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Monday, November 10, 2008
Star Parker :: Townhall.com Columnist
Republican future in principles - not process
by Star Parker
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What was the biggest suprise of Election Day?



John McCain has a knack for the bizarre. But he outdid himself, appearing on Saturday Night Live the weekend before election day to make fun of it all.

It was evident from the polls that only a miracle could pull this election off for McCain. But the SNL appearance made it clear that there would be no miracle.

Why would Americans, sitting on the political fence, riddled with doubt and worried about their future, vote for a man running to be their president who could satirize the campaign two days before they would go to vote? The man telling them that their sons and daughters must remain to fight in Iraq, that the future of the nation supposedly rides on his message, making it all a big joke?

McCain's strange sense of propriety, of nobility, of being the gentleman, is to be above it all. So days before a crucial election he could play the clown on national TV. Yes, of course, the message is important. But he showed, for him, most important is process, not principle.

This accounts for McCain's also bizarre suspension of his campaign, at a crucial time after the Republican convention, when he was picking up momentum, to be part of the process in Washington to produce a bank bailout package.

The initial months of a new presidency, as we are about to witness once again, are crucial. A newly elected president uses the opportunity to demonstrate leadership, consolidate power, and begin moving his agenda.

When George W. Bush was elected to his first term, it was clear in those critical early days that there were already cracks in the Republican vessel. When Republicans on Capitol Hill should have been marching in lockstep with their new president, taking over after eight years of a Democrat in the White House, there was a distracting voice in the Senate.

John McCain. What was his obsession? Campaign finance reform.

A new Republican president needed to move a conservative agenda and a key Republican senator deflected focus with his personal obsession with process and not principles.

Back to the current campaign, we have McCain's troubled selection of Sarah Palin. Did McCain pick a conservative Christian because of his own convictions? Of course not. He concluded he had to placate the evangelical base. Did he move to find the best and most qualified person? Someone that voters could readily picture moving into the oval office if necessary? No, he wanted a woman to appeal to women.

Process, not principle. Continued...

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About The Author
Star Parker is a nationally syndicated columnist through the Scripps Howard News Service and a regular commentator on CNN, MSNBC, and FOX News, as well as author of White Ghetto: How Middle Class America Reflects Inner City Decay.
 
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VP choice is questionable...

I agree with the column, but am not convinced we've truly tapped the Palin nomination. She did have credibility on the energy front and that was critical during ancient times--ie. two months ago. AND the other choices would have been slammed...in good part because running with McCain would have been difficult for anyone except, possibly, Lieberman. McCain does not enjoy agreeing with the people that support him and volunteer for him. The ground game for this campaign was basically non-existent--IN PENNSYLVANIA no less!
Let's quit blaming this mess on Palin...just for awhile, okay???

Otherwise your comments are spot on...

Daniel

McCain revisited
John McCain MUST be reviled as someone who should have known he could not win the Presidency. He should be reviled for not stepping aside in favor of a candidate who had a chance. This campaign could have been won...even by McCain...but he didn't have the will. He didn't have any political smarts and he refused to hire those who do to advise him. A candidate may not succeed in his quest but he must, at the outset, know what must be done in order to prevail. I saw none of that in McCain. Sarah Palin? I can only ask who else? She was the shovel whose insurmountable task was to dig McCain out of the pit. She was tapped very late in the game. Odds are she will be much better prepared the next time. At least, she understands Conservatism in a way that McCain never did. The office is such that it must be pursued with the idea that only one term is available. It is, then, imperative that the candidate sell his ideas to the public in terms that are frank, even frightening, so long as they are identified as fighting words. We fear the unknown because we don't know how to anticipate it. Ergo, the candidate must lay out the facts as well as his solutions, and defend his recitation in the face of objections by the Democrats. Conservatism is not dead. It is not even weakened! What it lacks is a spokesman skilled in hammering it home to the public at every opportunity and a coterie of supporters in the Congress who are equally talented and who will speak with one voice. This is essential! We bumpkins from the hinterlands understand this. How is it that the sophisticated talking heads in the Party don't have a clue!
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