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 ...
I prefer red-meat:
Envision This:
(Picture of Obama)
(Picture of 9-11)
(Reverend Wright denouncing America)
(Obama praising Wright)
(Wright damning America)
(American Flag — Do you damn America, do your friends?)
I love it.
When do you start production?
:>)
If you know any 527s, feel free to pass them along. I sadly am just an amateur strategist (plus military, can’t do them professionally).
My other idea:
(American Flag flying in the Wind)
(Arlington National Cemetery)
(Kid saluting the Flag)
(Soldiers going to War)
(Disaster Relief)
(Michelle Obama - for the first time in my life I am proud of my country)
(Are you proud of your country?)
I agree. McCain is a loser candidate. And he doesn’t need Obama to make him look doddering.
I just saw him on TV and he does dodder. What a joke.
The majority of the people of this country are getting the government they deserve. Which unfortunately is ruining it for the rest of us. Face it folks, we are a minority.
Why don’t you make that and put it on YouTube?
It’s good.
Very unfortunately, he IS a typical Republican these days. That's the problem.
If a Pres. McCain is calling the shots and forming party policy, what difference will a Conservative VP make? Except to discredit the VP’s conservative “street cred”....
IMO, no way McCain will ever beat Obama. Obama’s use of the “four more years of Bush” rhetoric is all it will take. I think that even the most unaware voter is accutely aware they don’t want another 4 more years and will risk either other Dem option. I’m just sayin.
That’s what is beginning to dawn on me. We no longer put people like Regan into power, because the average Republican is no longer conservative.
We had several Republicans in our extended family at one time. Now most of them are voting for Obama. The most conservative one was for McCain early in the Republican primary, when there were some real conservatives in the running.
Steel now, Palin / Jindal in 2012.
> but McCain will pretty much keep all of the Bush electoral votes,
No, and he may very well lose Ohio, NM, Colorado and Iowa, and the dems will spend heavily in Virginia and the Carolinas to keep him honest there
>and he might pick up Michigan, if his VP is Romney,
Yes, he might.
My analysis is that if Hillary joins the ticket then the dems will pick up near 300 electoral votes
This is going to be a McLiberal McLandslide victory. 30% of the Hillary voters swear they will never vote for Barack Fitzgerald Obama. The 60% of soccer moms and nascar dads in the mushy middle may be too busy to pay attention to politics daily, but they usually do get it right.
No way will they ever vote for an America hating Marxist.
BTTT!
I don’t even think “Bama will be the nominee of the Dimocrat party.
Don’t ask me who. But I just don’t think he will make it through.
Are you serious? Not only will he get a lot of apolitical/non-ideological voters, he will get a lot of moderate Republicans. McCain was about my fifth choice for nominee, but I never got a chance to vote before the issue was decided in previous primaries. He certainly is not the best candidate, but he is the candidate. And millions will vote for him.
...and may God have mercy upon our Republic.
So you cut from a young black man with groups of happy smiling American faces surrounding him to Senator McCain's picture (almost any one) and you see the same old tired rerun of castrated Republican Liberal Appeasement.
Add to the fact that McCain's message (which I believe consists mostly half-hearted promises that will soon revert to color) that is monotonically delivered, wrapped in a tenuous belief that "We" are united, is unenergetically received.
And so, the now 'United' Republican party steps lightly through the cemetary whistling its protective mantra. This is another Bob Dole campaign in the making.
You and I both know that the Republican Appeasement machine will NEVER put an add like that out.
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