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Wednesday, February 13,2008

What Will McCain Do Now?

He’s already changed principles and positions

By Joe Conason
 

The revival of John McCain’s presidential candidacy, now expected to carry him through to his party’s nomination, can be interpreted either as proof of the judgment of Republican primary voters or evidence of the paucity of alternative choices. Certainly, it confirms the wisdom of betting against the predictions of the national press corps, which produced so many sorrowful post-mortems on his campaign.

Very soon, if not instantly, the same pundits who wrote off McCain’s chances will be assuring us that the recent hasbeen is now an electoral juggernaut. They will describe him as resplendent in political valor, reforming zeal and militant patriotism, and of course brimming with “straight talk.” Of such shiny publicity has the Arizona senator’s image been built over the past decade or so.

What remains to be seen is whether his admirable image will withstand fresh scrutiny as he becomes the presumptive nominee—and how independents, Democrats and conservative Republicans will respond to an updated portrait of him. The price of his victory may well be measured in principles dropped, and in positions flipped and flopped.

He has quietly walked away from his former allies on campaign finance reform. He has run away from his own immigration reform legislation. He has sold away the commitment to economic fairness and fiscal discipline that once led him to oppose the skewed Bush tax cuts. On at least one issue, however, he remains absolutely consistent.

As he said not long ago, he favors dispatching generations of American soldiers to Iraq for a hundred years or more, while spending trillions of borrowed dollars not only on that war, but others to come in unspecified countries. “Bomb bomb bomb, bomb bomb Iran” is the mindless motto of the McCain foreign policy.

Too Much Like Bush?
In an election year when voters say they are demanding change from the failures and follies of the Bush years, this political profile could create serious problems for any candidate. For McCain, the dangers may be even greater, because while he resolutely upholds an unpopular war, he has forfeited the single issue that could most easily inflame the Republican base as well as many independents.

Any other Republican running against either Hillary Clinton or Barack Obama would quickly put the Democrats on the defensive over their refusal to promise that millions of undocumented workers and their families will be deported someday soon, or ever. Any other Republican would be able to portray the Democratic Party as advocates of unrestricted immigration and “amnesty” for immigrants who have entered the United States illegally.

It is simple to conjure a negative ad showing dark, frightening foreigners, with a script bemoaning lost jobs, rising crime and welfare costs, even the threat of terrorism. Stimulating fear has become a tradition in American elections. But McCain cannot benefit from that kind of demagogic commercial. After all, he was for amnesty before he was against it, as his conservative critics might put it.

And much as he may now wish to pretend that the issue is moot, his name remains on the reform bill sponsored by Sen. Edward Kennedy. Advisers to McCain may plan to mount a different brand of fear-based attack, much as former White House adviser Karl Rove did so successfully during the 2002 and 2004 elections. That campaign would feature ads assaulting the Democrats as disloyal and timid, for daring to voice even the mildest objection to the Bush administration’s surveillance and torture policies.

Dramatic commercials might steal a page from television, with a president trying to decide how to interrogate a suspect who knows where to find the nuclear suitcase bomb. Could we count on a Democrat to authorize the waterboarding in time? Yet that scary scenario won’t work for McCain, either, because he has stood forthrightly against torture, to the great dismay of many detractors in his own party.

The war in Iraq will afford him the chance to draw sharp distinctions with his Democratic opponent, but that difference will place him on the wrong side of the electorate. He will win points, perhaps, for sticking with the unpopular position. But with the prospect of recession growing each day, his devotion to military solutions and neglect of economic concerns may make him appear not only dangerous, but also irrelevant.

© 2008 Creators Syndicate Inc. What’s your take? Write: editor@shepex.com.

 

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I picked up your Feb 14th to 20th newspaper at Pick & Save yesterday because of your endorsement cover for Obama. Thank you for that accurate and cutting edge endorsement of senator Obama; as well as Joe Conason's What Will McCain Do Now? (What happened to the virtually useless and watered down McCain / Feingold campaign finance reform?) I couldn't agree with you more about nearly every written word of both articles. My biggest fear is that if Obama gets elected, he will be the assassination target of Neo-Con or Rovian extremists. Clearly, the right wing extremists' untold wealth and resources will make Obama's life not only miserable but practically stalemated for years into his tenure, if his life is spared. I hate to sound so negative, but ultimately wonder if left of center Hillary may end up as the better choice? Obama's youth and vision may stagnate his attempts at real change with a house and senate full of older politicians as usual (i.e. Hillary type) with whom he will seek to include in his attempt at the truth. I know I will vote Obama in the primary, and will support any candidate with the guts, intelligence, and charisma to stand up to the lobbyists and corporations bent on massive oil based growth economy idealology and rampant wasteful consumerism as a part of the American Dream. One thing FOR SHURE, the Republicans are scared stiff that Obama will undo all the safeguards Bush has put in place while in office. Maybe they will work in his favor, giving him line item veto power to reverse the corporate stranglehold that has run this country into the the ground for the last 8 years. But assuming your endorsement becomes reality, it will take someone like Obama with a lot of youthful motivation to take on the unequivocal mess this once great country is in now. Sincerely, Jef

 

 
 
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