The McCain/Bush Effect on Red States

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Posted June 30, 2008 | 12:59 AM (EST)



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When John McCain clinched the GOP nomination, it was widely believed that his relative popularity among moderates and independents may well save the party from a Bush-caused bloodbath in November. Things, however, do not quite seem to be working out like that: Texas, Georgia, Indiana, North Carolina, Alaska, Mississippi, and South Carolina are toss-ups or barely leaning to McCain, and dozens of House and Senate races in even the reddest of states are in play.

The horror of George W. Bush's presidency pushed away voters in the political center and now McCain is finishing the job, causing shrinkage at the far-right of the GOP while compounding the losses among independents. Rather than rallying disaffected Republicans and unaffiliated voters, McCain's candidacy is turning off the few remaining GOP loyalists. The result: a party with which only 25% of voters identify.

Much was made this week of the positive reviews McCain received from some right-wingers for his stance on judicial appointments ("Conservatives Warm to McCain," claims one headline.) That the GOP and the media are grasping at such straws at this point of the game says more about Republican desperation than it does about McCain's conservative appeal. The Arizona Senator's bizarre general election tack to the right does not exactly make him look confident that he has the GOP base covered, which is understandable considering the loathing directed at him as recently as this year's primary. And of course it further alienates independents just as Barack Obama is moving to the center (an expected and presumably necessary irritant.)

By nominating McCain, GOP voters perhaps thought that they got the best of both worlds: an elder statesman AND a maverick, one who could win over the party faithful and reach out to more independent-minded voters. Instead, they got Bob Dole, just older, less consistent and even more disliked by conservatives. Republicans voted in a man who they thought would lead to victory the very party he spent most of his career pretending to distance himself from. It could have been a genius move in a year such as this, but it would have also required a candidate who was truly independent, clear-headed and endowed with basic campaigning skills.

When a Republican spokesperson recently said that "there are no safe Republican seats in this election," she was talking about Congressional races, but she may as well as have been describing the presidential election. It is increasingly clear that the Arizona Senator can rely on very few safe havens (perhaps even including his own state.) At this point, McCain can only count on 56 (!) electoral votes as being solidly in his camp (ie, those where he leads in most recent polling by more than 10 points). By contrast, Obama can count on close to 200 (270 are needed.) It is hard to exaggerate the difficulty of the task ahead for McCain, even this long before the election. He is running 15 to 20% behind Bush in a whole series of red states where independents have not jumped back on his bandwagon, and where many of Bush's core supporters appear to be planning to sit it out (or vote for Bob Barr, the Libertarian candidate). McCain will not win by relying on reluctantly loyal GOP support in Wyoming, Utah, Nebraska, Kentucky, Kansas (barely), Nebraska, Tennessee, Oklahoma and Idaho, the only states where he is comfortably ahead. Meanwhile, Obama has basically already closed the deal in the entire Northeast and large swaths of Midwestern and Pacific ex-swing states.

Much will happen over the next few months but there is nothing that McCain can do to rectify the situation. There is no reason for anyone to vote for a Republican in 2008, let alone for the party's current presidential candidate, except for those voters who hate abortion and gay people more than war and recession. They exist, sadly, but not likely in numbers large enough to make a difference. Bush has made a laughing stock of those who favored Republicans' foreign and economic policies only to see a GOP administration get the US mired in nation-building and expanding deficits, and create a bigger, more powerful, more expensive and more intrusive Federal government. McCain is hardly the man to put the country back on the track where 78% thing it belongs: the Iraq war is as much his as it is Bush's, and he is equally as inept on economic issues.

McCain will have to count on some dreadful mistake by Obama, just as Hillary Clinton did, clearly not a winning strategy for her, and she is an incomparably better politician and campaigner than McCain could ever hope to be. And so, as Obama pumps millions of dollars of campaign money into Alaska, Georgia and Mississippi, states that Bush won by an average of 20+% in 2004, McCain will be in a penny-pinching, friendless and desperate quest to recapture some of that maverick magic that could have served him so well right about now.

 
 

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- demigod See Profile I'm a Fan of demigod

As one who has gone into deep depressions following the last several Presidential elections, I cannot count on my fellow Americans to make an intelligent decision. I can only say it is gratifying to finally see so many people turning on the Republicans after all the damage they have done. It would be so SWEET to see them go down in flames in November. Obama was not my candidate, but he is the Democratic candidate, so I will vote for him. At least he's against the Iraq war. But if he DOESN'T get us out of there, I'll be demonstrating against HIM.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:40 PM on 07/02/2008
- ched See Profile I'm a Fan of ched

Nice. I'm gonna print this out and read it as a bedtime story, or perhaps a prayer.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:29 AM on 07/02/2008
- oafishcad See Profile I'm a Fan of oafishcad

The Republicans aren't dummies, just their candidates are. Governor Bush was an easily beatable joke. The joke was on the Democrats and the USA. Look at the recent Gen. Clark mess. The GOP got the media to report McCain's spin, basically a lie, as truth. They have only begun. People believe what they hear on the news. If the news is going to dutifully report GOP spin (lies) as truth, for the next 4 months, we could easily have President McCain.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:58 PM on 07/01/2008
- elizaW See Profile I'm a Fan of elizaW

You are underestimating the Republicans in this country. They may not all be thrilled with McCain but they know that Obama would be a disaster for them. There is no way that Barack Obama is going to be able to sell himself to that crowd no matter how far to the center he moves. The Democrats always make the same mistake. They nominate someone who has a certain appeal and then through the course of the campaign turn that person into a joke. This is what the Democrats have been doing since 1979. Bill Clinton escaped that fate because of his considerable intelligence and charisma and because Americans felt they could trust him. Obama does not inspire trust and that's a big problem for the Democrats whether they want to deal with it or not.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:11 PM on 07/01/2008
- Anthrofreak See Profile I'm a Fan of Anthrofreak

And the flip-flopping fish out of water McCain is more trustworthy?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:21 PM on 07/01/2008
- whiskeytangofoxtrot451 See Profile I'm a Fan of whiskeytangofoxtrot451

You're missing the point. Republican voters don't decide the race, the independents do. The more McCain embraces the failed policies of Bush, the more he loses the independents.

If McCain wants to win, he'll have to do more than just claim to be a maverick. He'll have to start acting like one. Tough to do when his last year's voting record was something on the order of 99% in line with the Bush administration.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:54 PM on 07/01/2008
- loislane88 See Profile I'm a Fan of loislane88

95% in 2007 - 100% so ofar in 2008!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:49 PM on 07/01/2008
- flatus See Profile I'm a Fan of flatus

It is good to know that even in the red states common sense has a chance to show itself

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:32 PM on 07/01/2008
- SeanGardner See Profile I'm a Fan of SeanGardner

Hey Paul...once again, you rock.

I predicted months ago that Obama would crush McCain in the West and Northeast. And though people may not believe it, Obama (with the unintended support of Bob Barr) will win Georgia.

I also believe Obama will win North Carolina and Virginia, and I believe Mississippi is also in the cards. Montana is also in the cards.

Throughout the year, political pundits like Mark Halperin questioned Obama's path to victory, because he did not have the typical map of BLUE STATES and a few PURPLE STATES. For all of the talk about how important Ohio and Florida are, if Obama wins every state Kerry won, and won Nevada, Colorado, and New Mexico (3 states he's leading in) then he won't need Ohio and Florida.

In fact, I bet Obama will win at least 30 states this November. Obama knows what he's doing and I truly believe we will be looking at landslide victories for Obama.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:00 AM on 07/01/2008
- MPeter See Profile I'm a Fan of MPeter

Yeah! What an uplifting article! Thank you Paul. After being bombarded by articles that second-guess Obama's strategy for days on end, I am happy that you submitted such a great piece. If only the activists who support Obama could cut him some slack and allow him and his talented team to strategize and bring this thing home!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:48 PM on 07/01/2008
- rinpochet See Profile I'm a Fan of rinpochet

At one period of insanity I said that I wouldn't vote for Clinton if she were the nominee but not true. I would vote for any Democrati. There is no way that I will risk the future of the Supreme Court to the Republicans once more. Apart from that, there is war and the enconomy. Not to mention the world-wide hatred of this country now. I have never felt so gloomy about the state of this country and I am no spring chicken!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:36 AM on 07/01/2008
- AxelDC See Profile I'm a Fan of AxelDC

I felt the same way, thinking that McCain would be better than Clinton. The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse on the SC reminded me why we cannot elect any more Republicans for a long, long while.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:08 PM on 07/01/2008
- swift_goat_pet_for_truth See Profile I'm a Fan of swift_goat_pet_for_truth

I am not an Obama fan, although I will vote for him.

Two things I do know.

After 12 years, the GOP has demonstrated they know nothing about running an economy or handling the dollar.

And a absence of economic security will hurt America more than a couple thousand terrorist, no matter what they do.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:20 PM on 06/30/2008
- pbfishtaco See Profile I'm a Fan of pbfishtaco

Actually they knew enough to borrow valuable dollars, and pay back in cheap dollars.
And we're the ones left holding the bag.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:06 PM on 07/01/2008
- cambridgedude See Profile I'm a Fan of cambridgedude

i know it may feel like it's been forever, but King George has only been in power for 7 1/2 years, not 12. Otehr than that, you're spot on.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:35 PM on 07/01/2008
- KHAAANNN See Profile I'm a Fan of KHAAANNN

The Republicans took over Congress in 1996, that is what he is referring to.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:04 PM on 07/01/2008
- whiskeytangofoxtrot451 See Profile I'm a Fan of whiskeytangofoxtrot451

I think he was including the 12 years the GOP controlled Congress, too.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:54 PM on 07/01/2008
- djmc831 See Profile I'm a Fan of djmc831

i just don't know. i have one friend who is harping about obama being anti semetic (which i have only heard thru the same rumor mill that he is muslim). she is planning on not voting for president at all. i keep telling her "two words: supreme court!"....but she is like a dog with a bone.

i wonder how many others will be falling into these traps. the public can be rather stupid...how else can one explain american idol?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:23 PM on 06/30/2008
- brizzle See Profile I'm a Fan of brizzle

The older I get, the more I realize that people are fundamentally stupid. Most people do not know what a syllogism is or how such a thing might help your reasoning skills. However, people continue in their ignorance, pretending what they believe makes sense...when, in reality, most of our ideas are unfounded by anything except some vague feeling and a misunderstood train of logic.

Obama is not anti-semetic. Here's everything you want to know about Obama's views on Israel, direct from his website. Amazing what a resource his website can be:

http://www.pdfdownload.org/pdf2html/pdf2html.php?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.barackobama.com%2Fissues%2Fforeignpolicy%2F..%2F..%2Fpdf%2FIsraelFactSheet.pdf&images=yes

Also, to Mr. Jenkins: good piece.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:16 PM on 07/01/2008
- exxman See Profile I'm a Fan of exxman

We get the government we deserve.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:03 PM on 07/01/2008
- normathumb See Profile I'm a Fan of normathumb

This aint nothing but counting chickens. I wouldn't be so quick to write off McCain and the Republicans. There is so much that can happen between now and the one poll that counts. The last thing we need is for people to get comfortable and think it is in the bag and they don't need to vote. Truman won in '48 precisely for this reason. Many Republicans were so certain of victory, they didn't bother to vote. Most people still aren't paying attention. It will only be after Labor Day that a clear picture will begin to develop. This is no time for complacency and hubris so let's not start congratulating ourselves on our landslide just yet.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:54 PM on 06/30/2008
- wishiknew See Profile I'm a Fan of wishiknew

You ain't whistling dixie, normathumb! ahahhaha good post.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:53 PM on 06/30/2008
- Grunty1 See Profile I'm a Fan of Grunty1

"an elder statesman AND a maverick"

I think you are giving the GOP primary voters too much credit. Mc'Cain won by default, because all of the other GOP candidates proved themselves to be lousy campaigners (G'uillani, T'hompson) or outright liars (R'omney).

Mc'Cain holds both of these loser qualities in spades, but he was able to keep them quit because he ran out of money and shut his mouth!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:03 PM on 06/30/2008
- americanalien See Profile I'm a Fan of americanalien

After almost 8 years of self-induced coma throughout the reign of the Bush Regime, America is finally waking up. Americans are absolutely shell-shocked to realize the havoc that Bush and his criminal gang have wreaked upon this once great land. They are ready to take their country back and McCain's tricks will not distract them.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:02 AM on 06/30/2008
- wm1066 See Profile I'm a Fan of wm1066

I don't see that America was asleep, we just trusted our elected Reps. And we thought in 2006 the Dems would fight for us. But we got Reid and Pelosi. And they haven't done the job of protecting America. So now almost every American is hurting.
We need to throw out the Republicans AND the DINO's.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:25 PM on 07/01/2008
- thismachinekillsfascists See Profile I'm a Fan of thismachinekillsfascists

Are you kidding? America was FAST asleep, lulled there by Faux news and American Idol. Too many people couldn't give a shit about whether or not they were being lied to.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:12 PM on 07/01/2008
- B1uBall00n See Profile I'm a Fan of B1uBall00n

The dems have a 51 majority in the Senate and thats with McCain's buddy Joe. So they don't have a 60 vote majority to override any Bush veto. So they'd need to get republicans on board. Do you think that's easy? If so, then maybe you should run.

Blame Reid and Pelosi all you want, but we haven't exactly given them the "majority" they need to do anything productive.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:05 PM on 07/01/2008
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