Posted on 08/19/2008 9:45:40 AM PDT by the anti-liberal
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Wouldnt put it past him. Would you? Which is why, despite all the encomiums hes received from his Saddleback appearance, I havent joined the ga-ga bandwagon (and wont).
Rich Lowry reports:
NR has learned that the McCain campaign has been calling key state GOP officials around the country the last couple of days and sounding them out about the consequences of a pro-choice VP pick. The campaign is asking about the reaction of conservative grass-roots activists to such a pick and whether a pro-choicer can be sold to them. This is an indication that the McCain campaign is serious about the possibility of a pro-choice VP nominee and that McCain leaving the door open to Tom Ridge last week may not have been merely a friendly nod to a longtime supporter.
Sound off. Guess they didnt hear you loud enough the first go around.
Hat tip: Big A.
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(T-shirts via Mommy Needs a Cocktail)
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Update: David Limbaugh calls it
McCain must quit echoing the Democratic talking point that places form over substance and the illusion of bipartisanship above principle. Who says Americans want us to work together if that means abandoning legal protection for the innocent unborn or other inviolable principles?
Update: McRudy?!?!?!
In effect, voting for Obama. What a mess we are in.
Carolyn
I haven't come to a solid conclusion myself on this.
McCain is liberal on immigration reform and controlling free speech, but he is not pro-abortion.
Malkin is a bit too busy lately seeing the negative, but I guess someone has to watch that angle.
Ridge would not get my support.
Hopefully McCain hears us on this (like he heard us on the border issue? Hopefully not!).
I have been really agonizing over this presidential vote and have come up with the following analysis.
1. During the gang of 14 debacle I called McCain’s ofice and explained that I would never vote for him for anything.
2. I live in California and we will be one of the last states to send our electorial votes to the Republicans. I see my presidential vote as merely symbolic.
3. I am increasingly disturbed by the direction the Republican party is moving.
Therefore I will not vote for McCain but plan to vote for a conservative. Where do I find one? I put the Liberarians into the same basket as the Greens. So I need to look to the Constitution party or elsewhere. I would like to somehow express to the national (and state) party that conservatives are here and we do vote.
McCain has just thumbed his nose at conservatives too many times.
If McCain picks a pro-choice VP, I’ll choose to not vote for him in November.
Just how many pro-death voters does McCain think he is going to sway with a pro-death pick? I would venture to say at least 80% of this crowd would vote Democrat anyway even if he named George Tiller (the infamous partial birth abortionist) as his VP.
Given that this is the defining issue for maybe 20% of the electorate, is the potential to sway 2% (20% x 20% x 50%) worth the risk of alienating 8% (80% x 20% x 50%)?
Or more likely swaying 1.4% (20% x 20% x 35%) and alienating 10.4% (20% x 80% x 65%)? The math just doesn't add up.
Of course, the math didn't add up on making illegal aliens fast track citizens either and that didn't stop McCain.
Perhaps that will send a message, rather than silence.
Beginning?
Killing 60 million babies has made America old and bitter.
“Jumping the Shark” was an attempt to save a show that was on it’s last legs, but at least it was an attempt. If Malkin, Rush, Levin etc. are “jumping the shark” in an attempt to prevent McCain from driving another nail in the conservative movement’s coffin, then count me in.
>>Seriously. I want to feel good about the decision I make for presidency. Besides, at least I cant be blamed for whoever screws up the country next.>>
I am a Christian. Christ was not a pragmatist, therefore I am not a pragmatist. Christ did the right thing, therefore I do the right thing. God is in control of who wins, anyway. He hasn’t moved anywhere.
No, it isn't, "in effect, voting for Obama". Here's why:
Let's say there are 100 voters and you are the last one to vote. As you walk into the booth, the vote count is 43 for McCain, 42 for Obama, and 4 votes for 3rd party candidates.
In the first example, you vote for McCain, and the final vote is McCain - 44, Obama 42. In the second example, you don't vote for the presidential electors (or vote 3rd party). The final vote total is McCain - 43, Obama - 42.
Nope, that isn't a vote for Obama, no matter how you carve it up.
That's my take as well. I'm still going to vote for him without hesitation. But why would anyone expect him to toe the conservative line 100% when he never has and never will? He is what he is.
It's perfectly reasonable to bombard him with emails/phone calls, try to influence his pick if you think you can, but it's silly to act surprised when he simply continues to be who he is.
But no matter how much he differs from my views (climate change??), he's still clearly the best choice this time around. It's a complete no-brainer.
Pawlenty, = Global Warming hysteric who endorses the marxist “cap and trade” BS.
I understand that his stated position is as pro-life, but putting a “pro-choicer” on the ticket doesn’t speak well for the strength of that position.
BINGO!
Who's that?
Is the Pope Catholic?
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