Monday, February 4, 2008

PALIN SUPPORTER WITHDRAWS V-P SUPPORT

I am no longer backing Sarah Heath Palin for nomination as McCain's vice-president.


Make no mistake about it: I believe Alaska Governor Sarah Heath Palin is a superb human being with a great political future, and I look forward to supporting her in the future. HOWEVER, I AM NOW TAKING A NEUTRAL POSITION ON THE NOMINEE FOR THE VICE-PRESIDENTIAL SLOT. I was one of the orginal Palin supporters, so why am I now recommending that John McCain NOT appoint her as his running mate?

Through her spokeswoman, Gov. Palin has said she won't support John McCain at this point because he disagrees with her on the wisdom of drilling in the Alaska National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR). The sad part here is that I agree with her that there should be drilling in ANWR, but she is making a profound mistake in using this single issue as a reason not to endorse McCain.

There are many issues critical to the security of the United States, and ANWR is NOT one of them. I can't imagine John McCain choosing a vice-presidential candidate who support him because he's the last man standing, which apparently is what will happen with Sarah Palin.

The sad thing is that she agrees with McCain on nearly every critical issue, including the War on Terror, fiscal conservatism, and the sanctity of life. Compared to such matters, ANWR is small potatoes indeed. Sarah, why????

The upshot is this: I don't believe anymore that John McCain should select Sarah Palin as his running mate. For one of the first times, she's fallen into political pettiness and that should disqualify her as a choice for the vice-presidency.

Right now, I'm leaning toward either Senator Lindsay Graham of South Carolina or Gov. Charlie Crist of Florida. Either of them would help with the constituencies Senator McCain is trying to reach, and both of them endorsed the Senator when it truly mattered. In contrast, Sarah is a day late -- and an endorsement short.


I SENT THE FOLLOWING TO MANY OF MY FRIENDS WHO'VE BEEN INVOLVED HEAVILY IN "THE SARAH PALIN MOVEMENT." IT EXPANDS ON WHAT I SAID ABOVE:

I continue to care a great deal about Sarah Palin and believe she has an excellent chance to become America's first female President. However, today I made the difficult decision to withdraw my support for her as John McCain's V-P nominee. She is refusing to support McCain because they differ on one issue: drilling in ANWR. Perhaps for the first time in her political career, she's engaging in parochial Alaskan politics rather than doing what is clearly the right thing for the nation.

McCain is a man who values loyalty, such as the kind shown by other vice-presidential possibilities, such as Lindsay Graham, Charlie Crist, and Rudy Giuliani. They all provided essential support when McCain needed it. Sarah has not done so, even though she and McCain agree on nearly every vital issue. My colum today (above) tells the story.

It's important to understand that McCain is not going to run a Republican campaign based almost exclusively on appealing to "angry white males," the "dittoheads" of the nation. His goal is to appeal to the same kind of people that have given Sarah Palin such strong support.

The endorsements that matter are those that come at difficult times, and he's not going to nominate anyone who quibbles with him at critical moments.

If John McCain loses the general election, drilling at ANWR probably will not take place in the lifetime of Sarah Palin. It would also lead to what could be 16 years of Democratic presidents. That would certainly not be good for Sarah Palin -- or for the country.

I regard all of you as friends and will continue to do so.

_______________________________________________________________


Is McCain's Success Based on Split Conservative Votes?
Posted by: Michael Medved at 6:22 PM

To explain the startling success of Senator John McCain in the fight for the GOP presidential nomination, talk radio hosts and columnists who loathe the Arizona Senator cite an alleged split on the conservative side between Mitt Romney and Mike Huckabee.

According to this reasoning (explicitly advanced by Laura Ingraham, Hugh Hewitt and many others) if only Huckabee withdrew as a candidate, Mitt Romney could unite conservative cadres and pull out an upset victory on Super-Duper Tuesday.

Of course, Huckabee won’t leave the race (in at least six of Tuesday’s state contests he’s running well ahead of Romney) and the argument that he should rests on distorted history and illogical assumptions.

Some of my fellow commentators on the right seem to believe that the minority “moderate” wing of the party has united behind McCain because they had no other candidate, and the much larger conservative base in the GOP fatally split its votes among a number of once-viable alternatives.

These conclusions are flat-out wrong -- both about the party’s ruling conservatives and its remaining moderates.

WRONG ABOUT CONSERVATIVES

To believe that Huck and Mitt are dividing conservatives, you have to believe that Huckabee is a conservative --- which Romney, Limbaugh, Igraham, and countless others have been denying (stridently and strenuously) for months. Romney spent millions on negative ads in Iowa trying to label Huckabee as a liberal RINO—slamming him as soft on immigration, soft on crime, a big spender, a tax hiker and so forth (the same sort of attacks that they’re now applying to McCain). Fred Thompson pronounced Huckabee a “pro-life LIBERAL” and Rush delivered daily diatribes about how the former Arkansas governor was not “a conservative.”

So, has Huckabee now suddenly morphed into a true conservative just to give Romniacs an excuse for the failure of their guy to rally the rightwing base?

Either the elite commentators were wrong when they labeled Huckabee a “liberal populist,” or they are wrong now when they say he’s stealing conservative votes from Romney. The only other alternative is that they view conservative voters as just too stupid to see Huckabee for what he really is.

As to the idea that rock-solid, true-blue Reaganites were divided by too many candidates on the conservative side of the party, where’s the evidence of that?

It’s true that a lot of candidates tried to rally the base but most of them (Tom Tancredo, Sam Brownback, Duncan Hunter, Tommy Thompson, Jim Gilmore, Alan Keyes) got absolutely nowhere.

Nor did Fred Thompson (who co-sponsored McCain-Feingold, and compiled a voting record virtually identical to McCain’s during his years in the Senate) draw significant conservative support that hurt Romney. In Iowa, where Huckabee smashed Romney by nine points, Thompson and McCain tied for third. Did Thompson really take more votes away from Romney than McCain took away from Huckabee? In South Carolina, Thompson again finished third – and Romney finished fourth. Even if every one of Fred’s votes had gone to Romney, their combined total still would have fallen 3% (40,000 votes) behind McCain.

WRONG ABOUT MODERATES

But the analysis is also dead wrong that says that McCain’s been winning because he had moderate voters all to himself while conservatives divided their support among several candidates.

Through the entire campaign, Mac has had to compete for moderate or centrist Republican voters (and independents, in those primaries where they could vote) with Rudy Giuliani. Unlike McCain, Rudy has a long background as a moderate on issues like abortion, gay rights, and gun control, where Mac has been solidly conservative. Rudy also ran ahead of McCain in virtually all polls last year, and raised triple the money the Arizona Senator managed to put together. At one point, Rudy held the polling lead in South Carolina, and was competing with Mitt Romney for the lead in New Hampshire and Michigan and Nevada.
In other words, it makes no sense to say McCain had moderates to himself while Mitt had to struggle with other conservatives – especially since Rush, Sean, Savage, Laura and countless others relentlessly labeled Huckabee as a “moderate” or a “liberal,” who would be competing for those votes with Mac and Rudy, rather than drawing conservative votes from Romney.

In Florida, McCain’s victory was all the more impressive because Rudy was a powerful factor – investing far more resources into the state, and drawing more votes (15% to 13%) than Mike Huckabee. In other words, even if you assume that Huck and Mitt split conservatives (a very dubious assumption, as noted above), then Giuliani took even more votes away from McCain. Just for the record, the allegedly “moderate” vote in Florida (McCain plus Giuliani) totaled 51% while the allegedly “conservative” vote (Romney plus Huckabee, PLUS Fred Thompson’s 1%) totaled 45%. In other words, even if you combine the votes for all the purportedly “conservative” candidates it doesn’t provide enough support to top the “non-conservatives” who backed Mac and Rudy in a very high turn out primary.

Here’s the SLAM DUNK regarding the stupid argument that if only Huck dropped out, Mitt would surge to victory:

All of the three major national polls taken in the last three days (Fox News, ABC/Washington Post and Gallup) show that even if every single voter who backs Huckabee, switched to Romney (an impossibility, of course), McCain still wins across the country. The numbers, if you’re interested, of McCain supporters vs. the combined total of Romney and Huckabee supporters --- 48 to 39% (Fox News), 48 to 40% (ABC News/Washington Post) and 43 to 42% (Gallup). Meanwhile, all indications are that for many of the Huck-a-nuts—perhaps even a majority – their second choice would be McCain, not Romney.

WRONG ABOUT McCAIN

If you can’t explain McCain’s success by arguing that there’s been a big split among the party’s conservatives, then how can the Senator’s critics come to terms with his surging campaign?

Maybe they ought to recognize the obvious – they’re wrong about Johnny Mac and his appeal.

In state after state, Exit Polls show McCain drawing substantial backing among self-described “conservative” voters. It’s true that he’s weaker with such Republicans than among so-called moderates, but he’s strong enough (drawing over a quarter of conservatives, consistently and reliably, in the divided field) to indicate that many conservatives are simply ignoring the howls from talk radio that McCain is a secret liberal.

Sure, Ann Coulter claims that Hillary Clinton is “more conservative” than McCain, and says that she plans to campaign for Hillary (won’t that be fun?). But who knows the Arizona Senator better – Ann C. (who has very possibly never met him) or the solid, conservative Senate leaders (Tom Coburn, Johnny Isaakson, Saxby Chambliss, Richard Burr, John Kyl, Trent Lott, Phil Gramm, John Thune, Norm Coleman) who’ve worked beside McCain every day for years and have come forward to endorse him for the nomination? These guys earn nearly perfect voting records from the American Consrvative Union--- Trent Lott, for instance, got a lifetime 92% (even better than McCain's 82.3%), but he vouches for his long-time colleague as a solid, courageous pro-life conservative. Fred Thompson had a less consistent conservative record than Lott (86%) and very close to McCain's, and yet commentators readily embraced him as a "consistent conservative."

As to Mitt Romney, he is certainly a good man and a good candidate and a strong standard bearer for conservatives. Those who back Mitt deserve respect, and should proudly work hard for their guy on Tuesday.

But don’t pretend that McCain is only winning because divisions among conservatives have allowed some squishy moderate to sneak to victory.

It’s true that conservatives are divided in the upcoming primaries.

Some (perhaps a plurality) back Mitt Romney, a strong conservative.

Some back Mike Huckabee, a strong (though much maligned) conservative.

And some of us back John McCain, as the strongest and most consistent conservative in the race.

May the best man win.

http://michaelmedved.townhall.com/blog/g/2e932bab-9582-42bb-baf6-5e6f54aa62ad




NOTE: PLEASE READ THE WALL STREET JOURNAL ARTICLE IN THE COLUMN BELOW. THANKS.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Let me get this straight...
You support John McCain for Pres. even though you disagree with him a more than one issue.
and...
You're withdrawing your support of Sarah Palin because you disagree with her on one action/issue - the fact that she won't support McCain because of a disagreement on one issue.

Why can you get away with it and think of it as righteous, but she can't. Pardon me, but isn't that the pot calling the kettle black?

Julie

Stephen R. Maloney said...

I was talking mainly about practical politics. There is NO CHANCE John McCain (or any presidential candidate, including me if I ever run for President) will give the V-P nomination to anyone who is a day late and a dollar short with an announcement. Gov. Palin has very good political instincts but they failed her on this occasion. Note: It is okay in America to disagree with a candidate on one or more issues. That kind of thing happens in a free society.

steve maloney