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McCain-Palin Mudslinging & The Season Of The Conservative Pundit’s Discontent

Times could not be tougher for the John McCain-Sarah Palin punditocracy.

01aaalemmings.jpgIt’s bad enough that the approval rating of George W. Bush, their hero of the last eight years, has reached a historic low. And, inconveniently for these Bubba-Bashers, Bill Clinton ended his second term with a robust 70 percent rating despite lying about sex.

Or that the revolution fostered by Ronald Reagan, their hero of the last century, has been sacrificed at the altar of greed through a deregulation movement nurtured by now panicked conservatives who have become what they long railed against — big-government socialists.

While all of that is bad enough, there is the sorry spectacle of McCain who, while not of the hero class because he used to get all mavericky, is bottom-feeding his way to an ignominious climax in the most important presidential election since another big-government socialist defeated Herbert Hoover.

01aaafavor.pngTruth be known, McCain may not have done much better by conducting an honorable campaign. Or by choosing a running mate who is not a cipher.

Still, McCain could have tried. He could have tried by playing to his long suit — experience. He could have held onto his shaky base while dialing back the partisan cant and embracing voters desperate for change through an issues-oriented campaign as a pragmatic Washington insider who is willing to break with the pack and shake things up. In other words, truly embrace the notion of change and not merely steal that meme from Barack Obama.

But just as we’ll never know if the War on Terror would have turned out differently if sufficient resources had been put into Afghanistan and not diverted to Iraq, we’ll never know how McCain would have fared if he had taken the high road.

* * * * *

Speaking of dirt, I took a survey of pro-McCain blogs, including the big aggregators like Townhall and Pajamas Media, to see if anyone was taking McCain and Palin to task for their final descent into slime.

What I found was that while there was a little panic, plenty of amnesia and busy deck chair rearranging, not one of these pundits were troubled. Or suggested that McCain throw another Hail Mary pass by again “suspending” campaigning and blowing off tonight’s debate so he could personally shore up the hemorrhaging Dow Jones Industrial Average.

A sampling:


Jules Crittenden
, always ready with a military analogy at Forward Movement, channels Horatio Nelson and “Commodore Rove” and beseeches McCain and Palin to “attack, attack, attack.”

Alas, the tendentious Jonah Goldberg has nothing better to write about at The Corner at this most crucial juncture than old left-wing magazine interviews with the flaming Bill Ayers.

At least fellow The Corner traveler Mark Levin provides some substance (cough, cough) in arguing that the Keating Five scandal is small beer compared to Obama’s “belief system,” which has made him the darling of “domestic terrorists, Palestinian radicals, Marxists, and black liberation ideologues.”

Stuck with lemons, Michelle Malkin makes lemonade: People are again picking on Baby Trig, Obama’s wife was perennially dissatisfied in her old job, and the usual whining from a woman who has so endeared herself to right wingnuts.

Rick Moran, who seems to be recovering from his boy crush on Palin as he realizes that come-hither looks and winsome head nods are no substitute for substance, has that sinking feeling at Rightwing Nuthouse. He’s all for name calling, mind you, but fears that it “may backfire.”

Gerard Vanderleun, whose anger-management problems mask one of the keenest intellects in conservative blogging, rants away at American Digest, but fails to give himself credit for the McCain campaign taking his own well-traveled road.

Oh, dear.

* * * * *

Sharp-eyed readers will notice the absence of any mention of the Reverend Jeremiah Wright, whose vetting during the primary season was exhaustive and exhausting.

This is because focusing on the ravings of Obama’s former pastor, whom he has denounced, would invite opening the door to the ravings of Palin’s longtime and current pastor and their own particularly kooky brand of Christianity.

While McCain and Palin are playing the guilt-by-association game, Obama and Biden will repeatedly note in the coming days that McCain played a central role in the last great U.S. financial crisis — the savings-and-loan scandal that nearly destroyed his political career — subsequently fought against institutional reforms, and has had as his chief economic adviser the one person arguably most responsible for the economic meltdown.

While Republicans can hope that some voters change their minds, the economy isn’t listening.

Publius writes at Obsidian Wings that “Political campaigns are the ultimate Darwinian environment. Whatever strategy wins passes its genes on to the next campaign. Atwater won. Rove won. And so they live on even today. It didn’t matter that they used slimy tactics. So long as these tactics succeeded . . . . they would inevitably reemerge in future campaigns.”

There is only one way to end the slime — and that is to win.

That is what Barack Obama will do four weeks from now as the coda to John McCain’s career is written in the gutter.

Cartoon: A Far Side classic by Gary Larson

  • superdestroyer
    Shaun,

    When behind by a couple of touchdowns early in fourth quarter, the coach does not start ranting at the players and assistant. One should wait until the end of the game to start ranting and making long changes.

    Your thesis should probably be reexaimed around the Dec. 1 to see if the conservative pundits are in excuse making mode or in demanding change and heads mode.
  • RevDave
    I agree, the conservative pundits should say nothing while the McCain campaign condones calling Obama a terrorist, the crowd shouts "kill him" and openly insults black soundmen.

    Nothing to see here, please move along and remain silent.
  • DLS
    Poor Shaun. What's he going to do if the GOP fades into obscurity (not extinction, Super D) and the Dems likely (as intelligent people anticipate) make things worse than they are now? (Ironically, we're the same few who can distinguish between those things on which the Dems could rightly be blamed versus larger things out of the control of and not "pinnable" on whoever's in charge at the time).

    Super D: I may actually revisit Town Hall to enjoy the recriminations after the election as well as listen to righty as well as gloating-lefty talk shows just to, again enjoy (in a somewhat perverse sense) the post-mortems.

    Also, I'd say we're well into the fourth quarter now, and there's a possible question of its being three touchdowns ahead for the Demmies at this time. As others have already said, Obama at this point can just avoid mistakes and "run out the clock."
  • RickMoran
    "There is only one way to end the slime — and that is to win."

    Jesus, Mary, and Joseph, you're serious aren't you. You actually believe Obama has run a campaign free of "name calling" and smearing his opponent?

    What planet have you been on for the last 5 months? I guess the Keating 5 ad - a situation where McCain was exonerated and where he himself says he used bad judgement - is talking about "issues."

    Get off your high horse. Obama is doing whatever it takes to win. And smearing McCain is one good way to do it.

    You talk about my infatuation with Palin? Jesus Lord when are you going to take the mote out of your own eye so you can see how far you yourself are in the tank for The One? Anyone who believes this rookie is qualified to be president should have their head examined. Name one presidential candidate from either party in the last 100 years less qualified for the presidency than Obama? You can't.

    And that makes your advocacy of him as partisan as anything I've ever written anywhere about McCain/Palin.
  • kritt11
    Rick-

    Obama only decided to run the Keating 5 ads AFTER the McCain camp had Palin bring up Ayers and Wright. And although McCain wasn't charged with anything, the adjudicating body said he used bad judgment.

    We're looking at judgment calls- is it bad judgment to serve on a board with someone who was an antiwar radical when you were 8 or bad judgment to accept funds from a party that has business before Congress?
  • juneauwhy
    Facsism is a totalitarian nationalist and corporatist ideology.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10] It is primarily concerned with notions of cultural, economic, and social decline or decadence, and which seeks to solve such problems by achieving a millenarian national rebirth by exalting the nation, as well as promoting cults of unity, strength and purity.

    Those are not my words, I copied them from Wikipedia. The neoright pundits are silent (or sounding a bit confused) these days because the emperor's nakedness is now out there for all to see. It is not BIG GOVERNMENT they oppose. They have always wanted a government large enough to effectively tell the rest of us what to do in our personal lives. It is big government that does not promote their narrow agenda. We have made socialism a third rail word in American politics. Is Fascism also a third rail word? Our congress and the repugnant administration is taking us a giant step in that direction even if the word is taboo. Words appear to have different meanings depending upon whose ox is being gored.

    You will have to pardon my negativism. Being unemployed I have too much time to obsess about the layoffs I see daily on the news and wonder when the powers are going to "rescue" anyone not already a millionaire.
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