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The Day In Politics: Republicans

16 Jan 2008 08:30 pm

COLUMBIA, ORANGEBURG, CHARLESTON, SOUTH CAROLINA -- In his first few events here, an energetic John McCain's veered sharply to the right as he faced a barrage of attacks from rivals. And Mitt Romney started his final two-day swing through the Palmetto State by instantly lowering expectations. Fred Thompson and Mike Huckabee, fighting for faith conservatives, trained accusations at each other.

McCain, speaking in Greenville this morning, cited to an audience in Greenville his career pro-life stance, saying his opponents are willfully distorting his record.

McCain's rivals believe that McCain's advisers want to exaggerate the amount of attacks against him in order to replicate the charged environment of 2000, only with a McCain more outraged and more ready to respond.

But it is true that supporters of Mike Huckabee are telephoning McCain supporters in the state with the message that McCain is really pro-choice.

Drew McKissick, a South Carolina conservative activist, sent an e-mail blasting McCain's support for embryonic stem cell research and his status as a leader of the "Gang of 14" who brokered a compromise over judicial nominations in the Senate. Romney's campaign blasted McCain in a research briefing entitled "Defeated by Defeatism."

At a Romney event in Charleston, his staff openly acknowledged that he would not finish first here. He is not running television ads here. His crowds are not large, although about 50 braved an ocean's chill for an hour to hear Romney give a brief version of his stump speech this afternoon. Tomorrow, he flies to Nevada for two full days of campaigning.

aSD%20013.jpg (above: waiting for Romney)

McCain's campaign is also re-airing an ad that plays to cultural conservatives. It mocks an earmark Hillary Clinton obtained for a Woodstock museum in New York.

An adviser to Huckabee told CBN's David Brody, so far as McCain was concerned, "the gloves are off."

Thompson was asked about about rumors he was a shill for McCain. He denied these and blamed Mike Huckabee's campaign for spreading them. Thompson's campaign later accused Huckabee of flop-flopping on the desirability of a national smoking ban.

The Associated Press reported that Huckabee softened his floated proposal to stop immigration from countries who harbor terrorists. "''I think we just need to do a more thorough job of ensuring that when people come here, and they come from nations that the State Department has designated as terrorist nations, that we are diligent in background searches,'' he said, per the AP. Huckabee's campaign promised a major endorsement in Charleston on Thursday.

Comments (9)

McCain is a very sweet gift to our dem party: he will be 73 years old on election day and 81 after eight years!
He is totally unelectable on this factor alone!
Hillary at 60 looks like a co-ed and quite spry next to him.
There is a ceiling on his support and that ceiling will keep dropping as these weeks and months pass. He gets more unelectable every day.
America will do a very basic gut check and not let him drive the car when the time comes. No 73 year old reliably has 4 or eight years of stamina left. We should just give him his watch.
we will respect the job more than this in the end.

Listening to these jerks pander to the "lesser angels of our nature" makes me think Old Abe should've just let South Carolina go in 1861.

Looks like Romney is already throwing out SC. We'll have no back-to-back winner - again. What a crazy race...

http://www.political-buzz.com/

Matt,

You're wrong. There are the Nevada caucuses where Romney is favored to win ALSO on Saturday.

Romney is being extremely smart at the moment. He looks strong and ready to be President. He learned something from Iowa and New Hampshire, something that the other candidates have not. I respect the man. He will bring about the needed change for the challenges this nation faces. He will be leader we can be proud of.

Agree it is best that Romney avoid the most evangelical state and push his strength higher in the West. Republicans as a Party are better off with someone who has great strength in the West and Northern industrialized states than some candidate that just appeals to the Southern Bastion. Just as Dems keep realizing again and again (then forgetting) they fare much better with a Southerner coming from outside their Left and further Left Coasts bastions of strength.

Romney lets South Carolina go - while planting the message there that he is the true outsider, and he has West of the Mississippi to himself for a few days. While the Huckster beat ups Thompson and vice-versa and McCain goes from rally to rally pissed at the two and telling us more reasons why his POW-hood entitles him to any position in America he wants and Thompson is unappreciative of McCains great sacrifice.. Avoid the holier-than-thou odor of S Carolina politics.

Out West, Romney starts with a positive base, he gets more delegates in Nevada than in S Carolina, he gets to visit powerful Western donors and organizers for Super Tuesday efforts and plot his moves a week ahead of his opponents. A chance to also have some visible meetings on Western concerns, push the economic message more, and get some exposure with Latinos. While S Carolina is likely to be the other 3 arguing who loves defense and Sweet Baby Jesus the most.

Media exposure after SC where most of them will be?

"Huckabee wins the Fundies! Mitt hits Sin City and addresses concerns of donors in several states west of the Rockies. Romney meets with Hispanic voters to address the economy, water concerns, and reassure on immigration. With Latins other than Cubans for a change, which will be appreciated - Romney wins more delegates taking Nevada than the other 3 candidates do in S Carolina."

"Opponents argue that no Republican can win who is not beloved in the South. Romney counters in Florida that Republicans need a candidate who is acceptable in every value to Southerners if not beloved, but who can win outside the South.

Joins the others in Florida out to finish off Rudy, who is still talking about 9/11 and the terrorist threat to New Yorkers in Florida retirement villages, now trailing in the polls...."

The idea that McCain is unelectable on account of his age is absurd on its face. Ask Walter Mondale whether or not that kind of thing is easily exploited.

Voters need only to see McCain speak and campaign to understand that he's got plenty left in the tank.

Mccain is the only chance the GOP has of getting a win. But Rush is refusing him because he is too squishy. DO you think a canidate that does not attract independents has a real possibility of being electable in the present environment? Come on!

Romney is unelectable, and his lackluster finishes in the southern primaries will further prove that. In my mind, only McCain and Guiliani have a chance at bringing in the moderate and independent votes needed to win the general election. Mark my words, because they will ring true: voting for Mitt in the primary is the same as voting for the Democrat come November.