Posted by
Ned Barnett on Wednesday, March 05, 2008 3:10:52 AM
Ned Barnett (c) 2008
If he wants to win in November, Senator McCain had better wake up and listen to the message more than a million conservatives sent him on Super Tuesday II.
Earlier this evening, Senator John McCain comfortably
locked up the
Republican nomination with decisive wins in four state primaries.
Governor Mike Huckabee was remarkably generous, delivering a gracious
concession speech - he's been a class act from
beginning to end, and a refreshing change from the low-ball game played
by some other candidates - and it should be said that Senator McCain
has also opted for the "high road" in most of his efforts.
However, even as he is busy accepting his well-earned congratulations
from friends, former competitors and ambitious bandwagoners, if he wants to win in November, Senator McCain should see
tonight's vote as a conservative cautionary tale - one that he needs to address
before the Republican Convention ... one he should address right away.
There was no question before Super Tuesday II that Senator McCain was
going to be the Republican nominee. He was shy a few delegates, but
with only the zero-funded Governor Huckabee continuing to offer a
challenge, no rational observer expected anything other than Candidate
McCain. Certainly, Governor Huckabee knew this. More important,
Governor Huckabee's supporters knew this, too.
However, with most of the votes counted (as I write this), it's clear
that more than one million Republican voters took the time - and, in
Ohio and the Northeast, braved the elements - to come out and vote
AGAINST McCain. This wasn't the Rush Limbaugh-inspired cross-over vote
for Hillary (to keep the blood-soaked internecine civil war alive in
the Democratic Party), but rather a spontaneous, grass-roots uprising
against Senator McCain's positions on tax cuts, border security,
illegal immigration and a double-handful of other issues in which
Senator McCain differs from the Conservative base of the Republican
Party.
While McCain has won handily, he initially rose to the top because the
Conservative vote was split in several ways, while McCain's
resurrection of the "Rockefeller Wing" of the Republican Party went
unchallenged for the moderate Republican votes - and in addition,
Senator McCain did best, early on (when it really mattered) when
Democrats and Independents could vote in the Republican Party - and
exit polling showed that many did. In effect, between those cross-over
votes and their own split between four (then three, then two)
Conservative candidates, the Republican Party base's own fragmentation
allowed Senator McCain to become the Party candidate, without ever
earning a majority in those critical early primaries.
In effect, he won by attracting the largest plurality in elections
where no candidate attracted a majority - but he did so in elections
where all the Conservative candidates, when taken together, DID win a
majority of the votes. Like President Clinton in 1992, he became the
"plurality" winner, rather than the "majority" winner. Still, he won.
That's history.
But in the face of that ultimately decisive victory, Senator McCain saw
- tonight - well over a million Republicans come out and vote against
him, casting ballots based on principle rather than on any hope that
their votes would carry the day. That remarkable outpouring of
Conservative discontent MUST be a warning signal to Senator McCain ...
and if he's as smart a candidate as his track record seems to
demonstrate, he'd better listen long and hard to that warning signal.
Senator McCain - "the natives are restless" - the base that you MUST
have in order to win in November has just given you a bold and
committed vote of no-confidence. That's the bad news. The good news -
you've got eight full months to change your tune and decisively prove
to your base that you're worthy of their support, their passionate
support - as well as their votes. You need their money. You need
their volunteer door-to-door commitment. You need their passion - you
need them to believe in you every bit as much as you believe in
yourself.
You've got eight months to close that deal - but you'll be struggling
to overcome 25 years of aisle-crossing baggage. You may find that
you'll need every minute of those eight months, and if you're smarter
than your campaign advisors, you'll start today.
Remember, you heard it here first.
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