Posted on 06/03/2008 5:48:57 PM PDT by Salena Zito
Welcome to the party John McCain PITTSBURGH TRIBUNE-REVIEW By Salena Zito Spokesperson Jeff Sadosky said tonight that Sen. John McCain is not your typical Republican, which explains the non-traditional geographic pick of New Orleans for the launch of his general election campaign for president.
"We believe Senator McCain's vision for reforming government is particularly meaningful for the people of Louisiana who know all too well the tragic cost of government's failure to act," said Sadosky.
It's the same city where Democrat John Edwards launched and docked his candidacy for president.
Sadosky said McCain's speech tonight on the occasion of the final Democratic primary "will chart the course to November and draw contrast on some of the great issues that this debate will revolve around."
Here are excerpts from McCain's speech as prepared for delivery:
(Excerpt) Read more at pittsburghlive.com ...
John McCain will be the next President of the United States.
I watched a portion of McPainâs speech tonight on FOX. This guy is a joke, he calls himself a ... get this ... âa conservative republicanâ. McPain is the best the GOP can come up with (?) ... it’s all over folks ... this guy is a disaster.
You said: John McCain will be the next President of the United States.
I hope you are right. And then we will fight him hand and foot on just about every issue of consequence until we can replace him with a conservative either four or eight years from now.
Napolean should take a vacation until the first Tuesday in November. If he keeps his mouth shut, he probably cannot lose. Still, I wouldn’t hold my breath. You can go broke over estimating the intelligence of American voters. It did vote for Peanut Boy. And, McCain is a lot like Ford; no charisma, uninteresting, no vision, old.
Hee haw. I can hardly wait for the general election campaign.
I agree.
Obama’s is a doomed candidacy.
The major concern of all conservatives when voting at the federal level is the total political makeup of the next Congress. If there are enough TRUE conservatives that are part of the next Congress, then conservatism has a serious chance for some kind of decent political comeback sooner rather than much later, but if the next Congress is truly a super-majority of socialists in both the House and Senate, then U.S. conservatism as well as the entire U.S. as a capitalistic country is truly finished. The political left in complete charge will truly create serious long-term damage on all of the issues that eventually succeeds in turning the U.S. into a socialistic third world country for the long-term.
I hope you are right, but both of you are nuts.
There is a less than 10% chance that McCain will be the next President. There are too many factors against the “Republican” Candidate.
1. Iraq — We all know the situation is getting better, but the average voter does not.
2. Economy — We all know the situation isn’t as bad as the Media make it out to be and we know why the down-turn occurred, the average voter does not.
3. Gas Prices — We all know who is really to blame, the average voter does not.
4. He’s the “Republican”, read Bush guy, the average American is not a fan of Bush (unfairly, yes).
I just don’t see the cause of optimism, despite, the demographic advantage McCain should have amongst middle-class and blue collar voters, I just don’t see many of those voters crossing the aisle. I just don’t see it happen.
President Obama would be an unmitigated disaster (Jimmy Carter by a factor of 10), but I think its what we are going to get.
I disagree.
The current electoral map has them just about tied, but McCain will pretty much keep all of the Bush electoral votes, and he might pick up Michigan, if his VP is Romney, and there is actually something really really negative in Obama’s radical associations and in his inexperience and in his really odd gaffes.
We shall see.
But Ray Nagin is still in office, right?
Who is going to vote for him?
But I think one will see Colorado, Iowa, and New Mexico flop, which would be enough to counter a Michigan flop.
And if the VP nominee is Romney (to boost him in Michigan and on Economic terms), I think that could cost him in KY and some of the border states when Evangelicals (the 25-30% who said they would never vote for a Mormon) stay at home or vote for Bob Barr.
I hope and pray you are right. I’m just not optimistic (granted, I usually am never optimistic in regards to politics).
I, for one, don't care if pandering is the reason, I would love Gov. Jindal to be on the ticket. If only to quiet the MSM's inevitable "racism" stories. After all, with a minority on our ticket, Obama won't be able to use the "race" card over and over.
Plus, a young Conservative is just what this party needs.
I think the evangelical will vote for a McCain/Romney ticket because an Obama/CommieIslam ticket is unspeakable.
I would agree with that statement. I ultimately just don’t see the White Blue-Collar voters who right now are Anti-Obama sticking it out. Give it another 5 months of listening to their unions and they will be Obamaniacs.
I would be open to either Gov. Palin or even Lt.Gov. (Ret.) Steele. I think both would be great Conservative support for the ticket. Ditto with Bobby Jindal.
It depends, of course, on the new media to counter the old media + come up with enough $$$ to lauch a few counterstrikes in the old media.
Obama/Farakkhan 2008!
There’s a TV commercial in there someplace just screaming to get out.
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