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McCain's Revival
McCain’s Revival?
John McCain’s campaign experienced a revival at Saddleback Church this past Saturday -- a reawakening of enthusiasm that could fuel him to victory in November.
The Rick Warren Obama/McCain interview surprised me like a sucker punch. I was floored. McCain came across as the candidate I wanted as Commander in Chief – confident, substantive and even inspirational (“I want to encourage a generation to aspire to more than their own self interest.”). Obama struck me as a mediocre contender for a guidance counselor – everything will be ok if we can just understand one another and get along. The contrast was jarring.
Promising to “bring people together” is not a sufficient answer in a dangerous and complicated world. Obama sounded like a playground supervisor who tries quelling bullies by telling them they just need to be nicer. While liberals may swoon under Obama’s spell, shouting “stop it” won’t deter Bin Laden and other Islamic extremists from wanting to murder Americans and end our way of life. The Illinois Senator’s hubris might lead him to believe his personality and intellect can defeat evil. Thousands of years of human history prove he’s wrong.
On moral issues Obama was equally opaque. His responses to Warren’s questions were more appropriate for a University of Chicago honors seminar on Derrida – post-modern soliloquies that clearly expressed his relativist world view: All Truth is Your Truth (whatever that might be).
Before it began ,I thought Obama would dominate the event. He is comfortable in the Oprah style, “tell me how you feel,” interview setting. He is urbane, likeable and quick witted. And he is more conversant in the language of faith. Rhetoric like “we need to focus on deeds, not words,” or “whatever you do to the least of my brothers,” flows easily from the lips of one schooled in the liberal Social Gospel. McCain does not share that religious tradition, and I thought he would struggle in that venue.
Yet in the end, contrast was McCain’s friend. After each of Obama’s answers I had to ask myself “what did he just say?” Not so with McCain. Democratic strategists believe the Illinois Senator can do better than Gore and Kerry among faith-based voters by just showing up at events like this, or at least not speaking about religion with a hostile voice. I’m not sure.
Liberals erroneously construct a caricature that they think captures the faith-based community. They assume religiously-attuned voters only care about a narrow set of issues such as gay marriage and abortion. In reality, these American voters take a much broader and deeper view of the world.
McCain offered this broader perspective. He provided clarity, not rhetorical mush. And on issue after issue – from “what was your greatest moral failure,” to “does evil exist,” the presumptive Republican nominee answered clearly and concisely. There was no “on one hand some people believe this and on the other some believe that.” Agree with him or not, McCain’s positions were unambiguous and more understandable. He communicated convictions with courage. Obama tried to wrap traditional liberal beliefs in language acceptable to faith-based voters. In the end he seemed vapid and confusing.
While I started watching the Warren interview thinking Obama’s message of hope would resonate well in the Saddleback Church, I ended completely inspired – by John McCain.
- Gary Andres's blog
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Comments
I agree!
My reaction was similar. Do you think perhaps one or two questions (like the one about going against party loyalty) were designed to be easy for McCain? I attended the event and wrote about it here.
McCain was just playing to the base.
This was just a convenient opportunity to play to his base, just talk, nothing more.
Okay, you need to shore up your base. Go out there and say a few words that will hit their buttons and they are yours. I mean, where else are they going to go? All you need to do is say enough to get the conservative lemmings to the cliff, Obama will do the rest.
ex animo
davidfarrar
So, Dave. . .
. . .do you suppose McCain could shore up the base by calling for a nationalized healthcare system?
Hi Walt. Thanks for responding.
It's been so long since you and I have had the pleasure of communicating amongst ourselves, I have completely forgotten how you propose to control rising health care costs. Medical food stamps, perhaps?
ex animo
davidfarrar
Big Surprise for Some
it seems many people either haven't really heard John before or haven't really been paying attention....as hard as it is at times to cut through the media clutter of all things Obama John showed up Saturday night comfortable in his own skin and for an hour answered every question asked of him clearly, concisely without hesitation....I've heard and read similar statememts where people who weren't big supporters of John's were blown away by his interview with Rick Warren....he's famous for his straight talk and that was on full display Saturday night....it seems the tide is beginning to turn in John's favor
Saddleback
I agree. I thought afterwards that Hillary's stock would go up in the VP speculation. Indeed, no less of a CW maven than David Gergen thinks that Hillary would be a good add.
The contrast between Obama and McCain was stark. But, being well planned, it was on the Saturday night of one of the final Olympic swimming contests. What was Obama's answer to McCain re: town halls. Let's do it on Labor Day weekend, while everyone else is BBQing? Very clever these guys. Maybe they've known all along that it wouldn't be a pretty sight.
So Hillary/McCain at Saddleback would have been (IMHO) a much different situation. You have to admit the Dems were pretty audacious in selecting Obama. They need Hillary on the ticket to get some gravitas.
now that Mccain is experiencing revival
he should lay off the distortions and character attacks on Obama before someone asks him about the ninth commandment. The attacks on Obama's patriotism will backfire if he keeps them up for 10 more weeks. He has his fine record of maverick votes early in his career and recent strong support for conservative policy to run on. He should explain how his health care proposals will help both the uninsured and undersinsured (who experience finacial crisis when they get sick.) He can advocate for more troops to fight terrorism in Afghanistan and how his military background will help in recruiting them. He can demonstrate his ability to work across the aisle by supporting a compromise deal on energy in the senate before the election. This is the Mccain campaign that I'd like to see.