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01-03-2007, 06:37 PM #1
McCain Won't Excite Conservatives, Says Former Liberal
http://headlines.agapepress.org/archive/1/32007g.asp
McCain Won't Excite Conservatives, Says Former Liberal
By Chad Groening
January 3, 2007
(AgapePress) - An author and self-professed former liberal says he doesn't think Arizona Senator John McCain is going to excite conservatives as the 2008 "presidential sweepstakes" kick into high gear. He believes there are a couple of alternatives who might be more attractive to the conservative voting bloc.
Political analyst Keith Thompson is the author of Leaving the Left: Moments in the News That Made Me Ashamed to Be a Liberal. He says while John McCain remains the nominal frontrunner at this very early stage of the process, the Arizona senator has had a bad track record with conservatives, particularly on the border issue and judicial nominees. Thompson contends the McCain, were he to run, would even have to compete for the moderate Republican vote.
"Guest what? [Former New York City Mayor] Rudy Giuliani is looking at getting in the race, too," the author observes. "So those two guys split that moderate [voting bloc], which is not the predominant voice in the Republican Party anyway."
Thompson describes McCain's support in the GOP as "a mile wide but an inch deep." Among the factors that would count against the Arizona senator among Republican conservatives, says the author, are "his attempts to curry favor with religious conservatives after spending so much of his career dissing those voters, ... actually serving as a thorn in the sides of the conservatives on judicial nominations, and favoring this open borders amnesty approach."
So Thompson says even a longshot like California Congressman Duncan Hunter could cash in on the conservative GOP support. And while he believes Hunter is "good on the issues" and a "credible, strong guy," he says questions still remain.
"How he'll actually play [among voters is unknown]," he concedes. "There are so many factors [that come into play]." Hunter, he says, needs to be able to raise money and avoid verbal gaffes on the campaign trail.
According to Thompson, Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney remains another "McCain alternative," even though some evangelicals have a problem with his well-documented flip-flopping on hot-button issues like abortion and same-sex "marriage."Support our FIGHT AGAINST illegal immigration & Amnesty by joining our E-mail Alerts at https://eepurl.com/cktGTn
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01-03-2007, 06:46 PM #2
This is why the only promising person running for the Presidental seat in 2008 would have to be Duncan Hunter!
Build the dam fence post haste!
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01-03-2007, 07:05 PM #3
Re: McCain Won't Excite Conservatives, Says Former Liberal
Originally Posted by jean
the real 'hot-button' issues are the war in Iraq and the current invasion of 3rd world illegals. i know it sounds bad but abortion and whatever sex partner you want to marry just seem very 'local'. we need to protect our borders and so doing our people first, then we can worry if our son is dating the neighbors son...
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01-03-2007, 08:28 PM #4
I think its pretty safe to say the only people who support the traitor mccain are liberals. I don't know any conservatives who even still want him in Washington let alone want him as a president.
"Doing the same thing over and over again and expecting the same results is the definition of insanity. " Albert Einstein.
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01-03-2007, 09:28 PM #5
McCain may not excite conservatives but he sure will excite illegal aliens.
Thank you! We are ready to roll.
05-01-2024, 02:07 PM in illegal immigration Announcements