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Rally for Romney: Conservatives need to act now, before it is too late.
National Review Online ^ | January 31, 2008 | Mark R. Levin

Posted on 01/31/2008 10:37:41 AM PST by Delacon

I have spent nearly four decades in the conservative movement — from precinct worker to the Reagan White House. I campaigned for Reagan in 1976 and 1980. I served in several top positions during the Reagan administration, including chief of staff to Attorney General Edwin Meese. I have been an active conservative when conservatism was not in high favor.

I remember in 1976, as a 19-year-old in Pennsylvania working the polls for Reagan against the sitting Republican president, Gerald Ford, I was demeaned for supporting a candidate who was said to be an extremist B-actor who couldn’t win a general election, and opposing a sitting president. And at the time Reagan wasn’t even on the ballot in Pennsylvania because he decided to focus his limited resources on other states. I tried to convince voter after voter to write-in Reagan’s name on the ballot. In the end, Reagan received about five percent of the Republican vote as a write-in candidate.

Of course, Reagan lost the nomination to Ford by the narrowest of margins. Ford went on to lose to a little-known ex-governor from Georgia, Jimmy Carter. But the Reagan Revolution became stronger, not weaker, as a result. And the rest is history.

I don’t pretend to speak for President Reagan or all conservatives. I speak for myself. But I watched the Republican debate last night, which was held at the Reagan library, and I have to say that I fear a McCain candidacy. He would be an exceedingly poor choice as the Republican nominee for president.

Let’s get the largely unspoken part of this out the way first. McCain is an intemperate, stubborn individual, much like Hillary Clinton. These are not good qualities to have in a president. As I watched him last night, I could see his personal contempt for Mitt Romney roiling under the surface. And why? Because Romney ran campaign ads that challenged McCain’s record? Is this the first campaign in which an opponent has run ads questioning another candidate’s record? That’s par for the course. To the best of my knowledge, Romney’s ads have not been personal. He has not even mentioned the Keating-Five to counter McCain's cheap shots. But the same cannot be said of McCain’s comments about Romney.

Last night McCain, who is the putative frontrunner, resorted to a barrage of personal assaults on Romney that reflect more on the man making them than the target of the attacks. McCain now has a habit of describing Romney as a “manager for profit” and someone who has “laid-off” people, implying that Romney is both unpatriotic and uncaring. Moreover, he complains that Romney is using his “millions” or “fortune” to underwrite his campaign. This is a crass appeal to class warfare. McCain is extremely wealthy through marriage. Romney has never denigrated McCain for his wealth or the manner in which he acquired it. Evidently Romney’s character doesn’t let him to cross certain boundaries of decorum and decency, but McCain’s does. And what of managing for profit? When did free enterprise become evil? This is liberal pablum which, once again, could have been uttered by Hillary Clinton.

And there is the open secret of McCain losing control of his temper and behaving in a highly inappropriate fashion with prominent Republicans, including Thad Cochran, John Cornyn, Strom Thurmond, Donald Rumsfeld, Bradley Smith, and a list of others. Does anyone honestly believe that the Clintons or the Democrat party would give McCain a pass on this kind of behavior?

 

As for McCain “the straight-talker,” how can anyone explain his abrupt about-face on two of his signature issues: immigration and tax cuts? As everyone knows, McCain led the battle not once but twice against the border-security-first approach to illegal immigration as co-author of the McCain-Kennedy bill. He disparaged the motives of the millions of people who objected to his legislation. He fought all amendments that would limit the general amnesty provisions of the bill. This controversy raged for weeks. Only now he says he’s gotten the message. Yet, when asked last night if he would sign the McCain-Kennedy bill as president, he dissembles, arguing that it’s a hypothetical question. Last Sunday on Meet the Press, he said he would sign the bill. There’s nothing straight about this talk. Now, I understand that politicians tap dance during the course of a campaign, but this was a defining moment for McCain. And another defining moment was his very public opposition to the Bush tax cuts in 2001 and 2003. He was the media’s favorite Republican in opposition to Bush. At the time his primary reason for opposing the cuts was because they favored the rich (and, by the way, they did not). Now he says he opposed them because they weren’t accompanied by spending cuts. That’s simply not correct.

 

Even worse than denying his own record, McCain is flatly lying about Romney’s position on Iraq. As has been discussed for nearly a week now, Romney did not support a specific date to withdraw our forces from Iraq. The evidence is irrefutable. And it’s also irrefutable that McCain is abusing the English language (Romney’s statements) the way Bill Clinton did in front of a grand jury. The problem is that once called on it by everyone from the New York Times to me, he obstinately refuses to admit the truth. So, last night, he lied about it again. This isn’t open to interpretation. But it does give us a window into who he is.

 

Of course, it’s one thing to overlook one or two issues where a candidate seeking the Republican nomination as a conservative might depart from conservative orthodoxy. But in McCain’s case, adherence is the exception to the rule — McCain-Feingold (restrictions on political speech), McCain-Kennedy (amnesty for illegal aliens), McCain-Kennedy-Edwards (trial lawyers’ bill of rights), McCain-Lieberman (global warming legislation), Gang of 14 (obstructing change to the filibuster rule for judicial nominations), the Bush tax cuts, and so forth. This is a record any liberal Democrat would proudly run on. Are we to overlook this record when selecting a Republican nominee to carry our message in the general election?

 

But what about his national security record? It’s a mixed bag. McCain is rightly credited with being an early voice for changing tactics in Iraq. He was a vocal supporter of the surge, even when many were not. But he does not have a record of being a vocal advocate for defense spending when Bill Clinton was slashing it. And he has been on the wrong side of the debate on homeland security. He supports closing Guantanamo Bay, which would result in granting an array of constitutional protections to al-Qaeda detainees, and limiting legitimate interrogation techniques that have, in fact, saved American lives. Combined with his (past) de-emphasis on border-security, I think it’s fair to say that McCain’s positions are more in line with the ACLU than most conservatives.

 

Why recite this record? Well, if conservatives don’t act now to stop McCain, he will become the Republican nominee and he will lose the general election. He is simply flawed on too many levels. He is a Republican Hillary Clinton in many ways. Many McCain supporters insist he is the only Republican who can beat Hillary Clinton or Barak Obama. And they point to certain polls. The polls are meaningless this far from November. Six months ago, the polls had Rudy winning the Republican nomination. In October 1980, the polls had Jimmy Carter defeating Ronald Reagan. This is no more than spin.

But wouldn’t the prospect of a Clinton or Obama presidency drive enough of the grassroots to the polls for McCain? It wasn’t enough to motivate the base to vote in November 2006 to stop Nancy Pelosi from becoming speaker or the Democrats from taking Congress. My sense is it won’t be enough to carry McCain to victory, either. And McCain has done more to build animus among the people whose votes he will need than Denny Hastert or Bill Frist. And there won’t be enough Democrats voting for McCain to offset the electorate McCain has alienated (and is likely to continue to alienate, as best as I can tell).

McCain has not won overwhelming pluralities, let alone majorities, in any of the primaries. A thirty-six-percent win in Florida doesn’t make a juggernaut. But the liberal media are promoting him now as the presumptive nominee. More and more establishment Republican officials are jumping on McCain’s bandwagon — the latest being Arnold Schwarzenegger, who has all but destroyed California’s Republican party.

Let’s face it, none of the candidates are perfect. They never are. But McCain is the least perfect of the viable candidates. The only one left standing who can honestly be said to share most of our conservative principles is Mitt Romney. I say this as someone who has not been an active Romney supporter. If conservatives don’t unite behind Romney at this stage, and become vocal in their support for him, then they will get McCain as their Republican nominee and probably a Democrat president. And in either case, we will have a deeply flawed president.

Mark Levin, a former senior Reagan Justice Department official, is a nationally syndicated radio-talk-show host.



TOPICS: Editorial; Politics/Elections; US: Virginia
KEYWORDS: 2008; elections; hillarylite; marklevin; mccain; primaries; romney
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To: freespirited

But why do you have conservative principles? I presume because you have weighed the varying positions, and found the conservative ones to be the best. You may have even tried other principles and found them lacking.

Your objection is somewhat akin to the school system from that movie “stand and deliver”. The kids got most of the answers right, and the school decided that since they had always been flunking, they must have cheated to get the same answers.

But in the end, it turns out that they got the right answers because someone finally showed them the value of doing right, and they answered the same because it was the right answer.

I actually disagree that every one of his positions is right on. Conservatives don’t have a right on. He isn’t pure on the 2nd amendment. He isn’t quite right on free trade. He has doubts but doesn’t discount global warming.

But to the degree he has adopted our position, why can’t it be because our position is right? It’s not like he wasn’t already on out side on most of the issues, even in 1994. There were only a couple issues he was deftly against us. One is an issue that I see people turn on a dime with — abortion. It’s really a yes-no issue, so it’s simply to one day realise you were wrong.

We’ve seen girls sure to have an abortion, and in one meeting, boom, they change their mind, they are pro-life, they go off and have their child. Confronted with reality, smart people make the right choice.

The gay issue I think he’s in the mainstream of conservative thought, but he’s “liberal” to the more ardent social conservatives, of which I’m otherwise a part except I’m not as dogmatic about public policy of gays (I personally oppose homosexuality as immoral, as sin, as perverted, as unnatural).

But he’d lose no support if he said “I was wrong about accepting gays”, and yet he doesn’t say that, because it’s how he really thinks.

I agree, people can be fooled. But he’d have to fool a lot of people. And frankly, we’ve been fooled by others who we were certain were conservative, and maybe they were but somewhere they got corrupted.

But at this point, we are not talking about abandoning a good conservative for a crap-shoot. We are talking about either voting for a known half-conservative who probably can’t win the election, or picking a solid conservative platform of a man who at worst might be lying about a few of the social planks for which little can be done anyway.

I think that’s an easy bet. It’s like “I’ll give you $10, or else you can take this box which has a $20 bill stuck to it, and might have another $20 inside or not”. The fool says “Well, the $10 is a sure thing, and we don’t know if the box is worth $40 or not — but we KNOW the box is better than the $10 check, and the other $20 at this point is a pleasant extra.

I understand people not voting for a half-conservative because it “compromises their principles”, and “sends a message we don’t care about conservative values”.

But in this case, McCain wins with or without our support. McCain will win WITHOUT conservatives, and will “prove” that you can ignore conservatives and win the nomination.

And meanwhile, people will look at Romney’s platform, see him lose, and the next time around, NONE of our candidates will have a conservative platform — since it was rejected by the voters.

There’s no loss of “principle” in voting for Romney, because he is running on conservative values. If it turns out he lied, we have been fooled, but everybody will know he only won because he SAID he was a conservative, and next time around we’ll have conservatives, REAL ones, willing to run knowing that we will be able to get them the nomination.


481 posted on 01/31/2008 8:23:25 PM PST by CharlesWayneCT
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To: Petronski

LOL. You’ve outdone yourself! “Not just for breakfast anymore...” Geeeeeeeez!


482 posted on 01/31/2008 8:26:59 PM PST by jdm (A Hunter Thompson ticket would be suicide.)
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To: littlehouse36
And he's good looking, too!
483 posted on 01/31/2008 9:00:55 PM PST by Yaelle
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To: Beagle8U

Idiot? You can’t write an ounce of truth. You defended him on his distortion of the Iraq specific withdrawal date spin and you claimed he was endorsed by Nancy. Who’s the idiot? First clue, the guy who can’t read, or choose to not be honest.

Mutt is dropping and that leaves McCain, what a victory! yeah, we get the guy John Kerry rejected. Continue with your spin, distortions, and celebrations, VICTORY!

“Idiot.” Talk about a black pot.


484 posted on 01/31/2008 10:15:57 PM PST by enough_idiocy (Romney/Thompson or Steele '08)
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To: Leisler
is it a requirement that Romney supporters be ignorant?

I see that McCain supporters are just like McCain himself: nasty, arrogant, foul-tempered, and rude.
485 posted on 01/31/2008 10:18:41 PM PST by CottonBall (The mass of men lead lives of quiet desperation. (Henry David Thoreau, "Walden", 1854 ))
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To: Delacon
He has always done what he said he would do.

You bet! He told the radical gay Left he would do more for them than the previous world record-holder in that area, Teddy Kennedy, and man, did he come through in spades! Gay marriage, homosexualized schools, gay activists on the court...

486 posted on 01/31/2008 10:21:17 PM PST by EternalVigilance ("An appeaser is one who feeds a crocodile -- hoping it will eat him last." - Winston Churchill)
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To: Petronski
That's a lie.

Technically perhaps, but not on purpose. I was just mistaken.
487 posted on 01/31/2008 10:26:32 PM PST by CottonBall (The mass of men lead lives of quiet desperation. (Henry David Thoreau, "Walden", 1854 ))
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To: scripter
Not necessarily. Many FR conservatives voted for Schwartzneggar.

I am sure they did, but it was only to make sure the Democrat wasn't elected, not for any support for him.

488 posted on 01/31/2008 10:36:13 PM PST by fortheDeclaration ("Our constitution was made only for a moral and religious people".-John Adams)
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To: holdonnow
Great column!!! I’m glad to see you coming out so strong for Romney. Now if you could only convince Rush to do the same......: )
489 posted on 01/31/2008 10:37:39 PM PST by TAdams8591 ((Mitt Romney THE ONLY candidate who can defeat Hillary, Obama and yes McCain!!!!))
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To: Extremely Extreme Extremist

The smearing of the two isn’t even close. No comparison. Romney has been smeared more than any of the candidates BY FAR.


490 posted on 01/31/2008 10:40:15 PM PST by TAdams8591 ((Mitt Romney THE ONLY candidate who can defeat Hillary, Obama and yes McCain!!!!))
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To: holdonnow

AMEN, FRiend.


491 posted on 01/31/2008 10:43:39 PM PST by nutmeg (We need to unite behind Romney on Super Tuesday, and send McAmnesty back to Arizona)
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To: StarFan; Dutchy; alisasny; BobFromNJ; BUNNY2003; Cacique; Clemenza; Coleus; cyborg; DKNY; ...

Article by The Great One... Mark Levin.


492 posted on 01/31/2008 10:46:48 PM PST by nutmeg (We need to unite behind Romney on Super Tuesday, and send McAmnesty back to Arizona)
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To: Carry_Okie; DoughtyOne

Re: surviving 4 years of Hillary.

If Washington and NYC are nuked by islamofascists (and these plots aren’t stopped because She ain’t listening in to their conversations anymore), then the country is screwed in more ways than you can imagine.

There are some people around here who don’t have any concept about what a nationwide Katrina effect that would have.


493 posted on 01/31/2008 11:22:38 PM PST by patriciaruth (http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1562436/posts)
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To: patriciaruth

PatriciaRuth, I don’t disagree. Now who will facilitate that? Quite likely it will involve one of the 70,000 plus Saudi Arabian nationals inside our nation at this very moment on student visas.

Who allowed them to come here? Who allows them to travel freely within our nation?

I share your concerns about what Hillary does, but unlike so many republicans these days, I have grave concerns about what republicans do that put our nation at risk. In fact I am so concerned about it that I simply refuse to vote for men who will keep these same policies in effect until the unthinkable does happen.

And then they’ll glibly say, “Oh, we didn’t think of that.” Sound familiar?

Give me a conservative that will get our immigration, all of it, under control or don’t come knockin’ on election day.

I am darned tired of this. Either we are at risk enough to put all sorts of special policies into effect and get our borders under control, or we aren’t and we can quite harassing citizens only.


494 posted on 01/31/2008 11:57:10 PM PST by DoughtyOne (PARTY WANTED: Full Time, Cons exp a must. Refs 20 yrs. No Amnesty sptrs. 1 vote per 4 yrs negotiable)
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To: CottonBall

This is no place for dolts, so hop away little fluff ball.

( and HDT was a poser, a fake, a fraud. )


495 posted on 02/01/2008 12:16:52 AM PST by Leisler
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To: TAdams8591

That’s what happens when you are the John Edwards/John Kerry of the Republicans.


496 posted on 02/01/2008 12:19:03 AM PST by Leisler
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To: Delacon

Awesome piece!!! Mark is always the voice of reason - I enjoy his articles. I have researched all of the republican candidates for 6 months now. In my opinion there is nobody as flawed both professionally and personally as John McCain. The facts are the facts - he is what he is. Besides McCain himself being mired in scandal, his wife was caught stealing drugs from her own charity. The two of them have poor track records with regard to personal choice and decision making under pressure. I know how I am voting because I have spent much time in learning about the candidates. There is nobody like Mitt Romney in the intellectual, personal, and professional arenas. Again, the facts are the facts - he is what he is. This election cycle has been very interesting and it actually tells us more about the decline of this great society than it does about the candidates. My parent’s generation could never have overlooked what we are being asked to overlook with a vote for McCain. Actually, McCain would not even be on the ballot 30 years ago - America’s “greatest generation” would never have been fooled by him. This is the scariest of times.


497 posted on 02/01/2008 12:42:31 AM PST by kimley
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To: daviscupper

Arnold cannot be the vice-president. He is not a natural born American. A vice-president must be able to assume the office of the Presidency when the President is not able.
——————————————————————>

True, but since when did anyone in Washington adhere to the Constitution?


498 posted on 02/01/2008 2:54:57 AM PST by not2worry ( What goes around comes around!)
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To: Delacon; narses
Pinged from Terri Dailies

8mm


499 posted on 02/01/2008 4:38:40 AM PST by 8mmMauser (Jezu ufam tobie...Jesus I trust in Thee)
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To: fortheDeclaration
That’s just it. You can’t know why they voted for Schwarzenegger. Many here said a vote for McClintock was a vote for Bustamonte, yet some voted for McClintock anyway and supported the conservative candidate. Was their vote really a vote for Bustamonte? Of course not. This conservative does not rally for RINOs.
500 posted on 02/01/2008 5:33:56 AM PST by scripter ("You don't have a soul. You are a soul. You have a body." - C.S. Lewis)
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