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McCain Estrangement Syndrome ("Headed for a Defeat of McGovernite Dimensions...")
National Review ^ | 02/11/08 | Andrew C. McCarthy

Posted on 02/11/2008 6:13:49 AM PST by KentTrappedInLiberalSeattle

Are John McCain’s supporters trying to drive conservatives away from their candidate?

Senator McCain is the inevitable Republican presidential nominee. He is headed, though, for a defeat of McGovernite dimensions if he can’t sway conservatives to get behind his candidacy. For their part, conservatives don’t want McCain, but even less do they want to spend the next four-to-eight years saying “President Obama,” let alone reliving history with another President Clinton.

In short, there are the makings here for a modus vivendi, however grudging. Yet, McCain’s admirers appear to think belittling the senator’s good-faith opponents is the way to go. Theirs is a case of the pot calling the kettle “deranged” — and it will prove duly futile.

Put yourselves in my shoes for a moment. I have not supported Sen. McCain. I admire his perseverance and love of country. Still, I don’t think he is a committed conservative, and his penchant for demonizing all opposition is, to me, extremely off-putting. Protestations to the contrary notwithstanding, there’s nothing delusional about that.

In fact, as between the two of us, it’s McCain’s supporters who are deluding themselves. I take them at their word, for example, that a hallmark of the senator’s politics is his tenacity on matters of principle. Consequently, I am skeptical of his assurances that he would appoint conservative judges who will apply rather than create law. Why? Because he has a recent, determined history of beseeching federal courts to disregard the First Amendment in furtherance of a dubious campaign-finance scheme in which he believes passionately. Conservative judges would (and have) rejected this scheme, just as they would (and have) rejected another signature McCain position: the extension of Geneva Convention protections for jihadists.

Now, the appointment of conservative judges is a crucial issue — one McCain posits as central to why we should prefer him to Obama and Clinton. Thus supporters breezily wave off such concerns, maintaining that McCain both promises there will be no issue-based litmus tests for judicial nominees and has conservatives of impeccable legal credentials advising him.

But for me to conclude McCain would surely appoint conservative judges, I also have to believe campaign-finance and the Geneva Convention weren’t all that big a deal to him after all — a possibility that runs counter to everything McCain’s fans tell us about his fidelity to principle. He’s fought tirelessly for years, in the teeth of blistering criticism, to establish campaign-finance regulations, and I’m now supposed to believe he’ll just shrug his shoulders and meekly name judges who’ll torpedo the whole enterprise — all in the name of upholding a judicial philosophy I’m not even sure he grasps? How exactly is it deranged to have my doubts?

And, of course, that’s not all. McCain points out that he supported the Supreme Court nominations of Justices Roberts and Alito; but he blocked the appointment of Pentagon general counsel Jim Haynes to the Fourth Circuit, and his “Gang of 14” deal was the death knell for several other Bush judicial nominations. He says he’s learned his lesson on immigration “reform,” but he won’t rule out signing the disastrous McCain/Kennedy bill if it were to cross his desk in the Oval Office. He now says he opposes the Law of the Sea Treaty and its assault on American sovereignty, but he used to be an ardent supporter. He told National Review he didn’t foresee pushing for further campaign-finance legislation, but that was when he was unsuccessfully urging the federal courts to impose further restrictions on speech — and, as president, he would have the power to appoint aggressive Federal Election Commission regulators. He points to his long pro-life record, but his campaign-finance crusade included a years-long effort to suppress the pro-life message, and he supported government funding of stem-cell research that called for destroying human embryos. He claims to be for small government but he contemplates government regulation of everything from light bulbs to professional sports, even as his immigration proposals would crush state health-care and education budgets. While some of McCain’s supporters claim he has consistently opposed tax increases, his Kyoto-style proposal on global warming would actually result in the most enormous tax-increase in American history (while doing little, if anything, about climate change); and, relatedly, though McCain now says he supports making the Bush tax cuts permanent, he was one of their most vigorous opponents.

To be clear, I have never argued that no true conservative could support McCain — a commonly repeated strawman in the “derangement” indictment. The GOP field featured many accomplished candidates, but it was not a grand set of choices for the Right. The candidate most wedded to our orthodoxy, Sen. Fred Thompson, was late to the race and never really got out of the starting block. Mayor Rudy Giuliani (whom I originally supported) was conservative in many ways but, like McCain, listed serial apostasies in his ledger. The conservatism of Gov. Mitt Romney (to whom I later gravitated) was, in several particulars, of recent vintage, spawning concerns about his authenticity. Gov. Mike Huckabee, a peerless advocate for life and other core social-conservative causes, sounds more like a Democrat on the economy, governed like one when it came to taxes and pardons, and often seems at sea on national-security issues.

Conservatives had to pick someone. For all his flaws, no candidate could match Sen. McCain’s singular leadership in preventing an American defeat in Iraq. None came close to his heroism in service to the United States. And, in two decades in the Senate, he has sided with conservatives on about four out of every five votes — a rate that cannot camouflage the gravity of his departures but ought not be dismissed out of hand either. I found at least three of the other candidates more appealing than the self-professed “maverick.” That, however, does not mean it was irrational for other conservatives to come to a different conclusion — and though some now prescribe mere opposition to McCain as a form of febrile lunacy, I never suggested otherwise.

So, when McCain became inevitable on “Super Tuesday,” I resigned myself to reality in short order. That, I’ve always thought, is democracy in America: You do your best to persuade, you hope to win, but you don’t take your ball and go home if you lose.

There remains a rational case to continue rejecting McCain. We are, after all, electing a government, not just a president. I strongly suspect the conservative movement and Republicans in Congress would perform better if set against a Democrat president than in an uneasy alliance with McCain. Thus it’s not a simple matter of determining whether McCain is superior to Obama or Clinton; the question is whether he is so much better that we should tolerate the heavy cost of a movement and a party less disposed to fight a President McCain on the several flawed policy preferences he shares with Democrats.

That’s far from a no-brainer. But for me, the question must be resolved in McCain’s favor because of the war. Our troops in harm’s way deserve the best commander-in-chief we have it in our power to give them; the American people deserve the most vigilant protection against a rabid enemy we have it in our power to give them. For these purposes, McCain is measurably superior to Obama and Clinton. That doesn’t mean my reservations are any less real; they are just comparatively (and barely) less important.

By Wednesday, then, I was resigned to the senator’s being not just the nominee but our nominee. On Thursday, when Gov. Mitt Romney graciously stepped aside, I was glad. I don’t see myself ever being a McCain enthusiast, but by Thursday afternoon, I’d even gotten to the point of offering his campaign what I hoped was constructive advice on taking a leadership role in the current debate over intelligence reform.

But I’m no longer so sure. McCain’s supporters continue to mock thoughtful, good-faith critics as “deranged.” The principal objects of scorn are such conservative talk-radio icons as Rush Limbaugh, Mark Levin, Laura Ingraham, and Sean Hannity. A number of those folks are friends of mine, and, indeed, I appeared on a couple of their programs in the run-up to Super Tuesday. The discussion wasn’t “deranged.” I’m not deranged, and neither are they.

The McCain forces assert that ordinary Republican voters are roundly rejecting us naysayers. Really? That claim is even more demonstrably false today than it was a week ago.

Before last Tuesday, when he became inevitable, about two out of every three Republicans were voting against McCain. This past Saturday, despite having outlasted all meaningful opposition, McCain was humiliated when three out of every four Republicans cast ballots against him in the states of Washington (which he somehow “won”) and Kansas (where he was drubbed). To add insult to insult, McCain was also defeated in Louisiana by the likable but hopeless Huckabee, whose campaign at this point is an eccentricity. For Huck, that is; for the rest of us, it is a window on smoldering dissent — and a harbinger of catastrophe to come when one factors in the Republicans who are staying home while Democrats stampede to the polls in eye-popping numbers.

McCain’s only chance, a slim one, is to galvanize the very people his acolytes seem bent on antagonizing. That means allaying deep-seated conservative doubt. A powerful senator not exactly famous for listening to his detractors will need some convincing on that score — some understanding that, as Saturday’s primaries fairly screamed, he’s got a lot more work to do.

McCain’s fans do their candidate no favors by telling him the only people who can save his candidacy are unhinged.

And they do themselves no favors. There’s a battle on the horizon for the future of conservatism. On one side are those who revere unchanging principles, especially a healthy suspicion of government. On the other are those who would refine old principles under the guise of adapting them to new situations — those apt to see government more as a force for good than a necessary evil.

Sen. McCain runs in the latter circles. There, principally, is where he finds his conservative support. If he allows his campaign to become a referendum, pitting the tried-and-true against self-consciously evolved strains of “compassionate” and “national greatness” conservatism, November will look an awful lot like Saturday night.


TOPICS: Editorial; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2008; andrewmccarthy; anyonebutmccain; conservatism; conservativevote; gopcoup; juanmccain; mccain; mcmexico; ourmexicanoverlords; shills; unhingedsupporters; unity
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To: Nervous Tick

You are correct. The role of the court is to uphold the Constitution, not rubberstamp whatever laws Congress, in its infinite hubris, decides to enact. McCain’s got it absolutely bass ackwards, and yet he tells us with a straight face that he will nominate constructionist judges. How can he do that if he doesn’t even know what a constructionist judge is?


141 posted on 02/11/2008 9:10:49 AM PST by LadyNavyVet (“I will offer a choice, not an echo.” Barry Goldwater)
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To: KentTrappedInLiberalSeattle

LMAO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!


142 posted on 02/11/2008 9:12:07 AM PST by Grunthor (Unlike the Republican Party, this conservatives' principles MEAN SOMETHING!)
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To: Old Sarge
True, there are some in each camp, but personal attacks are about the weakest debate tactic out there.

On one blog I frequent, there was one Romney supporter who was so venomously and irrationally over-the-top in attacking all other candidates that the other commenters became convinced the poster in question was using reverse psychology to derail Romney. Unfortunately, the venom was for real, and the histrionics persuaded no one.

We've all seen similar tactics used by some in each camp. It might make the poster feel good to vent their spleen (better than going out and shooting up a shopping center, for instance), but how they think it helps their position to verbally bludgeon others is beyond me.

143 posted on 02/11/2008 9:12:13 AM PST by browardchad
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To: Mr. Brightside

“I will vote for McCain, just like Reagan endorsed and voted for Ford.”

Ford, while not a conservative, did not hate them. Can’t say the same about Juan.


144 posted on 02/11/2008 9:15:13 AM PST by Grunthor (Unlike the Republican Party, this conservatives' principles MEAN SOMETHING!)
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To: Mr. Brightside

“Reagan had long term vision, something many around here do not.”

Long term vision; conservatives vote for McCain, win or lose we get an even worse lib next time around.


145 posted on 02/11/2008 9:16:30 AM PST by Grunthor (Unlike the Republican Party, this conservatives' principles MEAN SOMETHING!)
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To: old school

“Is Republicanism synonymous with Conservatism. If not, when did that end.”

It’s not synonymous, never has been. The two ARE best when they work together however the Republicans have been trying to operate w/o conservative for oh....almost 8 years now.


146 posted on 02/11/2008 9:28:04 AM PST by Grunthor (Unlike the Republican Party, this conservatives' principles MEAN SOMETHING!)
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To: LadyNavyVet
“I intend to nominate judges who have proven themselves worthy of our trust that they take as their sole responsibility the enforcement of laws made by the people’s elected representatives”

I think you're shaving too close in your criticism of that statement. Our elected representatives ARE where laws should be made, not the courts.

To extrapolate from that remark that McCain intends to pack a court ala Roosevelt defies reason.

147 posted on 02/11/2008 9:36:32 AM PST by GVnana ("They're still analyzing the first guy. What do I have to worry about?" - GWB)
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To: KentTrappedInLiberalSeattle
I will NEVER vote for McCain. Despite high profile endorsements on his behalf. I'm a conservative before I'm a Republican. And John McCain is NO conservative!

"Show me just what Mohammed brought that was new, and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached." - Manuel II Palelologus

148 posted on 02/11/2008 10:05:15 AM PST by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives In My Heart Forever)
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To: GVnana

“Our elected representatives ARE where laws should be made, not the courts.”

Where did I say they weren’t? We’re discussing the role of SCOTUS, not the legislature. It is the role of the Court which McCain misinterpreted last week. It is not the Court’s job to enforce laws. That is the job of the Executive. It is the Court’s job to pass judgement on laws in light of the parameters defined by the Constitution.

It is obvious that McCain does not understand the proper role of SCOTUS nor POTUS in the system of checks and balances set forth by the Founding Fathers.


149 posted on 02/11/2008 10:50:51 AM PST by LadyNavyVet (“I will offer a choice, not an echo.” Barry Goldwater)
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To: Mr. Brightside
We can tell the moderates in the party, “You had your chance and you lost. Next we are going to nominate a real conservative.”

Not if the media doesn't let us. This entire election was controlled and managed from the get-go. It's been sad to watch. 

150 posted on 02/11/2008 11:10:03 AM PST by zeugma (McCain, if you want to be sold out for a day on TV.)
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To: Old Sarge

>> And Huckabee’s... <<

And Old Sarge’s...

(aw, drats, now I’m going to stand accused, to.)


151 posted on 02/11/2008 11:31:20 AM PST by dangus
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To: kjo
Genocidal-wanna-be Communists like Salma are disgusting, no matter how much they pay for fake boobs.
152 posted on 02/11/2008 11:34:09 AM PST by dangus
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To: tomnbeverly
It is not from rhetoric

Would you, for instance, be convinced that your god, messiah, higher diety, etc. was not the choice for your prayers (read vote here) but someone else IS the only only choice you can make, even though it appears from everything you know about him to NOT be what your persuaders believe him to be?

I'm not in this to teach Democrats a lesson ... I refuse to accept second rate when I know there is better. The RNC, administration, the DC PUB crowd have not learned a damned thing about who put them where they are. Succumbing to their will yet another time is through, period.

153 posted on 02/11/2008 11:40:07 AM PST by Gaffer
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To: Nervous Tick
“My problem is with one who will call a colleague (Sen. Cornyn) something similar, to his face in the Senate cloakroom, merely because they oppose one’s flawed pro-amnesty immigration stance.”

McCain had been out of town and my Senator Cornyn was working in that illegal immigration law committee to stop the amnesty provision. McCain got back in town and called Cornyn a string of non-repeatable words along with something like this, “I know more about this than you’ll ever know so shut up.”

That did it for me. Cornyn is a true conservative and a brilliant attorney. He was our Texas State Attorney General
and ruled in my favor when a Democrat District Attorney tried to remove me as Judge of the Early Voting Ballot Board. McCain will lose against Obama.

154 posted on 02/11/2008 12:30:32 PM PST by Marcella (Will work in my rose garden (with wine) and not listen to McCain.)
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To: DuncanWaring
At least one of McCain's lesser supporters, a great grandson of TR, the first of our really destructive RINO presidents, did a good job on one of the Fox Sunday shows. That worthy stated he supported McCain because McCain opposed ANWAR drilling and opposed tax cuts without offsetting spending cuts. Seems he somehow didn't hear about McCain saying he wanted to make the Bush tax cuts permanent or, IMHO more likely, McCain privately told him that he, McCain, was just blowing smoke to keep the yokels quiet.
155 posted on 02/11/2008 1:05:18 PM PST by libstripper
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To: zeugma
Not if the media doesn't let us.

The media does not decide who we nominate.

156 posted on 02/11/2008 1:55:45 PM PST by Mr. Brightside
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To: Mr. Brightside
The media does not decide who we nominate.

 

Hahahahahahaha. You too funny. 

157 posted on 02/11/2008 2:04:50 PM PST by zeugma (McCain, if you want to be sold out for a day on TV.)
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To: KentTrappedInLiberalSeattle

“Last night, I had a dream involving Salma Hayek; a pair of handcuffs; and leather breakaway nurse’s outfit. “

LMAO...Oh my God, we are having the same darn dream! What are the odds?! BTW, she says she like ME better.


158 posted on 02/11/2008 2:21:20 PM PST by Gator113 (America just traded away the possibility of a dream, for what is certain to be a nightmare.)
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To: KentTrappedInLiberalSeattle

To McCainiacs
Re: Support McCaine’s Campaign

Save your breath.

Better a liberal Democrat than a liberal Republican.


159 posted on 02/11/2008 2:40:10 PM PST by y6162
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To: GQuagmire
If its against Obama

It won't be. It will be against Clinton. And this guy may be right, that we can do a better job playing defense against the well-known Clintonistas than we can playing "offense" led by McCain at QB. All he'd do is throw interceptions.

160 posted on 02/11/2008 2:46:56 PM PST by hinckley buzzard
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