GEEZ LOUISE
Re: Philip Klein's Cold
Shoulder Politics:
Is Phillip Klein on McCain's payroll? Does he moonlight at the Weekly Standard?
McCain may win the Republican nomination but he will loose the
general election. The conservatives that Klein has so much contempt
for are not voting for McCain under any circumstances.
-- Louise
Maryland
I am certainly not an "elite conservative" as Mr. Klein laments.
But I AM mad as Hell at McCain. I do not need to repeat the litany
of sins, we are all aware of them. It would appear that the GOP is
turning away from conservativism, and heading for liberalism, while
the Dems are running toward socialism. Everybody seems to want
something for nothing. This is going to be a very ugly election. If
the RINOs insist on nominating a lunatic such as McCain,I fear we
are going to have 8 more years of the Clintons.
-- Janis Johnson
Independence, Missouri
"McCain cannot be stopped," according to Phillip Klein. He may not
be stopped in the presidential primary. However, if he wins the
primary, he will probably be stopped in the general election, when
conservatives focus on the Senate and House rather than the
presidential election. Remember what happened to George Bush I and
what happened to war hero Senator Bob Dole when he "moved to the
center" and lost the support of many conservatives.
-- Lewis Sheckler
No matter how favorably you spin McCain, he will not win the
presidency. He is nothing more that a RINO and has betrayed his
base. I vowed when he and his other thirteen buddies tried to stop
the President's Supreme Court nominees, that I would NEVER vote for
him and I haven't changed my mind now. Better to have the enemy you
know than the friend that you don't.
-- Ruth Warren
Canal Fulton, Ohio
While John McCain may win the Republican nomination, he will never win the White House. I am a Vietnam veteran and a conservative, but I will NEVER vote for John McCain. I also believe that for conservatives a Clinton/Obama administration would be better for conservatives. Two to four years of Clinton/Obama would enable the Republicans to recapture congress.
As for judicial nominations, you would get the same nominees
from McCain you will get from Clinton/Obama. When are you people
going to wake up and smell the coffee, John McCain is a liberal
socialist. A McCain presidency will include all of the following.
Liberal judges in the mold of Ginsberg and Breyer, support for
Roe v. Wade, (look at McCain's past pronouncements on
this) amnesty for illegal aliens, open borders, more "free" trade
agreements. more off-shoring of American jobs, continued
devaluation of the dollar, increases in taxes (look at McCain's
record on this, the end of the dollar as the world's reserve
currency, (as the dollar continues to lose it's value other nations
will no want to use it as a reserve currency) gun control, further
limitations on free speech, re-institution of the fairness doctrine
and
the list goes on.
While I will admit that many of these things will probably occur
under a Democratic administration, at least Republicans would then
not be blamed for it. John McCain is a disgrace and should not even
be in public office, he is unstable and prone to emotional outburst
and is the last man in the world whose finger you would want on the
nuclear trigger. I also predict that if McCain is ever elected
president, which is highly unlikely, he will start a war with
Iran.
-- Paul Martell
I am a lifelong Republican and conservative. My father was a Goldwater Republican in '64 when most of the nation was voting for LBJ. I cut my teeth on GOP politics while a college student in Texas working for Ronald Reagan to defeat America's worst President Jimmy Carter and went on to serve the party as a foot soldier, precinct chairman and member of 2 Texas County Executive committees (Bowie and Travis). I like the Club for Growth, CPAC and listened to Rush Limbaugh from 1988 till 2006. But I'm totally fed up with the juvenile behavior of "conservative elites" who have joined liberals in undermining the conservative administration of President Bush (his record not his rhetoric is to the right of Reagan) and Republicans in Congress. Those who prattled we could "throw away an election" in 2006 and berated Republicans not only handed Congress to the radical Democrats, but opened the door to John McCain and "purple dog" Mike Huckabee (a man whose lack of moral and ethical integrity makes him unfit for any elected office on the Republican ticket).
Had so-called conservative talking heads not decided to prove their "independence" by undermining President Bush and the GOP Congress (falling for Chuck Schumer's bait) not only would Republicans still control Congress, but the Republican standard bearer in 2008 would be someone like George Allen or some other bona fide conservative (it is notable that those John McCain campaigned for like George Allen generally lost in 2006). The melt down of the conservative movement that has produced the current political landscape is the gift of Sean Hannity, Laura Ingram, Anne Coulter, William F. Buckley and even Rush Limbaugh (just to name a few). Their hysterical overreaction to DPW, Harriet Miers, comprehensive immigration reform and GOP spending created a landscape of Republican desperation that has made it possible for John McCain and even liberal RINO Mike Huckabee to succeed. Rush Limbaugh predicted this, but seems to have forgotten his prediction, because he is now part of the problem.
The alternative media is still a tool for good, but instead of
continuing the mythologizing of Reagan, undercutting George W. Bush
and Republicans they need to be focusing their ire on the real
threat -- Democrats. If John McCain is the Republican nominee (it
is not a done deal) then by all means they can keep their support
to themselves, but rather than empowering Democrats as they did in
2006 (despite last minute Hail Mary's on behalf of Republicans)
they need to begin working now to defeat them.
-- Michael Tomlinson
Jacksonville, North Carolina
Mr. Klein reflects the liberal media line that McCain's win in Florida shows that conservatives are losing their influence in the Republican Party. Instead of referring to conservatives as being opposed to McCain, he narrows it down to "elite conservatives" or "constituencies" within conservatism.
For Klein, it's merely a matter of ruffling feathers, not substantive, core issues. It's really all about brave moderate Republicans surviving the "wrath of conservatives."
Strangely, Klein cites Mike Huckabee as proof of his theory, though Huckabee only won one contest. In addition, Huckabee is a social conservative for the most part, and most conservative opposition came late anyway, no doubt fooled early on by his evangelical appeal.