Anti-Bush Moderates Crown McCain GOP Frontrunner

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First Posted: 01-30-08 12:15 AM   |   Updated: 03-28-08 02:45 AM

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John Mccain

As John McCain took a big step toward winning the nomination in Florida, the Republican Party looks increasingly likely to pass the torch to a candidate powered by decidedly un-Republican constituencies: anti-Bush voters, the non-religious, supporters of abortion rights, and social-cultural moderates.

The network exit polls showed patterns of support for and opposition to McCain that are highly worrisome for the conservative and religious wings of the party - patterns that are likely to serve as an incentive to runner-up Mitt Romney to continue the battle. Despite losing the primary to McCain, 31% to 36%, Romney will try to claim, as he has already done, that he is the more legitimately conservative candidate in the race, laying claim to the mantle of Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush.

Crucial to McCain's win was his strength among the 25 percent of Republican primary voters who described themselves as "dissatisfied" with the Bush administration, and the 7 percent who are "angry" with the Republican White House. McCain left Romney in the dust, 45-15, among angry voters, and won by 18 points, 43-25, among the dissatisfied.

Conversely, the 19 percent of Republican voters who are "enthusiastic" about Bush backed Romney over McCain 32-27, and those who said they are "satisfied" with Bush backed Romney 37-30

One of McCain's biggest margins, 46-25, over Romney was among the small fraction - 11 percent - of Republicans who call themselves liberal. McCain was, in addition, a solid victor, 40-22, among the 28 percent of Republican primary voters who say they are moderates.

Among the conservative core of the party, which made up fully 62 percent of GOP voters, Romney beat McCain 37-27. Among the substantial 27 percent who call themselves "very conservative," Romney, with 44 percent support, more than doubled McCain's 20 percent, the same percentage as won by Mike Huckabee.

Self-described loyal Republicans, who made up 80 percent of primary voters, backed Romney over McCain by a slight 33-31 margin. But McCain crushed Romney, 41-23, among the remaining 20 percent who call themselves independents.

Columbia political scientist Robert Erikson noted than in contrast to earlier primaries, "clearly there is an increasingly ideological division between McCain and Romney, with Romney gaining among self-professed conservatives. The few liberals evidently love McCain. Even a week ago, the ideological divisions were flat. Voters must be learning their cues."

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McCain lost to Romney 27-35 among the 52 percent of pro-life Republican voters who said abortions should be illegal most or all of the time, while decisively winning, 43-26, among the relatively pro-choice 43 percent who said abortions should be legal some of the time or in all cases - in a contest in which all the major Republican candidates, except Mike Huckabee, had shaky anti-abortion credentials.

Ever since the election of 1964, the Republican Party has become the home of a majority of white voters. McCain, however, lost 31-33 to Romney among the 85 percent of the electorate that was white, while dominating, 51-15, among Latino Republicans. McCain, of all the Republican presidential candidates, is most in favor of the adoption of policies providing a path to citizenship for illegal immigrants.

The Republican Party is the dominant party among white Protestants. In the Florida Republican primary, Protestants made up 42 percent of those casting ballots. Romney beat McCain 37-29 among them.

To prevail, McCain had to win 38-28 among Catholics, many of them Hispanic.

In recent years, one of the major strengths of Republican presidential candidates has been their popularity among religiously observant voters -- those who attend services once a week or more.

McCain, however, lost to Romney among these religiously observant voters, 31 to 29. McCain beat Romney by a solid 42-33 margin among Republicans who go to church just "a few times a year," and he overwhelmed Romney 43-28 among those who said they never attend services at all.

Colby College government department chair L. Sandy Maisel said his analysis of the exit polls "leads me to question where the heart and soul of the GOP is. Romney seems to be splitting the Evangelical vote with Huckabee. He also is not getting all of the vote of those for whom economics is the key issue, splitting that with McCain. McCain is getting a huge portion of the military vote. All of that makes some sense, piece by piece, but if you put it together with the negative view of McCain by the most conservative elements of the party, of Huckabee by traditional, mainstream Republicans, and of Romney by many of those who think he is pandering to the social conservatives to get elected, then you have a mess for them, no matter who wins the nomination."

Brookings demographer William Frey argued that the shape of McCain's victory should help him in future contests:

"McCain has won the constituencies most reflective of voters outside the South: pro-abortion rights voters, minorities, non-churchgoers, and big urban and suburban residents. Most importantly, he won the fast growing counties in the middle of Florida where many Northerners of all backgrounds have recently moved. In short, he has won those Florida segments that are most reflective of the national Republican party, and many independents, not just the conservative South. This should bode well for his strong showing in the big urban coastal states, as well as growing interior western states on Super Tuesday."

Princeton political scientist Nolan McCarty pointed out that McCain was supposed to face an uphill struggle in Florida because it holds a "closed" primary limiting participation to registered Republicans: "This was supposed to hurt McCain, but the exit polls show that 17% of the Republican primary voters identify as independents and McCain carried them handily. If this pattern holds for other closed primary states, McCain should benefit."

In addition, McCain's more liberal stance on immigration probably helped him in Florida, producing a strong showing among Latinos, which, McCarty noted, "would bode well for him in the general election should he get the nomination" - although observers point to a distinction in political preferences between Cuban-Americans, who are numerous in Florida, and non-Cubans of Latin America and Caribbean ancestry who make up a majority of Hispanics nationally.

In a setback to Romney, who had campaigned stressing his economic expertise, the 45 percent of voters who said the economy is their top issue backed McCain over Romney, 38-32. "This is a pretty strong repudiation of Romney's campaign on his abilities as an economic manager," McCarty said.

McCain's Florida victory put him "well on his way to the nomination," said Martin Cohen of James Madison University. Looking toward the general election, Cohen noted "it was always said that McCain would be the perfect general election candidate but that he could never win the GOP nomination. Well, thanks to no unifying alternative and more of a willingness this time to kowtow to the core establishment groups....it looks like he will get the nomination....Many in the party are scared to death of McCain but you can't beat something with nothing and the Republicans had nothing this time."

Similarly, the American Enterprise Institute's Norman Ornstein was positive about McCain's prospects:

"No question that McCain's strength is among non-traditional Republican constituencies. But keep in mind that he did well among evangelicals, well among Cubans, well among veterans, and that this was still a closed GOP primary. So he has reason to gloat. If [Rudy] Giuliani now drops out [as is expected] and endorses McCain, it leaves Romney in a tough, but given his money, not insurmountable position."

Robert Y. Shapiro, a political scientist at Columbia, said the Republican exit poll data "confirms what came out in other states, that McCain draws independents and moderates, and, as to the anti-Bush voters and pro-abortion voters, it is clear they see McCain as an insurgent candidate who has distanced himself from the Bush administration as an independent thinker."

Looking as the exit polls for both the Democratic and Republican primaries, Columbia's David F. Weiman noted that Florida is a state ideally suited to the two winners: "Clearly Hillary and to a lesser extent McCain are the choice of the 60+ crowd. And in a state where they represent a striking 40+ percent of the electorate, they do very well." Erikson, in only partial jest, asked, "Is the typical McCain supporter an elderly non-Protestant white social-issue moderate?"

The exit polls were conducted by Edison Media Research and Mitofsky International for The Associated Press and the television networks.

As John McCain took a big step toward winning the nomination in Florida, the Republican Party looks increasingly likely to pass the torch to a candidate powered by decidedly un-Republican constituenci...
As John McCain took a big step toward winning the nomination in Florida, the Republican Party looks increasingly likely to pass the torch to a candidate powered by decidedly un-Republican constituenci...
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McCain is Bob Dole all over again; elderly war hero, long-time senator from a small state. Snooze.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:55 PM on 01/30/2008

6.5 years of being pro-Bush regressives and barely 1 year of being anti-bush regressives means that they are STILL pro-Bush regressives and are desperatly trying to save their shameful careers

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:52 PM on 01/30/2008
- semorg I'm a Fan of semorg 6 fans permalink

VS. Mccain, Obama is getting the momentum and is edging out Hillary...this is to show Obama, even without the name recognition of Hillary is doing better than her against the most like republican candidate. More reason democrats should rally behind him

http://rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/election_20082/2008_presidential_election/john_mccain_match_ups/election_2008_mccain_vs_clinton_and_obama

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:49 PM on 01/30/2008
- TLV I'm a Fan of TLV 117 fans permalink

I repeat - voters chose McCain because they did not have a Bush to choose from. Not because they are anti-Bush.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:42 PM on 01/30/2008
- Kundera I'm a Fan of Kundera 24 fans permalink

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

The latest Rasmussen Reports survey of Election 2008 shows Republican frontrunner Senator John McCain with single-digit leads over Democratic Senators Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama. McCain now leads Clinton 48% to 40%. He leads Barack Obama 47% to 41%.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:40 PM on 01/30/2008
- TLV I'm a Fan of TLV 117 fans permalink

McCain sure is smart, ain't he? Hyuk, hyuk, hyuk!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tu-tg1kQ8dk

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:34 PM on 01/30/2008
- Doofus I'm a Fan of Doofus 25 fans permalink
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There are supposedly about 6 significant factions among the Repos. The three main ones are religious Repos, capitalist Repos, and military-industrial Repos. And one of these is apt to refer to the other two as 'moderates', always meant in a negative way. Huckabee stands for the religious wing, Romney for the capitalists, McCain for the soldiers. When you think of Repo 'moderates', just remember 'Extremism in the defense of Liberty is no vice!', uttered by one of the last authentic Repo 'moderates'.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:32 PM on 01/30/2008
- poomplet I'm a Fan of poomplet 19 fans permalink
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I define the terms "undecided" and "independent". That said, moonbats really need to think twice about trying to label McCain as a "war monger".

No candidate can...or will...think longer & harder about putting troops in harms way than John McCain. Read the details about his captivity & character during the vietnam era. It's chilling how honorable he was in circumstances we cannot fathom. He also pubically slammed the way the military brass and polititians handled the vietnam war RIGHT after he was finally released.

Sure, as a polititian, he...along with most of congress..­.initially approved the Iraq war. But at this point, he's not supporting Bush as much as he's supporting the troops by making sure they have the funds and the numbers to get things done & then get out of there. He also cares about morale & not pubically slamming their cause...whatever he truly thinks about things. THAT'S why he won't join the "cut 'n run" parade & defends the war, not because he actually believes the war was necessary or that it was run properly!

I don't get why people judge candidates by what they say during a campaign moreso than their years of service/experience. I'm much more concerned about what's in their heart than the fact they might have flipped-flopped on some issues to make it through the JesusFreak gauntlet .

McCain IS a moderate! He's said in the past he supports Roe v. Wade, he's not a religious zealot, he's fiscally responsible, ethical and he has the right kind of experience(knows how the fed. govt ticks).

What bothers me is his age, and the fact I have no idea who he'd put on his slate. If it's a moderate...like Romney (same as McCain...his history shows his true colors)...I think I'm sold (DEFINITELY sold if Hillary gets the nod!).

Whatever...my point is, if progressives attempt to paint him as a war monger...that'll backfire when he lays out an eloquent argument that he will be the most cautious when it comes to committing troops to a conflict.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:22 PM on 01/30/2008
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It's always really bizarre to read about Republican "moderates"That just has to be a phenomenon of the coats,because I haven't met one in all my 44 years here in the Great Plains,nor the four years I lived in the Deep south.

And "Liberal" Republicans?That is beyond freaky.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:17 PM on 01/30/2008

If America wants more of the same Bush/Chaney war mongering Vote for McCain. Just wait until they show him singing "Bomb Iran". We'll see if independents truly lean towards ending our situation in Iraq and pushing into Iran. His hands have just as much blood on them as Bush, Chaney, Rove, and the rest of the war mongers. If the polls are right that most Americans do not support this war, he will fail.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:11 PM on 01/30/2008

Do anti-bush moderates not realize that McCain is just as much of a war mongerer as bush and cheney???? Incredible.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:55 AM on 01/30/2008

"What does he say? The jobs are never coming back, the illegals are never going home, but we're gonna have a lot more wars," Buchanan said of McCain. Scarborough remarked that McCain's "inviting" presidential platform for the fall consists of "less jobs and more wars":

Will McCain split the Republican Party?

http://www.youpolls.com/details.asp?pid=1657

.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:45 AM on 01/30/2008
- CindyKay I'm a Fan of CindyKay 17 fans permalink
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McCain Won Simply Because He Was Not the Slick MORMON Romney Or the Wannabe Gigilo Guiliani with a Whore for a Wife. End Of Story.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:44 AM on 01/30/2008
- NotWaldo I'm a Fan of NotWaldo 44 fans permalink
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"Wars, my friends, more wars!" If this madman becomes president, then we'll know the world is going to hell. But, it won't happen of course. I'm sure the good ol' USA will go back to dominating the world PEACEFULLY.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:40 AM on 01/30/2008
- helonias I'm a Fan of helonias 227 fans permalink
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Great, the hundred years in Iraq and even more wars candidate.

Which Jesus does he believe in?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:36 AM on 01/30/2008
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