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John McCain
Why I Won’t Vote for Him
By John D. Turner
Romney has dropped out and so has Huckabee. According to the press and Republican activists therefore,
McCain is now my man.
Whatever my personal views are, I am told, I should just “suck it
up”, hold my nose and vote for him anyway. After all, he’s better
than Clinton or Obama.
And a cold is better than the flu. So what? I am tired of holding my
nose.
I held my nose in 1992 and voted for George H. W. Bush’s second
term. I didn’t particularly like him. I didn’t think he was that
much of a conservative. He was vitriolic in his primary campaign
against Ronald Reagan in the 1980 election. It was George H. W. Bush
who coined the term “voodoo economics” to describe Reagan’s economic
plan, which has subsequently become known as “Reaganomics”.
Reaganomics is now a central tenant of Conservative thought, much as
Social Security is for the Democrats. Bush never subscribed to it,
which became evident when during his presidency he raised taxes
despite his “read my lips” pledge during the campaign.
Bush played conservatives like a fiddle. But, I was told, he was
better than Bill Clinton.
But George the First either thought it was in the bag, or else he
really didn’t want it that bad. He ran a lackluster campaign similar
to that recently seen by Fred Thompson. And he lost 370 to 168 in
the Electoral College.
In 1996, the Republican Party served up Bob Dole as the candidate.
Once again, I was told to hold my nose, and once again I did. I
didn’t agree with him. He was a moderate, not a conservative. I
thought that his candidacy would be an unmitigated disaster. Yet, he
won 44 of 60 statewide primaries. It was his turn at bat, I was
told. The Republican Party was rewarding an old warhorse who had
carried the party’s standard faithfully for many years.
Dole got the nomination, and went down to defeat. Bill Clinton swept
him 379-159 in the Electoral College. The electorate, it seems, was
not that enamored with a candidate who constantly referred to
himself in the third person.
After the election, he got a no-doubt well-paying job hawking
Viagra. I’m sure it made his wife happy. There were those who said
the nomination should have gone to her instead of him in the first
place. She certainly had more charisma.
Elizabeth Dole did run in the 2000 primaries. In fact, the
Republican field was even more crowded than it was this time around.
During that primary, I supported both Steve Forbes and Alan Keyes.
By the time the Texas primary rolled around, both were out and
George Bush pretty much had it wrapped.
John McCain ran in that primary as well. And he won in New
Hampshire, just as he did this time. But he lost in South Carolina.
McCain blamed his loss on campaign “dirty tricks” (similar to those
he perpetrated on Romney in Florida). His meltdown following his
loss did nothing to help his public image, and he lost big-time at
the Republican convention, scoring one delegate to Bush’s 2038. Alan
Keyes, with two delegates, did better than McCain.
So in 2000, I had my first chance since Ronald Reagan to vote for a
Republican candidate who, on the surface anyway, seemed to be a
conservative. George Bush had done a good job in Texas; I didn’t see
any reason why he couldn’t do a good job in Washington D.C. And he
certainly was a better choice than Al Gore.
George the Second turned out to be conservative in some areas, in
others, not so much. Conservatives were supposed to stand for
smaller government. It is the Democrats who believe government to be
the solution to all the country’s ills. Under W, government has
grown at an unprecedented pace.
It’s true that 9/11 didn’t help. You can’t fight a war without
spending money. But the country has managed to fight wars in the
past, without creating new cabinet level positions to do so. It is
my understanding that the Department of Defense (previously known as
the Department of War) is charged with the responsibility of
defending the nation. Remind me again why we need an entire new
Cabinet level government bureaucracy to do what we already have an
Army, Navy, and Air Force to do?
Please tell me how making the TSA civilian employees of the U.S.
Government did anything to improve airport security? Job security,
yes. And now we have thousands of new government employees on the
payroll.
And then there is No Child Left Behind, which hugely expanded the
budget of the Department of Education. And the prescription drug
bill. And others.
The example set by the President was infectious; Congress went on a
spending spree. Not a Democratic congress, mind you, but a
Republican one. And the voters turned them out. Now we are faced
with a Democratic Party that can creditably lay claim to being a
party of fiscal responsibility. Not that they truly are, of course,
but they can point to a budget that was balanced under Bill Clinton
(not due to his own efforts, but it was on his watch), and is now
running deficits of $400 billion plus, not all by any means due to
the ongoing war against radical Islam.
Still, George was a better choice than Kerry. And he was
conservative on many issues that matter to me.
Now we have John McCain. And once again I am being told to hold my
nose. He’s better than Hillary or Obama, so I am told. Does anyone
see a pattern here?
John McCain. Champion of Free Speech. Except when it comes to
political free speech. And if the first amendment protects any sort
of free speech, certainly it is political free speech. Not so,
according to McCain. John McCain claims he will nominate
conservative Supreme Court justices if elected. Really? Even if they
might overturn McCain-Feingold?
John McCain. Champion of workers everywhere. Particularly those
which are undocumented. McCain now says he is in favor of closing
the border. Interesting. Why is this not considered a flip-flop? How
can we believe him on this issue when the head of his “Hispanic
Outreach” program is none other than Juan Hernandez, a man holding
dual American and Mexican citizenship, who was the head of Mexico’s
Office of Mexicans Living Outside Mexico under Vicente Fox? A man
who is on record as saying that the North American southwest is “not
two countries; it’s just a region.” A man who has consistently
argued against building a fence on the border, who insists the
border needs to remain wide open so that illegal immigrants can
easily cross into the United States? A man who believes that all
Hispanics in the U.S. are Mexicans, even those who are citizens of
the United States? A man, who has said, with regard to Mexican
immigrants in the U.S., “I want the third generation, the seventh
generation, I want them all to think ‘Mexico first’”?
And I am supposed to believe that John McCain has had a genuine
change of heart regarding stopping illegal immigration and dumping
the McCain-Kennedy amnesty bill? Not.
John McCain. The man who evidently, based statements he made to Mitt
Romney during the Reagan Library Republican debate, believes that if
you haven’t served in the military, then you can’t be a leader?
Reality check. Not everyone can serve in the military. Guess all you
folks that haven’t served are for all time relegated to the status
of “manager”. This would, I suppose, include people such as lee
Iacocca, who didn’t serve because he suffered from rheumatic fever
as a child; or Franklin Roosevelt, who couldn’t serve because he
suffered from polio.
How about Ronald Reagan? Was it his time in the military that made
him a leader, time he spent doing pretty much exactly the same thing
he had done as a civilian, making movies? What if he had been 4-F
instead, which he could have been; he was classified for limited
service as it was due to nearsightedness, excluding him from
overseas service. Would he then still have been a leader? Or only a
manager?
John McCain. The man who claims he will appoint conservative judges
in the mold of Alito and Roberts. Really? How exactly will he do
that? Whom ever he nominates will have to get past a judicial
committee headed by Democrats, and get a majority vote from a
Democrat majority congress. Figure the odds. Oh, he might nominate
one, knowing he will never pass muster. And then, regretfully he
will have to “settle” for someone the Democrats will approve of. The
Dems are not going to allow someone on the court that might be the
swing vote to overturn Roe v Wade. And McCain isn’t going to
nominate someone who might overturn McCain-Feingold. You would have
to believe that the Republicans are also going to regain the Senate
this election. While we are at it, why not fantasize about regaining
the House as well?
John McCain. The man who criticized Mitt Romney as supposedly
wanting to set “timetables and benchmarks” to pull the troops out of
Iraq. The man who on 5 Feb 2006 introduced a resolution setting
eleven conditions which the Iraqi government would need to meet in
order to retain American support. Benchmarks? Timetables? What would
failure “to retain American support” entail? Pulling the troops out?
But I guess that setting “conditions” is ok; it’s the words
“benchmarks” and “timetables” that are a political no-no, according
to McCain in his televised debates. These are code words for “cut
and run”. “Conditions” is a different word, and so, somehow
different.
John McCain. Bipartisan? A uniter not a divider? Able to work with
Democrats? Keep this in mind. In every case where John McCain has
“reached across the isle” and cosponsored bills with the Democrats,
the results have not been conservative in nature. His presence as
the only Republican in the “Keating
Five” scandal is a piece of “bipartisanship” that, curiously,
has not been brought up in this campaign.
In 1999, he was on record as saying that he did not support
overturning Roe v Wade, specifically "...in the short term, or even
the long term, I would not support repeal of Roe v. Wade, which
would then force X number of women in America to [undergo] illegal
and dangerous operations." This sounds quite a bit like the quote
his campaign likes to use against Mitt Romney from his campaign
against Kennedy in 1994, and again from his campaign for Governor of
Massachusetts in 2002. In a November 2006 interview, McCain stated
that he was in favor of a constitutional amendment banning abortions
except in the case of rape, incest, and where the life of the mother
was in danger. He then further stated that, this being unlikely, he
supported the overturning of Roe v Wade, so that the issue could be
left up to the individual states. This sounds a lot like Romney’s
position. But Romney is a “flip-flopper” on this issue. Somehow,
McCain is not.
Of course, we mustn’t forget his participation in the “gang of
fourteen”, his desire to shut down the detention facility at
Guantanamo Bay, his votes against Bush’s tax cuts which he
characterized (in Democrat terms) as “tax cuts for the rich”, his
vote against drilling for oil in ANWAR, his discussions with the
Democrats on leaving the party in 2001 (Jeffords beat him to the
punch), and his serious consideration in 2004 to get on the ticket
with John Kerry as his VP.
If McCain somehow manages to lose the Republican nomination, it
wouldn’t surprise me to see the eventual Democratic winner to select
him for a running mate. And for McCain to accept.
And then there is his apparent assault on capitalism itself during
the debates, where he slung around the word “profit” as if it were
an epitaph; rhetoric that would have seemed quite at home in the
Democratic debates for president. Indeed, should Huckabee somehow
win the nomination, expect the Democratic nominee to use the same
language against him in the national elections.
I could go on, but this is supposed to be a column, not a novel.
My point is this: how is getting screwed by someone because he is a
Republican somehow better than getting screwed by someone who is a
Democrat? I’m still screwed. Is it supposed to be more palatable
because the person doing the screwing is a member of “my” party
rather than a different one?
I am supposed to hold my nose and vote for McCain because at least
he is strong on the war? Well so is Mitt. I am supposed to vote for
McCain because he was a POW once and suffered at the hands of our
enemies? This is supposed to make him a better leader exactly how?
Am I to vote for him because something happened to him 40 years ago
that he had no control over? Many others were held prisoner during
the Vietnam War. Many others were equally tortured. Does this make
them all leaders, and better qualified to serve as
Commander-in-Chief than those who have endured less?
I thank McCain for his service. That he suffered for his country is
undeniable. I certainly would not want to experience what he did.
That doesn’t automatically make him the only one for the job. Didn’t
we put this one to rest last time with Kerry and his three Purple
Hearts?
How strong does a president need to be to fight the war anyway?
Seems to me he only has to have the commitment to do so; his
military leaders can take it from there. He needs to have the
leadership to provide direction, and to keep the supplies flowing so
the military can do its job. What would McCain propose;
micromanaging the war from the White House? That worked so well in
Vietnam, when Johnson was president.
But then again, McCain has a burning desire to be
Commander-In-Chief. Not President; Commander-In-Chief. There is a
difference. Both McCain’s father and grandfather were four-star
naval Admirals. McCain followed in their footsteps, reluctantly,
attending Annapolis and finishing near the bottom of his class.
Unlike his father and grandfather, McCain retired from the Navy as a
Captain (O6), a distinguished rank to be sure, but not a four-star
admiral. There is nothing wrong with that; making O6 is by no means
to be considered a failed career. Only about two percent of those
who enter military service as officers attain that rank. His father
and grandfather were the first in U.S. history to achieve back to
back O10 status. Three in a row would certainly be a hat trick.
But Commander-In-Chief, that “outranks” them both. McCain uses that
word a lot. He seems to really like the way it sounds.
To give him credit, there are issues where McCain is conservative.
He is a strong supporter of Israel. This is important to me. He
supports the inclusion of Intelligent Design in school text books,
under the premise that “all points of view” should be available to
students. Not a huge issue with me, but still, a conservative
position. He has criticized his party on the “earmarking” issue,
stating “So why has my party, the party of small government, lately
adopted the practices of our opponents who believe the bigger the
government the better? I'm afraid it's because at times we value our
incumbency more than our principle.” This is something I would like
to see ended.
But as nice as these things are, they don’t outweigh the negatives.
John McCain is an American Hero. Fine. But that was 40 years ago.
What has he done for me lately? McCain-Feingold (campaign finance
reform – restrictions on free speech). McCain-Kennedy (amnesty for
illegal aliens). McCain-Kennedy-Edwards (trial lawyer’s bill of
rights). McCain-Lieberman (global warming legislation – carbon
taxes). Etc, etc, etc.
It seems that, at least lately, when McCain does something that
agrees with the Party (or Conservatism) it is entirely accidental.
This suggests a new title for him. McCain: the Accidental
Conservative.
But once again, I am supposed to hold my nose and vote for the
“lesser of two evils.” Tell me. If Adolph Hitler and Joseph Stalin
were both running for president, one on the Republican ticket, one
on the Democratic ticket, which one would you consider the lesser of
two evils? Should I support Hitler because, at least he has a
conservative position on illegal immigration? Stalin, because at
least he is conservative when it comes to supporting the war effort?
If George Washington were also running, should I ignore him because
he isn’t running on a major party ticket, but instead as a
Libertarian or Independent? Do I have to vote for Hitler or Stalin?
Perhaps I should just stay home and hope for the best.
Dick Morris says that the polls show that the Republican Party has
lurched to the left. If so, where does that leave Conservatives like
me? Oh that’s right. We are supposed to just hold our nose and suck
it up. I think otherwise. If the Party has indeed taken a turn to
the left, perhaps it is time for Conservatives to form a new party.
Newt Gingrich said as much recently at CPAC, stating that “it is
time for the conservative movement to separate itself from the
Republican Party.”
Ronald Reagan once said that he didn’t leave the Democratic Party,
the Democratic Party left him. With the nomination of John McCain
for President, the Republican Party will have left me, at least for
this election.
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