Monday, February 18, 2008

Frank Rich backs me up

To continue the previous post that I follow up in my Vindy post last night, Frank Rich steps up to the plate and seconds some of my points:

Mr. McCain could get lucky, especially if Mrs. Clinton gets the Democratic nomination and unites the G.O.P., and definitely if she tosses her party into civil war by grabbing ghost delegates from Michigan and Florida. But those odds are dwindling. More likely, the Republican Party will face Mr. Obama with a candidate who reeks even more of the past and less of change than Mrs. Clinton does. I was startled to hear last week from a friend in California, a staunch anti-Clinton Republican businessman, that he was wavering. Though he regards Mr. McCain as a hero, he wrote me: “I am tired of fighting the Vietnam war. I have drifted toward Obama.”

Similarly, Mark McKinnon, the Bush media maven who has played a comparable role for Mr. McCain in this campaign, reaffirmed to Evan Smith of Texas Monthly weeks ago that he would not work for his own candidate in a race with Mr. Obama. Elaborating to NPR last week, Mr. McKinnon said that while he is “100 percent” for Mr. McCain and disagrees with Mr. Obama “on very fundamental issues,” he likes Mr. Obama and what he’s doing for the country enough to stay on the sidelines rather than fire off attack ads.

4 comments:

Jan Pentz said...

Tyler, you are wrong. You speak of grabbing "Ghost" delegates from Florida. Do you know what actually happened with the primary in Florida? Here's what happened. A REPUBLICAN controlled state legislature in Florida changed the date inspite of warnings from the DNC. If it goes to court the delegates will win. The Democrats had no control over changing the date. Now, when Florida's delegates are counted Mrs. Clinton will be ahead by 180+ delegates.

Jan Pentz

Tyler said...

You're missing my point. I do understand what happened in Florida, but it's immaterial to what I'm talking about. I'm still talking about Mrs. Clinton's electability in the general election versus McCain. And if she becomes the nominee, which I don't deny might happen, the GOP will line up, energized, behind McCain, and we'll lose the election.

Jan Pentz said...

Dont get me wrong, I will vote democrat, whoever the candidate is, as the vast majority of democrats will. It takes 1100+ republican delegates to nominate their candidate, but over 2000 for a democrat. Why? Because there are so many more registered democrats. What no one seems to realize is that the republicans cannot win an election with out crossover voters.

Jan Pentz

Tyler said...

I'll be right beside you, Jan.