Only McCain… (II)
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Is McCain, as the subhed has it, the “best man” to unite America? Well, I think he’d have to be. Let me stress that “uniting America” isn’t necessarily the highest priority of the next president — perhaps Barack Obama would not “unite with” about 35 percent of the country that is bitterly opposed to his agenda, and I think that’s fair nough. But McCain would, in my view, be forced to unite America because he became the standard-bearer of a minority faction in our politics. How could McCain govern without engaging in really radical outreach to Democrats and independents? ~Reihan
This is right, and I wonder whether my original remarks on Reihan’s column were entirely fair. After all, in the improbable event of a McCain win, the next administration would be faced with a hostile Congress and an electorate that would have elected McCain in spite of its hostility to the Republican Party. His main concern would be to placate the majority, and not shore up his support within the party. Besides, were McCain to win, Palin would be sent off to tamp down conservative rebellions and make a lot of rhetoric about how much the President appreciates their support. With the exception of needing a couple votes in the Senate from time to time to eliminate the possibility of a filibuster, on many issues McCain would not need to bring along that many other Republicans. What they think of him would not be that important during the first two years, and depending on midterms he might feel free to ignore them for much of his first term.
There is a factor I overlooked before. This is the habit of rallying to the President of your party, which Republicans are even more likely to do as a result of their postwar dependency on winning the White House as their main route to power. Were McCain to win, it would delay and probably quash any nascent conservative skepticism about the expanding power of the executive branch, as the Presidency would once again become the sole focus of national Republican politics, and there would once again be a strong impulse to defend the administration against its critics. (You can already see why a McCain victory would be very unhealthy for conservatism, whatever else it might bring.) Even though conservatives would probably find important parts of McCain’s domestic agenda to be somewhere between annoying and appalling, their instinct to support “their” President would be powerful and would be particularly hard to resist so long as we have ongoing foreign wars.
Filed under: politics



In 2000 and 2004, President Bush was elected in a highly divided country, with two photo finish elections. He didn’t care about the other side, which was a substantial minority – a minority that was only a minority by a razor-thin margin. That didn’t stop him from enacting whatever his agenda was and continuing his campaign to his base. If the Democrats do not get 60 in the Senate and McCain wins, we will see 4 more years of obstructionist politics that do not care about governance and workable legislation. That is not the kind of change we need, but that is exactly what a McCain presidency will bring.
In 2000 the other size was actually a majority by half-a-million votes!
Of course, McCain won’t be President, but I think he is temperamentally and politically inclined to cooperate with the Democratic majority. He craves media approval, and he takes great satisfaction in the persona of being independent-minded even when he isn’t very independent-minded. He would trade almost his entire agenda to get another round of gushing op-eds praising his courage and integrity. Just imagine how excited all of his former admirers will be to write “the return of John McCain, maverick” stories the entire first year.
Pacific Moderate, it took a Supreme Court b*stard of a decision to put Bush in the White House, a decision which the SC wouldn’t even acknowledge as a decision. And that was *after* Jeb Bush purged 10’s of thousands of voters from the Florida, with a concentration on blacks. It took two layers of corruption for Bush to get into the White House.
I recall pundits reassuring us that this would mean that Bush would have to govern from the center.
Even before 9/11, Bush gave half the country the finger, and did almost as he pleased.