Pure
Fiel a Verdad
- Joined
- Dec 20, 2001
- Posts
- 15,135
http://www.thestar.com/article/424410
Why McCain could win the White House
May 12, 2008 04:30 AM Tim Harper
Washington Bureau
[Toronto Star]
WASHINGTON–Howard Dean surveyed the Indianapolis ballroom, a crowd of almost 2,500 Democratic faithful including Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton, and offered a warning.
"The only thing that can stop us from winning the presidency is ourselves," said the chair of the Democratic National Committee.
Maybe.
Conventional wisdom still tells us Obama, the young, silver-tongued agent of change, will easily dispatch Republican John McCain, the geriatric extension of the Bush administration, a man on the wrong side of the Iraq debate in a war-weary country.
[...]
[But] here are 10 reasons McCain could become the next president of the United States:
REAGAN DEMOCRATS
This is the term coined for white, working-class voters who migrated to Ronald Reagan, putting him in office in 1980 and 1984.
Will they become McCain Democrats?
They have consistently put their faith in Clinton during this primary season and Obama has offered no proof so far that he can win them back in the general election.
Obama outpolled Clinton among white voters without a college degree in only three states for which exit polling is available: Vermont, Wisconsin and Utah.
[...]
Obama is supported by less than 30 per cent of these voters in two states key to Democratic hopes: Pennsylvania and Ohio.
A Pew Research poll found almost one in four voters who consider themselves conservative or moderate Democrats would vote for McCain over Obama.
They were much more likely to stay with Clinton against McCain.
WOMEN
Much has been written about the danger of African-Americans and young voters fleeing the party if Clinton was seen to have somehow stolen the nomination from Obama.
Time, space and a unified convention will radically bring down the increasing number of Democrats who angrily say they would not vote for the winner if their candidate loses the nomination.
But there are millions of women, mainly middle-aged and older, who believed this was the year a woman was going to win the White House [...] Many are angry. How many of them will stay home in November or move to McCain?
SCORCHED EARTH
The race so far has been bruising, but not debilitating for Obama.
Clinton has done much of the Republican work in defining her opponent as elitist, inexperienced, a man of words instead of action.
[further actions might tarnish Obama to his great detriment]
RACE
There is still a hesitancy among some in the U.S. heartland to vote for an African-American as president and it is not always reflected in polling.
"You can't be called a racist in this country," said Edward Frantz, a history professor at the University of Indianapolis.
"It is worse to be a racial bigot than a gender bigot in this country at this time." Voters often cite other reasons for not backing Obama.
Clinton wasn't as restrained when she told USA Today last week, "Senator Obama's support among working, hardworking Americans, white Americans, is weakening again ... and whites in (Indiana and North Carolina) who had not completed college were supporting me."
DISTRACTIONS
Rev. Jeremiah Wright, former urban terrorist William Ayers, flag lapel pins, questions about whether he placed his hand over his heart during the playing of the national anthem – they will all resurface for Obama in the general election.
[...]
MCCAIN'S LIFE STORY
It is compelling and it will be exploited.
A man seen as a genuine war hero who overcame more than five years in captivity will play to a patriotic strain in this country which will be hard to counter for Obama, a 46-year-old first-term senator who came of age in the post-Vietnam era.
[...]
OCTOBER SURPRISE
Even if the country heads into the home stretch of this campaign with Obama well ahead, there will always be a sense right until election day that there is a well-timed grenade from the Democrat's past waiting to explode.
The Republicans have already started crafting a story line that the Democrats are nominating a candidate about whom less is known than any other candidate in history.
HOMELAND SECURITY
This has always been the Republican trump card and they will use it again. Polling indicates voters have much more confidence in McCain (63 per cent) than Obama (26 per cent) to defend the country against future attacks.
That far outstrips any margin Bush ever held over the 2004 Democratic nominee, Senator John Kerry, on the issue.
[...]
CALIFORNIA
[Can Arnie deliver it on a silver platter? If so, McC wins.]
Why McCain could win the White House
May 12, 2008 04:30 AM Tim Harper
Washington Bureau
[Toronto Star]
WASHINGTON–Howard Dean surveyed the Indianapolis ballroom, a crowd of almost 2,500 Democratic faithful including Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton, and offered a warning.
"The only thing that can stop us from winning the presidency is ourselves," said the chair of the Democratic National Committee.
Maybe.
Conventional wisdom still tells us Obama, the young, silver-tongued agent of change, will easily dispatch Republican John McCain, the geriatric extension of the Bush administration, a man on the wrong side of the Iraq debate in a war-weary country.
[...]
[But] here are 10 reasons McCain could become the next president of the United States:
REAGAN DEMOCRATS
This is the term coined for white, working-class voters who migrated to Ronald Reagan, putting him in office in 1980 and 1984.
Will they become McCain Democrats?
They have consistently put their faith in Clinton during this primary season and Obama has offered no proof so far that he can win them back in the general election.
Obama outpolled Clinton among white voters without a college degree in only three states for which exit polling is available: Vermont, Wisconsin and Utah.
[...]
Obama is supported by less than 30 per cent of these voters in two states key to Democratic hopes: Pennsylvania and Ohio.
A Pew Research poll found almost one in four voters who consider themselves conservative or moderate Democrats would vote for McCain over Obama.
They were much more likely to stay with Clinton against McCain.
WOMEN
Much has been written about the danger of African-Americans and young voters fleeing the party if Clinton was seen to have somehow stolen the nomination from Obama.
Time, space and a unified convention will radically bring down the increasing number of Democrats who angrily say they would not vote for the winner if their candidate loses the nomination.
But there are millions of women, mainly middle-aged and older, who believed this was the year a woman was going to win the White House [...] Many are angry. How many of them will stay home in November or move to McCain?
SCORCHED EARTH
The race so far has been bruising, but not debilitating for Obama.
Clinton has done much of the Republican work in defining her opponent as elitist, inexperienced, a man of words instead of action.
[further actions might tarnish Obama to his great detriment]
RACE
There is still a hesitancy among some in the U.S. heartland to vote for an African-American as president and it is not always reflected in polling.
"You can't be called a racist in this country," said Edward Frantz, a history professor at the University of Indianapolis.
"It is worse to be a racial bigot than a gender bigot in this country at this time." Voters often cite other reasons for not backing Obama.
Clinton wasn't as restrained when she told USA Today last week, "Senator Obama's support among working, hardworking Americans, white Americans, is weakening again ... and whites in (Indiana and North Carolina) who had not completed college were supporting me."
DISTRACTIONS
Rev. Jeremiah Wright, former urban terrorist William Ayers, flag lapel pins, questions about whether he placed his hand over his heart during the playing of the national anthem – they will all resurface for Obama in the general election.
[...]
MCCAIN'S LIFE STORY
It is compelling and it will be exploited.
A man seen as a genuine war hero who overcame more than five years in captivity will play to a patriotic strain in this country which will be hard to counter for Obama, a 46-year-old first-term senator who came of age in the post-Vietnam era.
[...]
OCTOBER SURPRISE
Even if the country heads into the home stretch of this campaign with Obama well ahead, there will always be a sense right until election day that there is a well-timed grenade from the Democrat's past waiting to explode.
The Republicans have already started crafting a story line that the Democrats are nominating a candidate about whom less is known than any other candidate in history.
HOMELAND SECURITY
This has always been the Republican trump card and they will use it again. Polling indicates voters have much more confidence in McCain (63 per cent) than Obama (26 per cent) to defend the country against future attacks.
That far outstrips any margin Bush ever held over the 2004 Democratic nominee, Senator John Kerry, on the issue.
[...]
CALIFORNIA
[Can Arnie deliver it on a silver platter? If so, McC wins.]
Last edited: