New Hampshire Primary Assures Continued
GOP Bungling
By: Christopher G. Adamo
Perhaps it is time to pass a federal law stipulating that any
winner of the New Hampshire primary is henceforth disqualified from running for
President. Constitutional considerations aside, it might just be the only manner
in which America could neutralize the circus that increasingly results from the
Granite State's belief in its inherent right to identify the latest presidential
"non starter" when it holds the nation's first primary.
Yesterday's primary results offered no more insights than
have past events, other than to inarguably convince the nation that it has no
desire for the excessively long and drawn out campaigns that are now the norm.
But the situation actually went downhill from there. The reappearance of
"inevitability" on the part of Hillary Clinton virtually guarantees that
Republican campaigning and voting patterns will remain, for the foreseeable
future, in "stupid" mode.
The Republican base has yet to become solidly motivated
around any particular candidate. Sadly, this is so mainly because the Republican
Party, along with far too much of the "grassroots," is not currently looking to
establish and advance a traditionally Republican agenda. Rather, responding to a
visceral but totally unwarranted fear of Hillary Clinton, the entire effort
appears to be to find the candidate and/or posture that can be employed as the
best defense against the scary but politically unremarkable former First Lady.
Most of the so-called "top tier" GOP candidates, amid
episodes of claiming sole proprietorship of the Reagan mantle, are offering
measured responses, hoping to "thread the needle" between right and left on a
host of topics from environmentalism to Social Security reform. Rather than
boldly asserting a conservative vision for America and a past record of
governing in that direction (Few can honestly claim the latter), they seem
preoccupied by a need to assure the electorate that, lurking in their background
is some version of "Hillary Lite."
Nor has the response from the base been any more noteworthy.
As one candidate after another jockeys towards the very temporary "frontrunner"
position, public scrutiny highlights all of the reasons why said candidate
cannot genuinely lay any claim to the perception of conservatism that might
briefly catapult him to that point.
Some analysts are incessantly attempting to determine the
particular reasons why the leading candidate of the day may be receiving such
support by delving into the details of his past political record or governing
philosophy. But to presume any relationship between current popularity and
present or past policy decisions is invariably a mistake. Sadly, the situation
is completely lacking in the substance necessary for such a conclusion.
Unrelated to any real consideration of past governing or
possible future actions in light of the candidate's past, the public is itself
reacting out of the same mindless fear of Hillary Clinton. Apparently, the
mistaken interpretation of the 2006 mid-term election persists. Far too many
people believe that the country reacted negatively to an overly conservative
Republican agenda, when in truth it recoiled over its frustration with the
abandonment of that very thing by Congressional Republicans and President Bush.
So, acting not on principle but out of fear of more
repercussions, and seeing Hillary as the country's standard bearer, the
so-called "top tier" waffles and postures, and with few exceptions (such as the
War on Terror), offers everything but truly heartfelt conservative alternatives
to the platform of the Democrats. And in the wake of Hillary's resounding
mandate
(or so we are told) in the New Hampshire Primary, the situation is
in all likelihood only going to get worse.
A loss for Hillary might have sealed, in the eyes of the
American public, the eventual collapse of her campaign. And such a scenario
could have opened the doors for the GOP to begin planning a presidential
campaign based not on the terror instilled in it by the Clinton political
machine, but instead focusing on a candidate who could truly represent Red-State
America and its overwhelmingly conservative, patriotic, and traditional
political philosophy.
So, John McCain is the Republican star of the moment, an
entirely expected result from New Hampshire. Yet McCain will never rise to the
stature necessary to inspire and coalesce the Republican base. Even in his post
primary commentary, he clearly showed that he intends to shift to the middle,
from where he believes he will rise to universal popularity. And he plans to
employ the same strategy when he campaigns in Michigan. Rhetoric aside, he is no
more interested in real conservatives or real conservatism than he ever was.
If McCain receives any bounce from his New Hampshire victory,
it is only liable to last until the public recalls his despicable track record
of undermining conservatism through, campaign finance "reform," enabling
Democrat judicial filibusters, supporting their pro-tax agenda, and of course,
the ugly crown jewel of his worldview, amnesty for illegal aliens.
But even in the unlikely event that he were somehow to take
the GOP field and gain the nomination, his campaign would be second to
Giuliani's in the speed with which it would irreparably implode, when his media
allies turn on him, which they will surely do the moment he has outlived his
usefulness to them.