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Washington Post: Lots Of Bush People Running McCain Campaign

If the tone and style of GOP Presidential nominee Sen. John McCain’s campaign seem a bit deja vu to you, the Washington Post underscores the reason why:

When Gov. Sarah Palin flew home to Alaska for the first time since being named the Republican vice presidential nominee, she brought along at least half a dozen new advisers to conduct briefings, stage-manage her first television interview and help her prepare for a critical debate next month.

From Mark Wallace, a Bush appointee to the United Nations, to Tucker Eskew, who ran strategic communications for the Bush White House, to Greg Jenkins, who served as the deputy assistant to Bush in his first term and was executive director of the 2004 inauguration, Palin was surrounded on the trip home by operatives deeply rooted in the Bush administration.

The clutch of Bush veterans helping to coach Palin reflects a larger reality about Sen. John McCain’s presidential campaign: Far from being a group of outsiders to the Republican Party power structure, it is now run largely by skilled operatives who learned their crafts in successive Bush campaigns and various jobs across the Bush government over the past eight years.

The team has been assembled and led by Steve Schmidt, a sharp-witted, low-key strategist who has emerged as the campaign’s day-to-day operations chief after the ouster of a group of sometimes undisciplined McCain loyalists. Schmidt’s operation is tightly run and hard-nosed — made up of policy advisers, communications experts, advance people and lower-level aides, many of them old friends who have worked together for the last eight years, and whose presence lends a familiar vibe to the Palin operation.

And McCain’s campaign clearly turned around once Schmidt took over its operations to the applause of GOPers everywhere. It’s Rove-derived, but it wins presidential elections. And, more often than not in recent years, Democrats have not. Is the Obama campaign capable of matching wits and campaign experience with this group?

  • Silhouette
    "Palin was surrounded on the trip home by operatives deeply rooted in the Bush administration."
    **********

    Shocker...

    Not..
  • CStanley
    Is the Obama campaign capable of matching wits and campaign experience with this group?

    Judging by the most recent frontpage of www.factcheck.org, it looks like they're certainly willing to give it their best shot.
  • Gichin13
    I like Obama, but I have been disappointed in some of his ads lately too. Point well taken.

    These are perhaps not nearly as bad as the kindergarten ad, but still definitely not the high road. I am fine with negative ads, but they should stay factual.
  • JSpencer
    Too bad Obama couldn't have stayed on the high road... but America has spoken and told us that negative wins, so what's he to do? Be the nice guy who finishes last? And turn the country back into the hands of those who have been sending it down the tubes? What to do, what to do... And oh, btw, thank-you Mr Rove for the (cancerous) stamp you've left on our democracy. By the time another generation goes by, nobody will remember it as ever having been anything but a divisive cesspool of hypocrisy and self-interest. What a fine legacy you will have...
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