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View Full Version : What John McCain Underestimates


Yellowdogtexan
06-05-2008, 05:48 PM
This is amusing http://thepage.time.com/halperin%E2%80%99s-take-what-john-mccain-underestimates/1. The astonishing enthusiasm that Obama inspires in his supporters — and how much it contrasts with the respect, but not passion, McCain enjoys from his own backers. (And the size of Obama’s crowds…)

2. The “Major League vs Little League” difference between Obama’s infrastructure and his own.

3. The inherent difficulty/sensitivity of running against two figures at once. McCain will have to 1) explicitly criticize a sitting Republican president before Republican audiences and 2) prevent the historic event of electing the nation’s first African-American president that many in the country (and the media) desire.

4. The ever-present danger on the trail that he might evoke Bob Dole with a Bob Dole-like misstep (fall off a stage, sound like a Washington fossil, seem angry and out of touch).

5. How little most Americans care about foreign policy (beyond the Iraq War) when the economy is in the tank.

6. How many voters (even Republican stalwarts) dread the idea of a virtual third Bush term.

7. How many members of the media dread the idea of covering a virtual third Bush term (and how much they buy Obama’s argument that McCain is an extension of Bush-Cheney).

8. The extent to which McCain’s lack of an economic message could make Obama (who also is challenged in adequately addressing the economy) seem like Bob Rubin, Bill Clinton, and Lou Dobbs all rolled into one.

9. That many of his party’s wiseguys and wisegals see polling data suggesting his chances of winning are no more than 30% (and how much it infects their cable TV appearances).

10. That in modern America, perception is often reality and style often beats substance.

11. That age is only a number unless it’s a really high number — then it’s a liability.

12. How old he looks when he is acting “presidential” on the stump – and how incongruous it makes his message of change appear.

13. How powerful debates might be when the allegedly inexperienced Obama of allegedly questionable judgment goes toe-to-toe with McCain, even on national security, and is therefore deemed of sufficient strength and stature to be president by many.

14. How valuable Obama makes voters feel (”we are the change we have been waiting for”) – while McCain’s campaign instructs and lectures voters.

15. How forcefully Obama will now move to the center as a mainstream, optimistic candidate celebrating both change and America’s greatness.I worked with the Obama campaign and on point 2, I can tell you that they are good. Expect to see Obama to pick up a national delegate or two this weekend in the Texas State Democratic Party Convention. The degree of organization of the campaign is truly amzaing.

issac the dragon
06-05-2008, 06:00 PM
Point 3. sucks, but it got him nominated, so it might work.

Obama is not a good debater, but McSame is worse. Does anyone listen to debates besides political junkies? What about the press loving McSame because he lets them live in his lap? Has he stopped that? I wondered what the press would do with two canidates they loved.

Viki
06-05-2008, 06:18 PM
Ah, the press ... I watched today as Andrea Mitchell and a female reporter who has been following the Clinton campaign decide that Clinton is delusional ... not in touch with reality, living in a bubble...in systems lingo we call that being so embedded in your own reality (the press, that is) that you can't even spy the horizon.

Apparently, to their thinking, Clinton should have dropped out when Obama announced (rather than be gutsy and brave and playing the game for as much as she could accrue and cash in later). I guess she hasn't been sufficiently ladylike.

Trueblue
06-05-2008, 07:48 PM
I think there is a middle ground between dropping out when Obama announced and refusing to concede when she had lost.

Judge Smails
06-05-2008, 10:49 PM
The debates are going to be painful to watch if you're a McCain supporter. Watching him stumble over pronunciations, mis-stating alliances, having to counter Obama's position on Iraq troop withdrawl with bush like answers....something the voters are sick to death of.

Then there will be the venues of the debates.

Put McCain and Obama in front of an audience at XYZ University and watch what happens.

Holy shit.

The footage that will be generated for Obama ad's and on YOUTUBE will be priceless.

I really feel for McCain. He's a decorated war hero, led a life of public service, suffered as a POW.

And the republican party is leading him to the slaughter.

Trueblue
06-06-2008, 06:55 AM
YellowDog, the word is "misunderestimated". :snicker