McCain's three dumb campaign mistakes

It's become accepted wisdom that McCain is losing ground in the polls right now because the economy is in such bad shape.

I think the real reason is that Obama has run a smart campaign and McCain has run a dumb one.  McCain and his advisors have made at least three fundamental mistakes in the general election campaign so far--mistakes that seem so basic that I can't understand how these people got as far as they did in politics.

Number one:  McCain has actually based his campaign on support for an unpopular war.  Why he chose to support an incredibly unpopular president and his continuing blunder in Iraq has always been beyond me.

McCain likes to cite the surge as "working."  What it has done is stop the continuing loss of American soldiers' lives, but it can't bring back the 4,000 who died in this mistaken enterprise.  The American public knows this and that is reflected in the fact that McCain's charge that Obama can't admit he was wrong about the surge doesn't carry any weight in the polls.

Number two:  The economy is bad, but McCain didn't automatically have to be associated with it.  True, he's a Republican, and Republicans are getting blamed for the economy.  But instead of distancing himself from Bush and his economic policies from the very start, McCain made the stupid statement that the fundamentals of the economy are sound. What was he thinking?

Number three: McCain tacked toward the right fringe of his party in supporting Bush on torture and in picking Sarah Palin as his running mate.  It's widely understood in politics that you move toward the center in the general election campaign.  Each candidate has his base.  The battle now is for independent voters. Obama understands this.  He made several moves toward the center once he got the Democratic nomination.  

The race of course isn't over.  But if and when Obama wins, it won't be--and it shouldn't be seen as--just because of the economy.  It seems to me that how the candidates react to the issues is still important.



Display:


McCain couldn't distance on the economy (none / 0)

his record is one of consistent deregulation and discredited conservative economics.  Phil Gramm, who is his close friend, was an example of this, McCain was simply incapable of moving beyond his bubble of tax cuts and deregulation.  His atrocious health care plan is yet another example of this.

John McCain may be a maverick on many issues, but on the two most important issues, the economy and foreign policy, he is either with Bush or to the right of Bush.  And there is little he could have done to distance himself on them.


Corporatism and Islamism are the greatest threats to civilizations' future.
by ClintoniteNoLonger4McCain on Sun Oct 12, 2008 at 10:58:13 AM EST

Re: McCain's three dumb campaign mistakes (none / 0)

Also he took away his experience attack by picking Sara Palin

He is not in sync with his campaign message

and every gimmick he tries it feeds into the erratic attack meme they are running now


President Barack Obama "get used to it"
by wellinformed on Sun Oct 12, 2008 at 12:06:12 PM EST

although he had no great VP option (none / 0)

Palin was certainly not his least-bad option. That was a catastrophe.

As you say, he undermined his main message against Obama about being "ready to lead."


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by desmoinesdem on Sun Oct 12, 2008 at 12:40:20 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: McCain's three dumb campaign mistakes (none / 0)

1. Steve Schmidt

If McCain would have run like he did in 2000, he'd be in much better shape.  Schmidt's Rove style tactics got him a bump, but (I hope) people actually caught onto the tactics of "get 51% of the country to hate the other 49%."  


Conservatism is nothing but a bad laissez-fairey tale
by neko608 on Sun Oct 12, 2008 at 03:42:38 PM EST

3 mistakes (none / 0)

1. Running for president after forgetting why he should be president.

2. Forgiving and hiring the people that screwed with him and smeared his family in 2000.

3. Going against Barack Freaking Obama.


You can't stop the signal.

President "That One"

by Dracomicron on Sun Oct 12, 2008 at 07:10:21 PM EST

Re: McCain's dumb (none / 0)

McCain was ALWAYS going to have problems. For one incredibly important (and often overlooked) reason.
John McCain doesn't have a base.
The right-wing social conservatives have never trusted him.
The old-school fiscal conservatives have always been a little wary of him because he's really uninterested in the economy.
Independents liked him in a general way, like most democrats.
There are only two groups who really loved McCain: The press and the super-hard-core neo-conservative nutjobs.
But even then, there was no one was excited about McCain. In a crappy field of republicans where each faction of the GOP was represented, McCain was the 'okay', middle of the road choice. (Think about it, Romney was the fiscal-conservative's guy, Huckabee was the evangelical's guy, Giuliani was the neoconservative's guy. And Thompson was the we-want-Reagan's-ghost guy.)
He needed to walk a tightrope in order to have any chance. But, diva that he is, he personally felt the need to shake things up and make waves.  So he airs celebrity ads. So he picks someone like Palin. So he lurches from strategy to strategy, attack to attack, plan to plan.
And in the process, he's managed to turn off democrats, independents, fiscal conservatives, and moderate republicans. All he's got left is the true wingnut crowd who think Palin is some sort of messiah who's also just like them. The kind of people who have a pathological distrust of intelligence, logic, or facts.

by EvilAsh on Sun Oct 12, 2008 at 08:27:28 PM EST


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