AP: McCain Faces Uphill Struggle In November

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LIZ SIDOTI | March 4, 2008 09:59 PM EST | AP

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Republican presidential hopeful Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., is surrounded by reporters as he answers their questions in the back room of his campaign bus, "Straight Talk", upon arrival in Dallas, Texas, Tuesday afternoon, March 4, 2008. Voters in Texas, Ohio, Rhode Island and Vermont go to the polls Tuesday in their state's presidential primaries. (AP Photo/Stephan Savoia)

WASHINGTON — John McCain's last-man-standing strategy prevailed. Now, on to the general election and the hurdles that come with it.

"I do not underestimate the significance nor the size of the challenge," the Republican nominee-in-waiting told the Associated Press on Tuesday, looking to the next chapter of his presidential quest.

A significant challenge is right.

McCain clinched the nomination Tuesday, surpassing the requisite 1,191 GOP delegates as voters in Ohio, Vermont, Rhode Island and Texas put him over the threshold. Next up for the party and its new standard-bearer will be convincing a public craving change to keep a Republican in the White House in the midst of a drawn-out Iraq war and a sluggish economy.

That's a daunting task by any measure.

But several factors further complicate McCain's run.

Approaching age 72 this year, McCain would be the oldest president ever elected and is certain to face doubts and questions that come with that distinction. His offbeat humor and occasional temper can be grating to even those who know him best. And, his habit of breaking with the GOP to work with those across the aisle irks the conservative wing of the party that he'll need in the fall.

Conversely, the Democratic Party is highly energized and will have a history-making nominee _ either the first female in Hillary Rodham Clinton or the first black in Barack Obama _ calling for a new direction after eight years of Republican rule by the unpopular President Bush.

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"With that scenario I'd have to withdraw my nomination," McCain joked to reporters recently on his campaign bus, laughing when one laid out the obstacles facing him and the party. "That scenario's so bleak!"

So it seems.

Becoming serious, McCain insisted he's undeterred.

"I, frankly, like where I am," he said. "I do not try to understate in any way the magnitude of the challenge we face. But I'm confident that we can present the choices in such a way that we can win."

The Arizona senator claims he can make a compelling argument to what he says continues to be a right-of-center country, despite GOP losses at all electoral levels in 2006 as well as a headwind _ and fundraising _ that overwhelmingly favors Democrats.

People, he says, will have a choice between a conservative Republican and a liberal Democrat _ a signal that the coming months will be framed primarily by ideology as he casts his Democratic rivals as big-government, soft-on-security liberals.

He frequently points to hypothetical head-to-head polls that show him in close contention _ if not leading _ Obama or Clinton across the country and claims that his long reputation as a Republican reformer during his 20-plus years in Washington can satisfy the public's call for change.

Maybe so.

But on a fundamental level, McCain simply being a Republican makes it difficult to argue that he can put the country on a different path _ as polls show the public clearly wants _ than the Republican president he would succeed and with whom he agrees on big-ticket issues such as Iraq and taxes.

Like Bush, he says troops should stay and the president's tax cuts should be made permanent.

Already, Democrats are casting him as a continuation of Bush's eight-year reign.

"I don't want ... four more years of George Bush and I think that's what John McCain offers us," says Howard Dean, the Democratic Party chairman.

McCain's expected elevation to GOP nominee _ and upcoming difficult general election campaign _ is a remarkable conclusion to his rocky primary campaign.

After losing his first presidential bid to Bush eight years ago, McCain began his second campaign as the presumed front-runner for the GOP nomination _ and sought early on to position himself as the anointed 2008 nominee in an extraordinarily crowded field.

With no vice president in the running and no obvious heir to Bush, McCain seemed the closest thing to the next in line for the nomination in a party that has a long history of giving the nod to the Republican whose turn is up.

When he started his campaign, he melded veterans of Bush's back-to-back successful elections with his own longtime loyalists to build a behemoth national campaign. He courted the party establishment he had a long record of spurning, and there was an all-aboard feel as the McCain train started out of the station in late 2006.

But he ended up squandering any advantage he had then early on. Political, financial and organizational turmoil rocked the campaign over the next six months and left it in tatters.

Nevertheless, he pressed on. He argued that the field was so flawed that he had as good a chance as any to emerge the nominee.

In the end, he persevered and came back from the brink of political death against all odds.

He hopes he can defy them again in the fall.

____

Liz Sidoti covers the presidential election for the Associated Press.

WASHINGTON — John McCain's last-man-standing strategy prevailed. Now, on to the general election and the hurdles that come with it. "I do not underestimate the significance nor the size of the ...
WASHINGTON — John McCain's last-man-standing strategy prevailed. Now, on to the general election and the hurdles that come with it. "I do not underestimate the significance nor the size of the ...
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- Colmore I'm a Fan of Colmore 46 fans permalink

The MSM will cover the Rezko trial relentlessly. Forgot about McCain's girlfriend, plus the lobbyists running his campaign. Had he been a democratic front runner, he would have been ripped to shreds by the media. The man is too old, too flawed, too crooked and not too healthy. Watch for Jeb to appear at the last minute. The fix is already in. Why do you think the "Royal Bush" endorsed McCain? They never do anything unless there is something in it for them.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:15 AM on 03/05/2008

Still trying to tout that "girlfriend" story that was debunked? Don't you ever get tired of bringing up the same old tricks? I thought libs were above that.

And for the record, lobbyists run all of the elections. Hillary is obvious, Obama's campaign will be under the microscope after he finishes off Hillary.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:22 AM on 03/05/2008

Libel - it's the crutch of the Clinton Party!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:24 AM on 03/05/2008
- MACS I'm a Fan of MACS permalink

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Both of the Democratic candidates out drew the entire republican party in all primaries last night. This does not bode well for the neocons in November.
.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:47 AM on 03/05/2008
- Wilbur I'm a Fan of Wilbur 25 fans permalink

I wish I could share your optimism. From my past experiences in seeing how elections unfold, what voters do in the primaries often gets reversed come the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November. If Obama gets the Dem's nod, the GOP Slime Machine will raise fears about his inexperience, and they will insinuate that he is a Muslim, or at least is in sympathy with them. If HRC gets the nod, the GOP/SM will push its "Hate the Clintons" buttons non-stop to roll out all of the innuendoes, lies and distortions it has in computer files. This will engender doubts and fears in many voters who pulled the levers for Obama or HRC in the primaries, particularly in swing states like Ohio, Pennsylvania and others.

I've seen this happen too many times before to think that it'll be different this time around. Americans by and large are far from the brightest beads on the rosary!

Wilbur

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:15 AM on 03/05/2008

There is little incentive for the Republicans to vote now since McCain has basically had the nomination since Romeny dropped out. Add bad weather to that, and its reasonable to see a lower voter turn-out.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:24 AM on 03/05/2008
- gevan I'm a Fan of gevan 19 fans permalink

On the seventy-fifth anniversary of Franklin Roosevet's inauguration, the former Navy flyer (born in FDR's 1st term) clinched the GOP nomination. With only twenty-six weeks until the convention votes his main job now is not to die (or have a stroke--or something).

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:46 AM on 03/05/2008
- nippersdad I'm a Fan of nippersdad 29 fans permalink

My friends: For the next eight months McCain will be claiming to represent the forces of change by not wanting to get out of Iraq, not wanting to change Bush preferred tax policy, not wanting to change Bush environmental or energy policies and defending Republicans from charges of corruption. This in the face of rising consumer prices due to inflation, a falling dollar, Bank bailouts, bad news on the international front, Republican pol convictions and debt contraints on popular public programs.

My friends: He has alienated the Republican social conservatives, the fiscal conservatives and the roid rage conservatives. He is left with the liberal Republicans and some independents. No where near enough to defraud an election a la 2000 and 2004. If he gets a third of the vote he will be damn lucky.

My friends: McCain's only chance is that liberal Dems and independents are so disgusted with the DLC Congress and Presidential Candidates that they pick this year for a protest vote.

Note to the dem candidates: Now is the time to get more progressive, not less so. If Dems give immunity to the Bush Administration, I will be voting for the Greens. I doubt that I will be alone.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:34 AM on 03/05/2008
- iPolitics I'm a Fan of iPolitics 33 fans permalink

McCain might not need to go up-the-hill. It's likely that the Dems are going to drop down to his level.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:27 AM on 03/05/2008

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Have you heard about McCain's health plan?

Its to live until the nomination
.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:14 AM on 03/05/2008

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The headline doesn't make sense...

How can it be an uphill struggle when he's already over-the-hill?
.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:09 AM on 03/05/2008
- forpeace I'm a Fan of forpeace 325 fans permalink
photo

*

Okay My Friends ......... this is McCane's 3 AM in the morning Ad.

http://www.brasschecktv.com/page/284.html

*

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:02 AM on 03/05/2008
- baylaw73 I'm a Fan of baylaw73 27 fans permalink

It's nothing a little election fraud won't fix.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:59 AM on 03/05/2008
photo

If McCain even makes it to November. Every time the guy speaks he sounds like he's half dead already.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:06 AM on 03/05/2008
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The media pushed the conservatives to Juan McAmnesty, and pretty much ignored the other candidates. The last week, stories start to come out about Juan about indescresions. Now it's an uphill battle.

The media pushed the liberals to Obama and Hillary while ignoring the other candidates who were better qualified.

The media used to report news. Now they are creating their own stories.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:56 PM on 03/04/2008
- Wilbur I'm a Fan of Wilbur 25 fans permalink

You hit the nail dead center, askmeificare. BINGO!!!!!

Wilbur

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:17 AM on 03/05/2008
- BOfever I'm a Fan of BOfever 2 fans permalink

Interesting story from a liberal persepective. In reality, after another Clinton win tonight she might just hang around until June where the Dems continue ripping each other a new one while McCain sits back and strengthens his base. In October, McCain may just need to give the Democratic nominee one final shove if the Dems go too far to just get the nomination.

Hillary has 50% negatives across the country, Obama is just starting to be covered as a real candidate and it can't help that the Rezko trial is just getting underway.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:34 PM on 03/04/2008

The Democratic Party lost this one Independent tonight their shenanagans and superdelegate- make up- the rules as you go along policy- I'm for McCain now..

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:24 PM on 03/04/2008

.

Good.

One less troll to fret over.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:11 AM on 03/05/2008
- rjean I'm a Fan of rjean 4 fans permalink

so whats new about that longisland­....the dems always make their rules as they go along...

may chaos be the theme song all summer....­..

ride on mccain....­..youre the only voice of reason in the mix.....an­d that is stretching it....

it is a hold your nose and vote election..­.....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:20 AM on 03/05/2008

How can he lose? He was endorsed by Hillary Clinton!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:19 PM on 03/04/2008
- dax49 I'm a Fan of dax49 18 fans permalink

don't worry mc cain, we catholics will be as supportive of you as you have been to us.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:05 PM on 03/04/2008
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