By John A. Barnes on 11.3.08 @ 6:07AM
Veterans for McCain rally in a most unlikely place.
No Republican presidential candidate has come within hailing
distance of winning New York since Ronald Reagan's 49-state sweep
of 1984. Since then, a state that was once hotly competitive
between the parties -- Herbert Hoover even managed to carry it
over native-son Al Smith in 1928 -- has slipped ever further into
its current status as among the bluest of blue states.
The reason can be found in the dramatic changes New York City and
the state have undergone since that final Reagan triumph
twenty-four Novembers ago. Ironically, Reagan's very success had
something to do with bringing these changes about. As Wall Street
boomed along in the '80s and '90s thanks to Reagan's
investor-friendly tax and regulatory policies, the city was
flooded with highly credentialed Yuppies from elsewhere who would
rather choke on their sushi than credit Ronald Reagan with
anything positive. At the same time, the low-skilled, low-wage
labor needed to man the restaurants, bars, and convenience stores
that catered to this new overclass poured in (legally and
illegally) from Africa, Asia, and Latin America. Both groups, for
different reasons, voted virtually unanimously Democratic.
The losers in this process were the GOP's base: the socially
conservative, fiscally-conscious ethnic working classes of New
York City, its suburbs and the upstate areas. As the industries
on which they depended for employment fled for more economically
welcoming climes, these folks retired, died, or moved away
themselves. Archie and Edith Bunker, if they are still alive,
have long since settled in Florida.
It was the remnants of that demographic that gathered the
Saturday before the election in Manhattan's Foley Square. United
under the banner of "Veterans for McCain," about 150 of them
joined in unseasonably warm fall sunshine to defiantly proclaim
their support for John McCain, his running mate Sarah Palin and
the values they share (and that his opponent, implicitly, does
not): God, family, and country.
LEE GREENWOOD'S "God Bless the USA" wafts over the loudspeakers
as the attendees gather. Gray heads seem to be in the majority,
though a few young families with small children are also in
evidence. A handful of New York's Finest hover at the fringes,
looking relaxed. They are probably grateful that this is one
crowd that appreciates their presence.
The speaker's list, as one might expect, is heavy on veterans
(which makes electoral sense -- there are around one million in
New York State) or folks with military connections. They are
under no illusions about taking the state for McCain, but believe
theirs is a message that must be heard, especially just a few
blocks from Ground Zero.
"We are locked in a deadly conflict with Islamic terrorism," says
Gary Berntsen, a New York native and the author of the 2005
bestseller Jawbreaker, his account of his time in
Afghanistan as a senior CIA operative after 9/11. "We need to
stay on offense in this conflict, and John McCain is the only one
running for president who can do that."
National security is also high on the list of motivations for
Bartle Bull, a former publisher of the Village Voice and
civil rights lawyer in Mississippi who served as New York
chairman for Robert F. Kennedy during his 1968 presidential
campaign. He now heads Democrats for McCain in New York.
How did he go from supporting Bobby Kennedy to supporting John
McCain?
"They have two things in common," he says. "A strong national
defense and a belief in the free enterprise system. I don't think
Barack Obama really believes in either. I think that's what
pushed me over. My country is more important than my party."
While the crowd is mostly white, a smattering of Asians,
Hispanics and, yes, African-Americans are also present. I asked
one of the latter, a Hofstra University journalism student named
Akeem Mellis of Queens, how he came to be here.
"I've been a Republican for seven years, ever since 9/11," he
said, sounding a theme that was heard several times during the
day.
Asked what his family and friends think of his affiliation, he
smiles a bit awkwardly.
"It can be tough to resist the allure of 'The One,'" he admits.
"My family was split between Hillary and Barack earlier this
year, but now they are all firmly behind Barack Obama. I think
they are more impressed with the style rather than the
substance." No matter how the election turns out, he's likely in
for a tough Thanksgiving dinner.
THIS BEING NEW YORK, it was to be expected that a few Obamaniacs
would try to crash the proceedings. Perhaps realizing they are
locally outnumbered, they confine themselves to pushing their way
toward the front row near the speaker's platform, hoping to draw
the attention of the handful of local TV news crews who have
shown up.
But men who have faced enemy fire won't be so easily brushed
aside. Mark Moody, a Mississippi-born Bronx resident who walks
with a cane due to the injuries he sustained leading an Army
platoon in Iraq in 2005, moves immediately to interpose his bulk
between the Obama supporters and the cameras. He is joined
quickly by several other veterans. Realizing that knocking an
injured war veteran to the ground might not be the best
publicity, the Obama supporters give up and slink off.
The rally was capped by a man who has known John McCain longer
than anyone else in attendance. More than forty years after his
F-4 Phantom was downed over North Vietnam, retired Air Force Lt.
Col. Barry Bridger still looks fit enough to climb back into the
cockpit and fly again. He met McCain when he found himself
confined in the next cell after they and 34 other prisoners were
removed from the Hanoi Hilton and isolated in a separate prison
because they were "troublemakers."
"John McCain showed up at the Hanoi Hilton with a broken leg, two
broken arms, a broken shoulder and a bad attitude," he recalls.
But McCain also brought with him, Bridger says, "the values of
his ancestors. And those values were what brought him and the
rest of us through. And those values are embedded in the DNA of
every American."
Does he think that the sacrifices he and other veterans made are
still held in the same esteem as they once were in this country?
He thinks for a moment.
"The country has changed a lot since Vietnam," he says. "A
'politically correct' mindset has taken hold in a lot of areas
since then. We didn't have that back in Hanoi. We couldn't have
afforded it."
topics:
Election 2008, Foreign Policy, John McCain