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November 4th will be
reckoning day for the
GOP.
The Republican Party, despite knowing all the risks it assumed in doing so, nominated its most unworthy candidate, John McCain.
And McCain turned around to reward the GOP's misplaced
confidence by running a
horrible campaign that will result in a
Barack Obama Election Day landslide.
The multiple personalities McCain has displayed during
his bumbling effort come as no surprise to his long-time
observers. The truth is that McCain isn't an agent of
change or a maverick but merely a rude, angry old time pol whose time has run out.
Politics is about winning. But that fundamental concept
hasn't yet penetrated the
thick-skulls who call the shots for the Republicans.
Deluding itself that somehow a carbon copy of George Bush, one of the least popular presidents in American history, could somehow mount a winning drive against either of the two Democrats—Hillary Clinton early on but eventually Barack Obama—the GOP will soon be left with the spoils.
When analysts look back at Election 2008, they'll point
to the
Wall Street collapse as the fatal blow to McCain.
By the time the final votes are tallied, it will be. But
the
financial crisis, at least to some degree, could
have been anticipated. Signs of trouble abounded months
ago.
Yet, the GOP was content to go with McCain, a Johnny-One
Note (the Iraq War) and a self-confessed economic
ignoramus, instead of looking for reasonable
alternatives and a fresh face.
The true turning point, however, was the late January
night in
McCain went over the top in large part because of the
endorsements of Republican standard bearers—RINOs, in
other words—Gov.
Charlie Crist and
Sen. Mel Martinez. McCain's win, narrow though it
was, built on his previous week's
Then, on the heels of his
The rest, as they say, is history.
Ironically, even ten months ago, nearly half of all
And
Romney had tailored his campaign to that message
while at the same time exploiting the Republican's
conservative base with McCain's long history of
abandoning his party on key votes.
Said Romney, prophetically: "At a time like this,
If Romney were today's Republican nominee, a few things
probably would have happened that did not in McCain's
campaign:
This is all hindsight now. But with the third debate in
the history books, McCain is finished. Republican
insiders now hope that McCain can help his party gain
Congressional seats, or at least minimize the losses,
and build a 2012 foundation.
In the end, Obama will receive nearly 400 electoral
votes, a landslide. That's quite an achievement for a
candidate that no one is truly enthusiastic about.
Joe Guzzardi [email him] is a California native who recently fled the state because of over-immigration, over-population and a rapidly deteriorating quality of life. He has moved to Pittsburgh, PA where the air is clean and the growth rate stable. A long-time instructor in English at the Lodi Adult School, Guzzardi has been writing a weekly column since 1988. It currently appears in the Lodi News-Sentinel.