McCain Works Well Across the
Aisle
But Can He Work With
Republicans?
Written by JB Williams
©2008 USA
Being best buds with the likes of Teddy Kennedy, Hillary
Clinton and Barrack Hussein Obama might buy you a few Independent votes, but it
won’t do much for your core conservative constituents. McCain’s buds think Joe
Lieberman is a right-wing extremist and worked to defeat his re-election…
Nobody in America has worked harder to avoid a McCain
nomination than I have. But despite all the efforts of 62.4% of Republicans who
voted against McCain in the Republican primaries, he is looking more like the
RNC nominee every day, as candidate after candidate leaves the GOP race and
throws their support to McCain.
Now, with only 37.6% of the Republican vote, some of which
isn’t actually Republican, coming instead from liberal Democrats and
Independents in open primary states, it seems McCain will have an up hill battle
to the Oval Office. Instead of reminding voters how well he has worked with
liberals in the past, he might consider coming up with a few reasons why
Republicans should vote for him.
A Call to Unite
McCain clearly has liberal and moderate Republicans wrapped up,
which apparently accounts for approximately 37.6% of the Republican Party. No
candidate can win a national election with only 37.6% of his own party behind
him. So all RNC efforts are now focused on telling the other 62.4% of the party
that they must unite behind McCain in opposition to an alternative worse than
McCain, Hillary Clinton, or worse yet, Barrack Hussein Obama.
But the 62.4% of Republicans who voted against McCain in the
primaries seem to be saying, "Not so fast Senator McAmnesty!" When Republican
stalwarts like Rush or David Limbaugh and Ann Coulter vow to fight McCain all
the way to November, you know you have a serious problem on your hands.
The need for Republicans to unite in order to defeat both
Clinton and Obama is so obvious that it hardly deserves mention. But that being
the case, the RNC should have allowed a stronger Republican candidate to emerge
so that all Republicans could vote FOR that candidate, instead of just against
Clinton and Obama.
Core Conservative Principles Stand in the Way
Much has been written about the many shades of gray that now
make up the Republican electorate. Those at the base of the party, who still
believe in those old conservative founding values of Life, Liberty, Freedom,
Sovereignty and Security, are often now referred to as only an extreme
right-wing fringe faction of the party.
Yet, this allegedly small faction of so-called extremists makes
up a large portion of the 62.4% of the party who voted against McCain; - maybe
even the majority of that group. The fringe faction may not be as small as
alleged by RNC friends in the MSM.
It is these folks who are now being accused of threatening the
McCain campaign and the future of the Republican Party, on the basis that they
are all hung up on their conservative values and principles and fail to grasp
the notion that the Republican Party is more important than all of those values
combined. They refuse to "calm down" and get in line and it is driving the party
powers insane. Desperate times call for desperate measures I’m afraid.
Principles Can Either Unite or Divide
At the moment, the Republican Party is divided down ideological
lines. On one side are those who believe in some, but not all conservative
principles and values. These folks call themselves moderates, usually due to
their liberal social stances.
On the other side are those who hold all founding conservative
principles and values dear, be they fiscal, security or social. They make no
distinction between social, security and fiscal conservatism, seeing them all as
interconnected and inter-dependent. These folks call themselves conservatives
and they are willing to go to the mat in defense of those principles.
Core Republicans are unhappy with McCain’s history. McCain has
a history of working across the political aisle, often at odds with his own
constituency. Engaged Republicans are aware of this reality and they do not have
confidence in McCain as a result.
It’s not right-wing extremists who stand between McCain and his
quest for the White House. It’s the fundamental values of the Republican Party,
which McCain has too often found himself at odds with. This will have to be
resolved if the party is to unite behind him in the fall and the RNC can no
longer expect voters to hold their nose and ignore those values. They’ve
accommodated that request in the past and have paid a heavy price.
McCain will have to Meet them More than Halfway
To be fair, McCain is conservative on many issues. (per On the Issues
)
Opposes - Abortion is a woman's right
Favors - Teacher-led prayer in public schools
Strongly Favors - Privatize Social Security
Strongly Favors - Death Penalty
Strongly Favors - Mandatory Three Strikes sentencing laws
Strongly Favors - Absolute right to gun ownership
Opposes - Repeal tax cuts on wealthy – Even as he recently
voted against making Bush’s tax cuts permanent.
Strongly Opposes - The Patriot Act harms civil liberties
Favors - Expand the armed forces
Strongly Opposes - US out of Iraq
Strongly Favors - Drug use is immoral: enforce laws against it
Strongly Favors - Allow churches to provide welfare services
But to be honest, he also has some severe problems with more
than 60% of Republicans on some other very important issues of our time.
Favors - Replace coal & oil with alternatives – He has
bought hook, line and sinker into Al Gore’s Global Warming Scam, which is little
more than a poorly veiled attempt to bring America to its economic knees.
Favors - Stricter limits on political campaign funds –
Considered by many Republicans to be a direct assault against free political
speech.
Strongly Favors - Support & expand free trade – Missing however,
the vital ingredients of "fair" free trade aimed at benefiting Americans more
than third world dictatorships, and expanding fair free trade without
relinquishing national sovereignty or security.
Favors - Illegal immigrants earn citizenship – This one
earned him the nickname Senator McAmnesty. He says he now understands that we
must close and secure the border first. But Amnesty for those already here is an
idea he has not given up on.
Favors - More federal funding for health coverage – He
supports increased welfare in the form of federal socialized health care, just
not complete government controlled socialized medicine like his Democrat buds.
Favors - Same-sex domestic partnership benefits – which
means, he supports giving homosexual’s equal moral, social, legal and economic
status with the foundational moral fabric of any successful society, the
traditional family unit.
Perhaps the two most important issues McCain must find a way to
unite with conservatives on is national sovereignty and security.
Convincing conservatives that he is serious about winning the
war against international terrorism and defending the safety and sovereignty of
the United States is all but impossible at this point.
So long as he remains firm in his position in favor of open
borders and legalized illegal immigration, and refuses to recognize that the
only people on earth who can tell us when and where the next 9/11 will happen
MUST be interrogated by any means available, because we are "at war" with people
who seek to kill millions of innocent American citizens and bring America to its
knees, convincing conservatives will remain impossible.
Being tough on terror in Iraq is one thing. But refusing to be
tough on terrorists at home is quite another.
Party Unity Over American Principles, at Any Cost?
Republicans, conservatives in particular, have been told to sit
their principles and values aside and do what’s best for the party many times in
the past and the result has always been the same. A more gradual slide into the
leftist abyss of Democratic Socialism with more social spending, more deficits,
more taxation without representation, and less freedom, liberty, security or
national sovereignty for the governed. In short, more federal power and less
personal freedom.
These are the very values conservatives are no longer willing
to compromise on, even in the name of party unity.
To be sure, both Clinton and Obama would indeed be worse than
McCain in all regards. There can’t be any real doubt about that in the mind of
any informed Republican.
In the past, before two Bush Presidents turned on conservatives
after the election and the Republican controlled congress failed to act any
different than a Democrat controlled congress, this alone might have been enough
to get conservatives into the booth for McCain.
Today, It Will Take More
Republicans spent 40 years as the minority party in congress.
It took Newt Gingrich and his Contract with America to convince American voters
that finally, somebody was serious about representing the true will of the
American majority and the minute they were convinced, the nation rallied around
that idea and placed Republicans in control of both houses of congress for the
first time in 40 years.
Of course, once Newt was gone, it took liberal and moderate
Republicans only twelve years to convince those same voters that they were not
really up to the task, and Republicans allowed Democrats to take both houses
back in 2006 as a result.
Now it is twice as hard to convince conservative voters that
Republican candidates, especially like McCain, mean anything they say. The
highest priority for all pro-American voters in 2008 must be keeping both
Barrack Hussein Obama and Hillary Rotten Clinton far from the Oval Office. But
it will take more than that to get conservative voters into the booth for
McCain.
A Contract with McCain is in Order
Styled after Gingrich’s Contract with America and based on the
same pro-American values, McCain is going to have to make a Contract with
Republicans based on all conservative values, if he hopes to gain their support
by November.
It is no longer enough to toss out rhetorical promises easy to
break after the election is over. Frankly, Hillary is facing much of the same
challenge with Democrats that McCain faces with Republicans. Both have a career
long resume full of broken promises with their constituents. Obama is favored
right now simply because he has no resume at all, therefore, no resume of broken
promises yet, with the emphasis on yet…
If McCain is serious about becoming President, he will have to
come up with a realistic means of convincing the majority of Republicans who
voted against him in the primaries, that he is serious about representing the
same principles and values that they believe in, or they will have little or no
reason to vote for him in November.
McCain needs to come up with a solidly unapologetic Contract
with Republicans, much like the Gingrich Contract with America, and soon.
His campaign and the RNC can wrestle the nomination away from
all conservatives through the primary process, but that is no way to get those
same voters behind you in November.
In fact, the more screwed the Republican electorate feels
through the primary process, and believe me, they are feeling more screwed by
the minute, the more difficult it will become to get them into the booth in
November.
McCain MUST do something tangible and he must do it fast. If he
fails to grasp the severity of his problem, he will suffer a landslide defeat in
November and America will be at the mercy of one of the two most unqualified
individuals to ever seek the Oval Office.
The ball is really in his court. If he wants the party to
unite, he will have to do something real to unite it…