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Friday, August 22, 2008
Rich Tucker :: Townhall.com Columnist
Searching for the Real Unifier
by Rich Tucker
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Will Sarah Palin make a run at the GOP Nomination in 2012?


Some questions answer themselves.

For example, the cover of the September issue of The Atlantic magazine asks, “Who’s the real Unifier,” Barack Obama or John McCain. “Obama and McCain both say they want to usher in a new, less divisive brand of politics. Which of them has the better chance?” the story’s introduction asks.

The entire piece could have been two sentences long. “Since arriving in the Senate, in 2005, [Obama] has voted with a majority of Senate Democrats almost 97 percent of the time, according to Congressional Quarterly,” writes longtime political commentator Ronald Brownstein. Meanwhile, “McCain has voted with a majority of Republicans 85 percent of the time since entering the Senate, in 1987.”

That record provides your answer. McCain has often taken positions that angered conservatives, and he’s reached out to liberals for help on everything from federal judges to campaign finance reform. If either man can “unify” the country -- and that’s unlikely -- it’s McCain.

And on a broad scale, if either party is the “big tent” party, it’s the GOP.

Recall that Sen. Zell Miller, a life-long Democrat from Georgia, gave the keynote address at the Republican convention four years ago. And Sen. Joe Lieberman, abandoned by the Democrat netroots but re-elected in Connecticut as an Independent two years ago, will speak to this year’s GOP gathering. Can anyone remember a Republican being invited to the Democrat convention?

But this is The Atlantic, so a two-sentence answer -- no matter how complete -- wouldn’t have sufficed. Brownstein rambled on for several pages, so let’s take a closer look at some of his more questionable statements.

“American voters nearly always elect a president who responds to the flaws they have found in his predecessor,” Brownstein begins. As an example, “Jimmy Carter was more honest than Richard Nixon.” While that’s probably true, it’s also true that Carter followed Ford, not Nixon. Oops.

Brownstein adds that George H.W. Bush was elected because he was “kinder and gentler” than Ronald Reagan. Hum. That’s not exactly right. He was elected because the country wanted to give Reagan a third term, but couldn’t (that pesky Constitution!) so took a chance on Reagan’s second-in-command. Still, while we’re playing the opposite game, let’s try a couple more.

Maybe Americans were tired of Eisenhower’s experience and competence, and so elected JFK. Maybe they were tired of George H.W. Bush’s buttoned-down fidelity, and so went with the swinging Bill Clinton. Et Cetera. Continued...

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About The Author

Rich Tucker is an editor in Washington D.C. and a columnist for Townhall.com.

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Redlac- I agree and disagree
Lincoln destroyed the roots of Federalism and the tree is slowly expiring assisted by the Justices. I disagree with the VP choice. I think that Mac should select a woman because there are a lot of angry women out there. Other candidates may help in a state or two, but a woman VP helps him in all 50 states.

Time for the ants to stand up
to the grasshoppers. How long can we maintain a conservative position in the U.S. when just about 50% of the people pay no income tax and are therefore liberals. Do you think that they will vote for Republicans when the liberal Democrats are the party of handouts. The main problem is that when the grasshoppers become more numerous than the ants, that society will fall as was demonstrated in the first settlement in the U.S. at Jamestown. Socialism may succeed in Religious Organizations where all are required to work and contribute to the group good, but not in secular society where not all are required to be productive.
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