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Patrick Buchanan
Pat Buchanan
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An Unnecessary Defeat?

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Why did John McCain lose?

Let's start with those "headwinds" into which he was flying.

The president of the United States, the leader of his party, was at Nixon-Carter levels of approval, 25 percent, going into Election Day.

Sixty-two percent of the nation thought the economy was the No. 1 issue, and 93 percent thought the economy was bad. Two-thirds of the nation thought the war McCain championed was a mistake, and 80 percent to 90 percent thought the country was on the wrong course.

As a political athlete, measured by charisma and communications skills, McCain is not even in the same league with Barack Obama. He was outspent by vast sums, and his political organization was far inferior.

It is a wonder McCain was even competitive, dealt such a hand.

Yet, by Sept. 10, McCain, thanks to Sarah Palin, whose selection had proven a sensation, had come from eight points behind to take the lead, and Joe Biden was wailing that maybe Hillary would have been a better choice for Obama.

Then came the collapse of Lehman Brothers, the bailout of AIG, McCain's assertion that the economy was fundamentally sound, and his panicked return to Washington to assist Bush and Hank Paulson push through a wildly unpopular bank bailout — using 700 billion in tax dollars to buy up rubbish paper the idiot bankers had put on their books.

The Establishment's Man had come to save the Establishment.

Suddenly, it was McCain who was down 10 points, as the feline and feral press went on a wilding attack on Sister Sarah. He never recovered, though the McCain-Palin final push left egg on the faces of pollsters who were predicting a double-digit triumph for Obama.

Perhaps no Republican, in these circumstances, could have won, especially with that month-long bloodletting on Wall Street that wiped out $4 trillion to $5 trillion in stock and bond value, ravaging IRAs and 401Ks, portfolios and pensions alike.

Yet, McCain might still have won had he not, like his three fellow establishment Republicans Gerald Ford, George H.W. Bush and Bob Dole, been inhibited by the Mainstream Media and his own Beltway beliefs.

Consider. In California, where a liberal judiciary had ordered the state to recognize homosexual marriages, voters, by 52 to 48, slapped the judges across the face and ordered the ban reimposed and placed in the California constitution. Arizona and Florida also voted to outlaw gay marriage, by landslides.

The New York Times deplored the "ugly outcome" of these three referenda and said voters were "enshrining bigotry," thus calling the majority of Californians, Arizonans and Floridians bigots and their Bible-rooted Christian beliefs nothing but bigotry.

Good to know what they think of us.

Yet, McCain, who might have been out front on these moral and cultural issues, paid only lip service — and lost Florida, and California by a landslide.

In Missouri, where McCain eked out a victory, a proposal to make English the official state language carried six to one. In Nebraska, a proposal to ban affirmative action carried 58 to 42, but lost in a 50-50 tie in Colorado.

Parental notification won 48 percent support in California, a far higher share of the vote than McCain got, while a measure to outlaw abortion except in cases of rape, incest and the life of the mother got 45 percent in South Dakota. Had McCain made an issue of Obama's support for a Freedom of Choice Act that would eliminate all state restrictions on abortion, he could have forced Obama to defend what yet remains a radical and extreme view in America.

While Barack was locking up black America, McCain failed to hold onto Bush's share of the white working class, though Obama had the most liberal voting record in the Senate and long associations with the likes of Jeremiah Wright and '60s bomber William Ayers.

Perhaps fearful his "good guy" reputation with his old buddies in his media "base" would be imperiled, McCain ruled Wright off limits and seemed hesitant even to go after the Ayers connections. Lee Atwater would not have been so ambivalent. Leo Durocher put it succinctly: "Nice guys finish last."

Ultimately, however, the Beltway Republicans are losing Middle America because they are ideologically incapable of addressing two great concerns: economic insecurity and the perception that we are losing the America that we grew up in.

Economic insecurity is traceable to NAFTA-GATT globalization, under which it makes economic sense for U.S. companies to close factories here, build plants in China and export back to the United States. Manufacturing now accounts for less than 10 percent of all U.S. jobs.

Social insecurity is traceable to mass immigration, legal and illegal, which has brought in scores of millions who are altering the character of communities and competing with U.S. workers by offering their services for far less pay.

These are the twin causes of death of the Reagan coalition, and as long as the Republican Party is hooked on K Street cash, it will not address either, and thus pass, blissfully addicted, from this earth.

Patrick Buchanan is the author of the new book "Churchill, Hitler and 'The Unnecessary War." To find out more about Patrick Buchanan, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2008 CREATORS SYNDICATE INC.


Comments

6 Comments | Post Comment
Sir;... I crossed paths with a couple of hard core republicans yesterday, and naturally they were crestfallen, broken hearted, and depressed... I tried to talk to both of these people and to reasure them; but it was pointless... It seems only a single issue directed their vote for the whole republican ticket, and, it was abortion... It did no good to suggest that economic injustice results in sexual injustice, or that the inevitable trend in law and economy has been to fracture the family, and the support of community, and leave the individual exposed, defensless, and lonely, and that this trend would make relationships more difficult, and make abortions more likely... In fact, I could not challenge them to think about the subject rationally without seeming to them like an enemy... From my perspective, trying to relate to them was like trying to date a picture of a girl... They were flat, having only one dimension, and they did not care who the presidency was handed to, -on any other issue, or even whether the guy was competent... The presidential choice, for them, was only between right and wrong. They voted right. They think right. And they are right, and any suggestion that they may not be so right, in fact, was taken as a compltely rude insult... Sorry... Make your moral argument, and back it up with your vote, but consider, please, that government has got to work for all, and as long as objective people can look at republican rule, and see that it has no essential respect for life, or the necessities of life like economy, environment, or peace; they will not accept it... This separation of church and state has not worked.. It has empowered the church people, and weakened the country, and, made what should be a rational process into the hostage of belief... This is crazy made common...How soon shall we touch the fires of intolerance to the wicks of rational human beings??? Before the election of Mr. Obama, I would have told you our differences were slight, and were riled out of all proportion by the megamouths on the right... To meet some actual true believers, women in this case, was frightening... I would have met with better results trying to talk to a wall... Some people have spoiled our conversation, our communication.....If we are talking past each other, using similar words, but having totally different meanings, and without the ability to hear what others are even saying, how will we have peace and unity??? Thanks...Sweeney
Comment: #1
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Fri Nov 7, 2008 5:05 AM
Aside of the fact that Obama is just plain smart, and in dangerous times most people in their right mind don't want to fool around with the typical stupidity that comes along asking for their vote, the Republican ship is rudderless. People voted for intelligent leadership and against a cohort of plunderers who proved in spades they simply couldn't control themselves once they were at the apex of their dominion. How sweet it will be to put that sad era behind us, even though we will live with its consequences for some time to come.
Comment: #2
Posted by: Masako
Fri Nov 7, 2008 7:46 AM
While I love your enthusiasm for Gov Palin, your reasoning for John McCain's fall from his spike in the polls after her selection can indeed be attributed to her also. You like to put that blame squarely on the economy but I add that in those first few weeks, Gov Palin was hidden behind a lipstick on a pit bull speech.
Once the country was able to hear anything spontaneous from her, it quickly realized her lack of basic knowledge or an invisible grasp of the enormity of the job at hand was evident from a six school spree to earn a basic BA degree. THAT is why many turned away from the ticket.
It takes intelligence to first understand the problems at hand. You have it, Senators Obama and Biden have it with their Ivy League educations, and it became very apparent that McCain and Palin were no where close.
Idealogy is great...knowledge is the greatest asset to winning the votes of the citizens. It showed.
Comment: #3
Posted by: Barb
Sat Nov 8, 2008 10:09 AM
Pat Buchanan does not live out here in the real world with the rest of us. McCain lost for two reasons. First reason. Palin. Simple. She was an idiot and even the rednecks McCain chose her for were smarter than she was. They saw through her immediately after checking out her looks...the second reason was the vicious mean attacks without substantiaion that she and McCain kept howling out like two wolves with their teeth bared. They were uncivilized and vicious and people really don't like that. So...a stupid VP pick...and mean and vicious campaigning. THAT is why he lost, Pat.
Comment: #4
Posted by: Patricia Moran
Tue Nov 11, 2008 8:29 AM
Re: Barb Barb...I agree with you completely. Palin was not bright enough to be VP NOR was she in ANY way competent enough to be our president. McCain underestimated the intelligence of the American people! They saw through her almost immediately. Her 'hometown You Betcha" and her little side winks buried her almost as soon as she finished her acceptance speech. From then on, it was downhill all the way. I know a BUNCH of people who said they were going to vote for McCain until they saw this incredible lightweight girl flitting around the country pretending to be a candidate for the ALMOST highest station in this country...our Vice President. McCain was very foolish and I think someone should straighten the Republican Party out and get it out of their minds to have this woman lead their party for 2012. I hope they do it, because I am a Democrat and this would ensure our victory for the NEXT 8 years.
Comment: #5
Posted by: Patricia Moran
Tue Nov 11, 2008 8:36 AM
Re: Barb Barb...I agree with you completely. Palin was not bright enough to be VP NOR was she in ANY way competent enough to be our president. McCain underestimated the intelligence of the American people! They saw through her almost immediately. Her 'hometown You Betcha" and her little side winks buried her almost as soon as she finished her acceptance speech. From then on, it was downhill all the way. I know a BUNCH of people who said they were going to vote for McCain until they saw this incredible lightweight girl flitting around the country pretending to be a candidate for the ALMOST highest station in this country...our Vice President. McCain was very foolish and I think someone should straighten the Republican Party out and get it out of their minds to have this woman lead their party for 2012. I hope they do it, because I am a Democrat and this would ensure our victory for the NEXT 8 years.
Comment: #6
Posted by: Patricia Moran
Tue Nov 11, 2008 8:37 AM
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