Over Before it Began?
There may be little John McCain can do at this point. And maybe it's been that way all along.
Oct. 15, 2008--Historians may look back at this election and decide that the outcome was never really in doubt. The political fundamentals were so clear and so unchanging long before the real contest began, throughout nearly the entire second-half of the Bush presidency.
The war, the economy and the GOP mismanagement of their congressional powers and an incredibly unpopular president may have made it almost inevitable: The Republicans were going to lose. The particulars of the current election—economic chaos, an efficient, mistake-free, flush Democratic campaign and a Republican one opposite in every way—have done nothing to change those fundamentals.
Of course, history is for tomorrow.
Today, no matter what the polls look like, those who genuinely believe that the race is over make up a minority of Americans, and those willing to say that it's over are a tiny minority of that minority. In part, those unwilling to call the race now are just being careful with their history. To believe the most likely outcome is to be comfortable with the idea that a Democrat, who happens to be a black man, is going to prevail, inevitably, over a genuine American war hero, who is white and who comes from a kind of American royalty, with a father and grandfather who were both 4-star admirals in the U.S. Navy.
Many Democrats can't bring themselves to believe that Obama will not find a way to lose in the way that John Kerry and Al Gore did. Many black people cannot fathom that the America they grew up in, rife with prejudice and racial hostility, is on the verge of electing a black president. Black Democrats, and there are a lot of them, are doubly anxious. So fundamentals be damned.
"I just see Dewey and Truman, all over again," says one of my New York friends who spends all of his time reading the swing state polls.
"My mind tells me we can win," says one Democratic operative who got her start in politics on the triumphant Clinton campaign of 1992 and has been in withdrawal since. "But my heart won't let me go there."
John McCain sought to shore up his base this week, by playing the we're-down-but-not-out card. "Senator Obama is measuring the drapes and planning with Speaker Pelosi and Senator Reid to raise taxes ... we've got them just where we want them," he told a crowd in Virginia Beach. According to the polls, McCain is trailing in Virginia, which has not been won by a Democrat since the LBJ landslide of 1964. He also trails in key states that George Bush won in 2000 and 2004—North Carolina, Colorado, Ohio, Missouri and Florida. If these polls even remotely reflect the mood of the electorate, McCain could be headed for an LBJ-size thumping. Lyndon Johnson won 486 electoral votes to beat Barry Goldwater, then the senior senator from Arizona, who would eventually be replaced in the Senate by John McCain. But at about this time in 2000, Al Gore was ahead by double digits, too.
One point of consensus across the political and emotional spectrum is that tonight's debate is John McCain's last chance to make a case to voters that he is the better choice to lead the country out of this mess.
In some ways, this imperative offers McCain a shot to play to his strengths. Whatever his faults as a candidate and a man, no one can question his survival instincts. He has been left for dead more than once, only to pull some strange Lazarus act and walk away triumphant. Ask next-presidents of the United States Mitt Romney, Mike Huckabee and Rudy Giuliani. McCain has been getting a lot of advice on how to proceed in the face of his dismal prospects, all of which can be divided into two categories: 1) Take the high road and talk to the American people about his plans. 2) Get nastier and raise doubts about Obama.
Conservative talker Tucker Carlson advocates the latter, insisting that for McCain, not talking about Obama and his former pastor Rev. Wright would be political malpractice.
"The McCain campaign's attempt to tie Barack Obama to terrorist-turned-professor Bill Ayers appears to have failed…By the end of the week, McCain will likely have moved on to another line of attack. The obvious question is: Why not Jeremiah Wright?"
In The New York Times, Bill Kristol, who has been coaching the McCain-Palin campaign from the sidelines, has decided it is time for a more dramatic move: "It's time for John McCain to fire his campaign," Kristol wrote on Monday. "He has nothing to lose. His campaign is totally overmatched by Obama's. The Obama team is well organized, flush with resources, and the candidate and the campaign are in sync. The McCain campaign, once merely problematic, is now close to being out-and-out dysfunctional."
I'm guessing that the only real option for McCain is to go dirtier not cleaner, to convert his campaign over the next two weeks into a giant Obama Doubt Generation Machine, and I wouldn't be surprised if that conversion begins tonight. Look for a dramatically different John McCain in New York this evening from the ones we saw in Nashville last week and Mississippi three weeks ago.
The question, of course, is whether it is too late for him now, or whether it ever would have mattered. Of course, only history can go there.
Terence Samuel is deputy editor of The Root.
Also on The Root:
Terence Samuel calls slaughters the pig, Kai Wright sees racism in the McCain campaign, and Sam Fulwood III tells us why Obama has to stay cool.
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Over Before it Began?
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View All Comments »theoriginal MissZ at 10/16/2008 8:21:32 PM
Comment:
The Electoral College was created to prevent MOB RULE. The USA is a Republic not a true democracy, so if the popular vote counted for anything except State government, then the most populated states would be able to decide who would win the election.
The Founding Fathers encouraged us to be watchful of politicians and the laws they add to the Consitiution. This man I worked for once told me, when the Communists enslaved the Hungarian people that most of the refugees wanted the chance to come to the USA because not only did we have the RIGHT to Freedom of Speech, but we had the means to back up that right with the Right to Bear Arms to protect our soverign selves.
Next year when they want to put a micro chip (like animals are now "protected" from getting lost) in your arm to verify your national ID will you let them? Without a fight take the Mark of the Beast? LEST HE NOT BUY OR SELL, UNLESS ...(Revelations from the BIBLE) GOD BLESS AMERICA, LAND OF THE FREE, HOME OF THE BRAVE.
We the Founders, based this Nation on Christian principles and we:
Warned you of the dangers of excessive taxation. Now you labor nearly six months of the year to pay taxes at all levels as your economy suffocates under this cruel burden.
Warned you of the dangers of foreign entanglements. Now thousands of men and women suffer and die in foreign lands while your government plans a military draft.
Warned you of the dangers of government spending. Now your growing National Debt stands at 8 trillion and your babies are debt slaves from the day they are born.
Warned you of the dangers of a private Central Bank (The Federal Reserve) and a debt-based monetary system. Now you drown in credit card debt as you lose your homes to foreclosure.
Warned you to obey the Constiution because power corrupts. Now a secretive government can spy on you and detain you at will under the guise of "National Security."
Warned you of the dangers of political parites. Now you have two powerful parties that conspire against the people, plundering you while they pretend to oppose each other.
Warned you keep your nation sovereign and independent. Now you submit to UN and NAFTA authority as your borders are diliberately left open to endless illegal immigration.
Warned you to be distrustful of government. But you believe the sugarcoated falsehoods of ambitious politicians and now you no longer know who to trust or what to believe.
Warned you of the importance of an honest, independent and unbiased press. Now your centralized "Mainstream Media" is full of propaganda, distortions, and omissions.
Warned you that the price of liberty was eternal vigilance. But while you were distracted by the ballgames an TV show, government stole you liberty and bankrupted your children.
Truthtoyou at 10/16/2008 3:53:09 AM
Comment:
GoodReason at 10/15/2008 10:55:33 PM said: "Darn, guess not! McCain brought his "A" game tonight."
IF that was McCain's "A" game it's too bad he was playing in the AAA leagues. The most embarassing moments of his twitching, tongue flicking eye-rolling Angry Man (which ain't selling well with undecideds) was his lame attempts to smear Obama with Ayeres and Acorn and his plaintive bleating about "hurt feelings" that Obama wasn't repudiating third party comments.
Obama's counter that we the public DON'T CARE about your hurt feelings and crocodile tears over your own mudslinging, we want a president who will solve our problems and undo the messes the last 8 years of Republican Rule have created was spot on.
So in case you were wondering Good Reason, that swirling whirling blur McCrash sees out the cockpit window (something he apparently has seen numerous times before given his flight record) is the ground rushing up to meet his plummeting campaign.
We'll alert the fire brigade.
GoodReason at 10/15/2008 10:55:33 PM
Comment:
Darn, guess not! McCain brought his "A" game tonight. He's the seasoned public servant we need at this critical time in America. He nailed Obama on several key points, and boy, was it interesting to hear about Joe Biden's foreign policy views! After listening to the glib, ambitious, smooth-talking lawyer, I thought to myself--gee, this isn't change anyone could believe in. McCain won it hands down, and blew out of the water the whispering campaign about his age. Congratulations to the McCain-Palin campaign for a job well done!