By W. James Antle, III on 7.11.07 @ 12:08AM
For John McCain's presidential dreams, it's now or never.
In early 1980, Ronald Reagan stumbled in the race for the
Republican presidential nomination. Fundraising results were
disappointing, forcing the campaign to accept federal matching
funds. Staff members were being let go. Reagan lost the Iowa
caucuses, and with it the inevitability that accompanied his
frontrunner status.
Then on the afternoon of the New Hampshire primary, Reagan fired
John Sears, his campaign manager. And the rest, as they say, is
history.
This is likely the historical analogy that most appeals to John
McCain following the toughest day of his so far disappointing
presidential campaign. Chief strategist John Weaver is gone.
Campaign manager Terry Nelson is gone. Deputies Reed Galen and Rob
Jesmer
followed them out the door. The Arizonan and his supporters
would prefer to believe this marks a Reagan-like new beginning
rather than the beginning of the end.
Perhaps they will be proven right. But the Reagan-McCain analogy
breaks down in some key places. Reagan, who barely lost Iowa, won
the New Hampshire primary the day he sent Sears packing, before the
firing could have had any effect. Meanwhile, the McCain staff
shake-up looks less like a deliberate change in direction than the
fallout over
internal disarray.
McCain is left with less cash on hand than Ron Paul. He is said
to be focusing on an early state strategy while cutting staff in
those very same states. Fred Thompson is sucking up oxygen
nationally, Mitt Romney in Iowa and New Hampshire.
All this takes place in a hurried political climate where
candidates need more money and have less time than they did in
1980.
More importantly, McCain has based his presidential run on
flawed premises. He was never the runaway frontrunner the media
assumed. Since 2005, polls showed he would have a fight on his
hands if Rudy Giuliani -- or any number of other potential top-tier
candidates -- got in the race. The strategy of trying to be the
independent maverick of his 2000 campaign and an
establishment-friendly Bush loyalist at the same time never made
sense.
Building a campaign organization around being a George W. Bush
or Reagan-style frontrunner, in anticipation of money that never
came in, turned out to be a serious error. So was the McCain camp's
failure to appreciate the extent of the senator's estrangement from
grassroots conservatives -- a bad relationship made worse by the
recently defeated Senate immigration bill.
It didn't have to be this way. Despite all the talk about
McCain's heresies against conservatism -- especially since he ran
to the left of Bush in the 2000 primaries -- he remains the
Republican presidential candidate with longest record of opposition
to abortion, support for conservative judicial nominees, and
advocacy of a strong national defense. While it would never have
been easy for McCain to get past his partnerships with Russ
Feingold and Ted Kennedy, the Gang of 14, or his votes against the
Bush tax cuts, he could have appealed to the pragmatic social
conservatives who are still searching for a candidate.
Yet when McCain differed from the Republican base, his words
always carried a hint of anger, as if he did not respect the very
people he most needed to persuade. It was similar to the disdain
some Republicans evinced when they read favorable press clippings
about McCain in traditionally liberal media outlets.
McCain has been through tougher ordeals. He is not likely to
give up easily. Shortly after his campaign restructure, he took to
the Senate floor to counsel against withdrawal from Iraq. When
California Sen. Barbara Boxer confronted him with polling data
showing rising antiwar sentiment, McCain raised his voice
slightly.
"The fact is, I do read the polls. And if the Senator from
California had paid attention to my opening statement she would
have known that I made it clear that I understand the frustration
and the sorrow of the American people," McCain shot back. "I also
know that a lot of us are not driven by polls. A lot of us are
driven by principle. And a lot of us do what we think is right no
matter what the polls say."
So McCain continues what might be his final national campaign,
doing what he thinks is right and trying to turn things around.
Without the independents who have turned against him because of the
war. Without the same enthusiasm from the liberal media. Without
John Weaver. And without much time.
It will either be a new beginning or John McCain's last
stand.
topics:
John McCain, Abortion, Law, Iraq, NATO, Conservatism, Immigration