McCain Struggles To Regain Footing

digg Share this on Facebook Huffpost - McCain Struggles To Regain Footing stumble reddit del.ico.us RSS

LIZ SIDOTI | July 5, 2008 07:39 PM EST | AP

Compare other versions »
I Like ItI Don’t Like It
Republican presidential candidate, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., talks with reporters aboard his campaign plane as his wife Cindy looks. McCain's referring to himself as an underdog may be an understatement: he trails Democrat Barack Obama in polls, organization and money, while trying to succeed a deeply unpopular fellow Republican in a year that favors Democrats. (AP Photo/LM Otero)

WASHINGTON — John McCain calls himself an underdog. That may be an understatement.

The GOP presidential candidate trails Democrat Barack Obama in polls, organization and money while trying to succeed a deeply unpopular fellow Republican in a year that favors Democrats. McCain also doesn't seem to have a coherent message let alone much of a strategy despite securing the nomination three months earlier than Obama.

"This is a tough race. We are behind. We are the underdog. That's what I like to be," the GOP nominee-in-waiting frequently tells donors these days, keenly aware not only of his woes but also his proven comeback ability: He won his party's nomination despite the implosion of his campaign last summer.

One year later, and now in the general election, McCain's troubles are so acute that he recently gave senior adviser Steve Schmidt "full operational control" of the day-to-day campaign and, effectively, scaled back the duties of campaign manager Rick Davis. The shift in responsibilities came after weeks of Republican quibbling that McCain had not adequately made the transition for the fall.

"The frustration is there's no big theme around which to build a winning campaign," said Steve Lombardo, a Republican pollster. "They need a big strategic message that will show the differences between the two campaigns, and allow for a win."

Hope is far from lost: The election is still four months away. The national conventions and the presidential debates are upcoming. Conservative evangelical leaders skeptical of McCain are now coalescing around him. The race remains competitive. And, Obama's campaign is far from flawless.

McCain also is beefing up his staff with more presidential campaign veterans under the guidance of Schmidt, a top aide in President Bush's re-election effort and the operative who led Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger to a come-from-behind victory in California two years ago.

The campaign will try to showcase its efforts to restore discipline next week when McCain announces a "jobs first" economic plan and tours competitive states.

Story continues below
advertisement

For now, GOP insiders are cautious as they watch for improvement _ and they should be.

The political environment is dreadful for the GOP, with Bush's approval rating at low levels as the country teeters economically and fights two wars.

Asked Saturday what he thinks about McCain's apparent pride in underdog status, Obama told reporters traveling with him: "Two years ago, John McCain was the putative Republican nominee who has been part of the Washington establishment for years and who touts all his Washington experience, versus me. So the notion that somehow I'm the heavy favorite in this race belies recent political history and a lot of American history. So, we've got a lot of work to do."

Still, compared with McCain's campaign struggles, Obama is seemingly skating along, visiting states Bush won four years ago and courting traditional GOP supporters with his core message: "Change We Can Believe In."

Nonetheless, the Illinois senator says, "I'm going to have to be a better candidate" and is mindful of his own vulnerabilities.

There are many, not the least of which is trying to become the first black president of a country where racism still runs deep. The GOP-fueled liberal elitist label also could stick on this Harvard-educated Chicagoan.

And, Obama also may be undercutting his claim to be a straight-shooting, new-politics candidate as he repeatedly breaks with his liberal base on various issues to aggressively move to appeal to the center of the electorate.

National polls vary widely, but they have one commonality: None show McCain ahead of Obama. And, on voters' most important issues, McCain trails on every subject but Iraq and terrorism. He also lags in key states, including Bush-won Colorado and Ohio.

When it comes to message and strategy, McCain has appeared to flounder.

He hasn't settled on one theme and can't seem to stick with a particular line of argument in favor of his candidacy for more than a couple days. His attempts to derail Obama are scattershot; the campaign simply takes advantages of openings Obama creates rather than creating a negative narrative against the Democrat. And, McCain's fundraising events have driven his campaign schedule, often putting him in solid Republican states instead of swing states likely to decide the election.

As the sleepy summer pre-convention window opens, Obama is running TV ads in 18 states while McCain focuses on 11 for now and the Republican National Committee bolsters his efforts in the Great Lakes region.

At the same time, McCain, 71, is working to match Obama's organization. For now, McCain's campaign is roughly 300-strong compared with Obama's 1,000-person plus operation.

Obama had a campaign in just about every state during the long Democratic primary, and he has started bolstering the remnants of those existing networks. His aides also boast of a hefty grass-roots organization, a "persuasion army" of allies who will reach out to neighbors, friends and relatives. That's reminiscent of Bush's 2004 campaign.

Conversely, McCain's ground-game operation has been slow-moving; staffers weren't dispatched in earnest to key states until last month _ even though the GOP primary ended in March. The RNC has fewer than 100 offices with just about the same number of field staffers. The campaign, itself, has 11 regional campaign managers who, in turn, have brought on nearly 100 staff members as part of a much-maligned, decentralized structure.

To return power to headquarters, Schmidt is hiring a national political director and a national field director to oversee ground-game efforts, and is promising to add hundreds more field staff and open more local GOP offices.

But all that takes money, and here, too, McCain trails.

Obama has 1.5 million donors and had raised more than $287 million by the end of May. McCain has far fewer donors and had raised $115 million. May was Obama's worst fundraising month of the year. He raised $22 million, to the $21 million McCain brought in during his best fundraising month.

Still, McCain and Obama entered June with virtually the same amount of cash available for the rest of the summer, $33 million for Obama to $31.6 million for McCain.

But McCain probably will feel the financial pinch this fall.

Unlike Obama, McCain will accept nearly $85 million in public financing and the spending limits that come with it. The Democrat can raise and spend at will.

Said Phil Musser, a former Republican Governors Association executive director: "There are a lot of miles to go before we get to Election Day, and McCain is in his finest form when he's the underdog."

The candidate had better hope that rings true once again.

___

EDITOR'S NOTE _ Liz Sidoti covers the presidential campaign and has covered national politics since 2003.

WASHINGTON — John McCain calls himself an underdog. That may be an understatement. The GOP presidential candidate trails Democrat Barack Obama in polls, organization and money while trying to s...
WASHINGTON — John McCain calls himself an underdog. That may be an understatement. The GOP presidential candidate trails Democrat Barack Obama in polls, organization and money while trying to s...
Filed by Nick Sabloff  |  Report Corrections
 
Comments
327
Pending Comments
0
iPhone App Promo

Want to reply to a comment? Hint: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to

View Comments:
Page: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Next › Last » (9 pages total)
- ComnCents I'm a Fan of ComnCents 3 fans permalink
photo

Mac Grump’s biggest problem is his envy of O ’ s teeth.

Seriously, Mac Old’s IQ is about half of O ’ s. How is he going to fix that before the debates ?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:46 AM on 07/08/2008
- nativeeyes I'm a Fan of nativeeyes 5 fans permalink

McCain=10x worse than Bush.

Women, God help you!!!

Our Troops, see you in 10 years and way to many more dead...


I hope not,


Obama 08'

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:54 AM on 07/07/2008
- openhand I'm a Fan of openhand 36 fans permalink
photo

Someone please pin him down to a date by when he wants to be ahead in the polls. If he commits himself to a date and doesnt reach it there will be panic in the tent.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:27 PM on 07/06/2008

The fact that Johnny McCan't is the republicans presidential hopeful merely highlights what a
pathetic state that party is in. It is over for them, so over!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:16 PM on 07/06/2008
- edpell I'm a Fan of edpell 3 fans permalink

McCain has three groups on his side anti-gay, anti-abortion, and old white folks that are afraid of Obama's skin color. This gets him a solid 35% all he needs is 1 out of 4 of the remaining voters.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:34 PM on 07/06/2008

saddest part is that is true....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:30 PM on 07/06/2008
- VSamuels I'm a Fan of VSamuels 66 fans permalink

Don't pin the 'afraid of Obama's skin color' carnard only on old white folks. There are plenty of Americans who suffer with this disorder throughout this country; most just hid it a little better and or are more tolerant because of the current circumstances in our society. Those who for instance claim to have black friends for instance, aren't necessarily O.K. with having a black person govern their lives or run their government. There are various shades of implicit racism in American society and I would submit that McCain may have a solid 42 percent of these folks.

Those who call for the end of Affirmative Action deny the reality of racism's on-going part in our society, but it is a real factor which has always been a part of Americana, just like baseball, hotdogs and Mom's apple pie. And, it will play a central role in the fate of both Obama and McCain, inspite of the MSM failure to acknowledge the role of the many 'hate factories' spread through America.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:33 AM on 07/07/2008

Okaaaay, let's not compare McCain to anyone else. Let's simply compare McCain to McCain.

Hello!!!! Physically, Mentally, Emotionally, Professionally, Morally, Socially, Expediently, the capacity to Lead OR be Lead, etc.

That's the test this country WILL vote on.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:01 PM on 07/06/2008
- MetryJen I'm a Fan of MetryJen 3 fans permalink

What is this article, the AP's tip sheet for the McCain campaign?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:09 AM on 07/06/2008
photo

Regain? That would imply he was once sure footed, basically he is still an unbalanced radical conservative republican warmonger.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:17 AM on 07/06/2008
photo

Reactionary.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:26 PM on 07/06/2008

We need to get our focus off the is guy and on to Obama and all the changes we want and need. Get the focus off then negative and onto the positive. Remember "Anything But Bush"? It strengthened him and further weakened Kerry, Gore etc - partly because these guys had no spine for the fight, but also because it put all the focus on WHAT WE DONT WANT. You get what you concentrate on. Law of Attraction.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:35 AM on 07/06/2008
- imsosure I'm a Fan of imsosure 30 fans permalink
photo

He started off in the deep end, what footing?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:26 AM on 07/06/2008
- Tropiholic I'm a Fan of Tropiholic 20 fans permalink

the deewb who slipped on the banana peel

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:21 AM on 07/06/2008
photo

John McCain is running for Bob Dole's first term.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:07 AM on 07/06/2008
- VOTER I'm a Fan of VOTER 186 fans permalink
photo

Daily Kos has a new name for McCain's Campaign Jet.

THE LAPDOG EXPRESS!

How appropriate!

There is a SPECIAL section, reserved only for SPECIAL reporters, who have EARNED their
SPECIAL seats where they can interview McSame. (Writing only SPECIAL articles about McSame)

Sooooo Sweet!

The AP writer, LIZ SIDOTI, of this article has earned HER SPECIAL SEAT by bringing McSame
his favorite Dunkin Donuts and Coffee with cream and sugar. (Just the way he likes it!)

Again................. Soooooooooo sweet!

Imagine Liz researched the Old Man enough to find our how he likes his coffee but stopped there.

You will not find facts and figures about McCain in her AP articles unless she has a strong reason to
build up the Old Man. LIke this one going for the sympathy voters by playing McCain as the Hero Underdog.

Liz and other AP reporters are on an ATTACK OBAMA MODE AND PITY PLUS PRAISE MCCAIN MODE, while ignoring McCain's obvious flaws, distortions and lies.

What will the MSM do when:

THE LARGEST NUMBER OF VOTERS IN RECORDED HISTORY TURN OUT TO VOTE FOR OBAMA AND HE BECOMES THE NEXT PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES?

Stop by the nearest Dunkin Donuts shop for a group session?

If so, Liz, you have been warned, DO NOT WEAR A TERRORIST SCARF!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:37 AM on 07/06/2008
photo

Good thing he likes to be the underdog.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:08 AM on 07/06/2008

let's see how he likes underbus.....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:20 AM on 07/06/2008
- mamacat I'm a Fan of mamacat 151 fans permalink

McCain's message: "I love George Bush, and I pledge to be even more like Bush than Bush."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:49 AM on 07/06/2008
Page: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Next › Last » (9 pages total)
Comments are closed for this entry

 You must be logged in to comment. Log in  or connect with 

Connect