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The Revenge Candidate? by Monica Crowley
Human Events ^ | 02/21/2008 | Monica Crowley

Posted on 02/21/2008 7:41:12 AM PST by K-oneTexas

The Revenge Candidate? by Monica Crowley

Contrary to popular conservative myth, the nomination of John McCain did not materialize out of thin air. It didn’t result from a liberal conspiracy, it wasn’t the moderates’ fault, and he didn’t just stumble into it.

Here are five semi-counterintuitive reasons why McCain will be giving the Big Speech in Minneapolis on Labor Day:

1. While conservatives were off flirting with every Rudy, Fred, and Huck, the Nice Guy, Mitt, waited patiently, holding a bouquet. By the time we realized the Flash in the Pan Guys weren’t the ones to bring home to mom, it was too late for the Nice Guy. And the Bad Boy already had the ticket to the Big Dance.

2. A lot of people have actually voted for McCain, and they weren’t just moderates and Independents. Enough Republicans have voted for him to give him the nomination -- and yes, a decent number of conservatives have too.

3. Iraq. McCain staked his entire presidential campaign on supporting the president’s policy in Iraq, and then put his ambitions further out on a scrawny limb by supporting the troop surge -- when most politicians, including Republicans, were openly skeptical. It was a huge gamble, and it paid off.

4. A twenty-five year-long conservative (yes, conservative) record. The reason so many Republicans have been voting for McCain is not because he’s a wild-eyed liberal. It is true that over the past eight or so years, McCain has been off the conservative reservation on a number of key issues. He has relished sticking it to conservatives on tax cuts, illegal immigration, campaign finance, Guantanamo, etc.

But McCain’s problem isn’t that he’s a leftie. It’s that he’s unpredictable. Conservatives -- like most other voters -- want to know what kind of president their candidate will be. That’s awfully hard to do with McCain -- except if we take a step back and look at his longer history. For almost three decades, he’s been a fierce tax cutter, budget slasher, national defense hawk, and pro-life warrior. He’s come around on the Bush tax cuts and (at least somewhat, albeit begrudgingly) on illegal immigration. On the other issues bothersome to conservatives, let’s remember that Ronald Reagan raised taxes, withdrew from Lebanon after the terrorist attack against our Marines, signed a hugely destructive amnesty bill, and wanted to offer total nuclear disarmament to the Soviets. Even Reagan wasn’t Reagan.

5. Finally, the 2000 election is proving more seminal -- and in a different way -- than anybody thought. Most people assumed Al Gore would get in the race, and that he’d be the immediate Democratic frontrunner because of the Revenge Vote. Most Democrats think he wuz robbed in 2000, the election stolen from him by George W. Bush. Last year, they were full of old anger and ready to extract their revenge. Then Gore didn’t get in, and that was the end of any talk about a Revenge Vote.

But we should also think of McCain in that context. In the 2000 election, it wasn’t just Gore who people thought got robbed. It was McCain too. He won the New Hampshire primary. The Straight Talk Express was rolling along toward the nomination, when whammo! The Bush team clubbed him in South Carolina, and that was the end of the McCain juggernaut.

What you see in his nomination is at least partly, the Revenge Vote. There are a lot of Republicans, moderates, Independents, even Democrats, who like McCain and thought he wuz robbed in 2000. Here comes another chance to support him, to right a wrong, to even “erase” to some extent the Bush years by rewarding McCain.

If this sounds farfetched, remember that voting is an emotional act. Yes, it’s an intellectual exercise and yes, it’s grounded in core beliefs. But it’s also -- perhaps more so -- emotional. Of those running, whom do you like the most? Whom do you respect? Whom do you trust? Whom do you want in your living room for four years? Whom do you want ordering your sons and daughters and sisters and brothers into combat?

Voting is about feeling, which is why the idea of the Revenge Vote is so important. Voting is impulsive -- at the same time it’s thought out. You may agree with Hillary Clinton but feel she’s a conniving hydra-headed monster. You may like Barack Obama but feel he’s not ready for primetime. You may respect John McCain but feel he’s not an authentic conservative. Emotional arguments can be made against all of the candidates -- and for them too. And that’s just it: we think we’re thinking through all of the important issues and making detached, dispassionate judgments. But the truth is we’re not as dispassionate as we think.

On election day, we’re not just voting with our heads. We’re voting with our hearts too -- or maybe more accurately, our guts. And sometimes, if not most of the time, our guts do the leading.

Behold, John McCain.

Monica Crowley, Ph.D., is a nationally syndicated radio host and television commentator. She has also written for The New Yorker, The Wall Street Journal, The Los Angeles Times, The Baltimore Sun and The New York Post. www.monicamemo.com


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: marines
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To: K-oneTexas

Her sister who is also hot, is married to Alan Colms. Go figure!


21 posted on 02/21/2008 8:03:33 AM PST by duckman (I refuse to use a tag line...I mean it.)
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To: K-oneTexas

I disagree completely. Romney never got the required traction, because the last two times he ran for office, he ran to the left of Ted Kennedy. However, he did “talk the talk enough” to draw some conservative support. The Huckster further split the vote by waiving a Bible and then the Media did their part by running story after story about Thompson “not doing as well as predicted”.


22 posted on 02/21/2008 8:13:23 AM PST by NavVet ( If you don't defend Conservatism in the Primaries, you won't have it to defend in November)
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To: Uncle Miltie

big baby....


23 posted on 02/21/2008 8:14:12 AM PST by HappyinAZ
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To: petercooper

24 posted on 02/21/2008 8:19:37 AM PST by Diogenesis (Igitur qui desiderat pacem, praeparet bellum)
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To: levotb

Then I must not have gotten my membership papers to the “Real” conservative wing (I guess that would be the far right fringe...) of the party.

Does the membership package include: 1) How to be a bad sport? :2) How to be a name caller? 3) How to trash the only hope we have running for president?

How many times to people have to post his conservative voting record befor you get it?


25 posted on 02/21/2008 8:19:38 AM PST by HappyinAZ
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To: K-oneTexas
1. While conservatives were off flirting with every Rudy, Fred, and Huck, the Nice Guy, Mitt, waited patiently, holding a bouquet. By the time we realized the Flash in the Pan Guys weren’t the ones to bring home to mom, it was too late for the Nice Guy. And the Bad Boy already had the ticket to the Big Dance.

Nope. The REAL conservatives were with Fred (and Duncan) all along.

26 posted on 02/21/2008 8:20:45 AM PST by Titus Quinctius Cincinnatus (Men fight well when they know that no prisoners will be taken.)
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To: longtermmemmory
We should even revisit the whole concept of Thompson as a vote splitter for McCain.

I personally like the idea of Romney and Huck as the vote splitters for McCain.

27 posted on 02/21/2008 8:24:48 AM PST by Titus Quinctius Cincinnatus (Men fight well when they know that no prisoners will be taken.)
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To: HappyinAZ
How many times to people have to post his conservative voting record befor you get it?

Because what he did twenty years ago is not nearly so important as what he's done in the last eight.

28 posted on 02/21/2008 8:27:21 AM PST by Titus Quinctius Cincinnatus (Men fight well when they know that no prisoners will be taken.)
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To: HappyinAZ
How many times to people have to post his conservative voting record befor you get it?

Here, let me post a link to his voting record.

John McCain’s voting record

He ain't the most conservative that ever voted but he wasn't a liberal, until lately.

I still don't know how I will vote.

29 posted on 02/21/2008 8:31:06 AM PST by Just another Joe (Warning: FReeping can be addictive and helpful to your mental health)
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To: K-oneTexas

What happens when McCain plops face first into his soup at a campaign dinner? The guy is way past his sell date. Yeah, I’ll vote for this backstabber if he’s still ambulatory on Nov 4th


30 posted on 02/21/2008 8:34:44 AM PST by dennisw (Never bet on a false prophet! <<<<<||||>>>>> Never bet on Islam!)
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To: Titus Quinctius Cincinnatus
Fred and Duncan were. However Fred didn't have the fire in his belly once he entered the race. Duncan didn't seem to run a national campaign but rather tried to do it as a grass roots campaign. Neither withstood the test of time of a campaign. Unfortunately that is the truth.
31 posted on 02/21/2008 8:35:41 AM PST by K-oneTexas (I'm not a judge and there ain't enough of me to be a jury. (Zell Miller, A National Party No More))
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To: e-male
Ph.D. = Pile it high and deep.
32 posted on 02/21/2008 8:38:30 AM PST by allmendream ("A Lyger is pretty much my favorite animal."NapoleonD)
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To: K-oneTexas; oldglory; MinuteGal; seekthetruth; mcmuffin; M Kehoe; gonzo; sheikdetailfeather; ...

“Contrary to popular conservative myth, the nomination of John McCain did not materialize out of thin air.” ~ Monica Crowley

She shot herself in the foot in the first sentence.

Rush in___ October 2006 ___ before the election:

“..But none of it still clicks logically to me why you expect — or why you think — by sending your own people out of power adds up to a good thing, especially positioning you for a re-conquest of that power in 2008. I’ll tell you what’s going to happen. If the Republicans lose the House and the Senate because of principled conservatives who exercise their power by doing nothing, by staying home and [not] voting, and if the Democrats win, they’re not going to stop being kooky and they can’t start being kooky because they are kooky to begin with. It stuns me. ...

“..The idea facilitating all this, while hiding under this or behind the banner of: “I’m principled and they’ve let me down and they need to be taught a lesson.”

Well, fine and dandy, but why is it that you don’t think the left needs to be taught a lesson for their absolutely unbelievable childish, immature, and dangerous behavior the last five years? How do they escape your wrathful eye? How is it that the Democrats somehow don’t make you mad? What is this death wish that some of you have? Why is it you cannot see who the real problem in America is or who your real enemy is in a political sense? Why can’t you see it? And if you do see it, then would somebody explain to me how ignoring the enemy and allowing them to gain more power somehow advances your cause? It may make you feel better, and it may mean that you are selfish, and it may mean you’re trying to portray yourself as smarter and more forward thinking than anybody else.

But it’s a death wish, particularly this notion that they’re not going to get anything done in the next two years anyway, and they’ll learn a lesson. Let me tell you about learning a lesson. In two years, you same people who will have helped bring about an ascension to power by the Democrats are going to be so angry; you’re going to be so fed up over what they have tried to do, over the things they will maybe have accomplished, that you are going to demand power back — and you will accept anybody that you think has a chance of winning it.

Right now, that looks like McCain above anybody else — who, I must tell you, is not a conservative — and so what are you probably going to end up doing? You’re going to be so frustrated by 2008 and the thought of Hillary Clinton becoming president is so obnoxious, so abhorrent, that in 2008, you will flush your precious principles down the drain and elect a Republican, precisely the kind of Republican you think you’re running against now. Or you will at least nominate one. Who knows how that election will go. So the very principle that you are fighting here, if you succeed, you will be given a candidate who fits the very thing you’re angry about, somebody who’s not conservative enough, but probably has the best chance of winning. ...” excerpted from:

Disaster Does Loom if Democrats Win,and Will Lead to Nomination of McCain
October 18, 2006
http://www.rushlimbaugh.com/home/daily/site_020808/content/Landmark_Rush_Monologue.member.html

BEGIN TRANSCRIPT
RUSH: I want to continue on the theme that has evolved over the past couple of days, maybe even a little bit longer than that and that is the notion, well, there’s an argument out there raging between noted professionals like me and rank amateurs over whether or not it’s a smart thing to do to not vote in this election. I’ve heard this before. You know, I’ve heard the argument, “Well, the Republicans abandoned their principles, and I’m not going to abandon mine, so screw them!” The last time this happened in significant numbers to deleterious effect was 1992, when a bunch of Republicans said to hell with Bush 41 and the no-new-taxes promise that he broke.

“We have to show these guys a lesson,” so we ended up with eight years of Bill Clinton — and ...” [snip] http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/1968154/posts?page=42#42


33 posted on 02/21/2008 9:00:41 AM PST by Matchett-PI (Racists, criminals, and all the dregs only have a voice in one Party - all vote 'RAT)
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To: K-oneTexas
While conservatives were off flirting with every Rudy, Fred, and Huck, the Nice Guy, Mitt, waited patiently, holding a bouquet.

Another saddened Mitten, otherwise known as a sufferer of (ERCD) Estrogen Related Cognitive Dissonance.

Mitt was far from the "nice guy"--he's an Eddie Haskell-type nice guy. And even intelligent women with PhDs seem to fall for it every single time.
34 posted on 02/21/2008 9:07:18 AM PST by Antoninus (How did you come to Barack?)
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