors voted for:

vietname prisoner guy,
or
Mormon guy,
or
evangelical preacher guy

ZERO depth.

CPAC is a not going to even register on the public mind.


37 posted on 02/06/2008 5:43:54 AM PST by longtermmemmory (VOTE! http://www.senate.gov and http://www.house.gov)
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To: bcsco
"....Especially since this may well be the first election I haven’t voted in for many years....."

By staying home you help put Clowntoon back into the Whitehouse. What's worse?

38 posted on 02/06/2008 5:44:19 AM PST by Victor (If an expert says it can't be done, get another expert." -David Ben-Gurion, the first Prime Minister)
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To: Sybeck1

Everyone faults Romney for becoming more conservative, it’ll be interesting to see what McCain says and how the MSM portrays it. If McCain suddenly gets religeon and embraces certain conservative views will they call him a flip-flopper? a political oportunist willing to say anything?

I hope he does get booed off the stage and finishes dead last. Who is he tryin’ to fool?


39 posted on 02/06/2008 5:45:09 AM PST by teddyballgame (red man in a blue state)
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To: W04Man

McCain is America’s Khrushchev...and he is going to bury us.


40 posted on 02/06/2008 5:47:25 AM PST by chainsaw (Monica Lewinsky's ex-boyfriend's wife for Pesident !)
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