The Democratic National Convention brought to you by … John McCain?
posted at 9:40 am on August 16, 2008 by Ed Morrissey
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Viewers watching the Democratic convention on network television may find themselves surprised to see ads from the DNCC’s newest major sponsor … John McCain. Thanks to a record donation haul in July and a low burn rate, the McCain campaign has to burn off millions of dollars in the next three weeks. What better way to reach potential voters than to provide a series of 60-second counterpoints to the rhetoric in Denver?
Sen. John McCain has so much spare cash on hand — he collected a record $27 million in July — that the Republican candidate plans to run campaign ads during the networks’ coverage of the Democratic National Convention later this month.
Because Mr. McCain has agreed to accept $84 million in public financing for the general election, the presumptive presidential nominee has only until Sept. 4, when he accepts his party’s nomination, to spend the more than $21 million he has on hand.
“We continue to have record months of fundraising. This is now the fifth month in a row that we have exceeded the month before,” said McCain campaign manager Rick Davis. The candidate’s advertising budget for August is expected to exceed $20 million, he said, and, by the Republican convention, Mr. McCain is on track to spend some $60 million on TV advertising during the whole primary campaign.
So much for laying low during the Democratic convention. Normally, the opposition keeps quiet and surrenders the spotlight during conventions, presumably because the viewers so interested in the Democratic convention that they watch it on TV won’t have any interest in Republicans, and vice versa. However, McCain has some significant draw among independents and disaffected Democrats, and it makes more sense for McCain to get aggressive during Denver.
Presumably, Obama will follow suit — although his team wouldn’t comment one way or the other on this story. The Obamacan movement has mostly gone bust, as Newsweek reported this week. Obama has managed only meager movement among Republicans, far less than McCain among Democrats.
Also, Obama doesn’t have the same luxury McCain has in spending this money; he can use it in the general campaign, and in fact needs to keep it for that purpose. Obama already has to travel to Switzerland during the GOP convention to raise money, thanks to his renege on a pledge to accept public financing, as McCain has done.
McCain can steal a little march on Obama diring Denver’s convention. It may not move the needle in the polls, but it sticks the needle into Obama’s ribs — something that Obama hasn’t tolerated well in this campaign.
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I think his national security advisor, Cary Grant, is meeting him there.
JiangxiDad on August 16, 2008 at 9:49 AM
“..stick the needle into Obama’s ribs. Something he has not tolerated well…” Now, if I did not know better I would think that the implication is that Obama is a sore ass?
jeanie on August 16, 2008 at 9:50 AM
You know, McCain just might win this thing. The odds are not in his favor, but he just might pull it off.
Terrye on August 16, 2008 at 9:52 AM
I’d love it if the ads actually responded to events, statements, and speeches from the convention and the news coverage of it. For example, taking clips from Hillary’s speech from Tuesday night and juxtaposing them with clips from her in the primaries in an ad on Wednesday. That would be very effective I think.
D0WNT0WN on August 16, 2008 at 9:52 AM
Maybe McCain could do some infomercials as well. At least his life story is much more interesting.
jencab on August 16, 2008 at 9:52 AM
Well, he may or may not be sore.
Ass, definitely. But sore? Who knows.
Knuckledragger on August 16, 2008 at 9:55 AM
Well, you have to figure Obama will saturate the airwaves during the GOP convention, and just in case, you can be sure the network coverage of McCain will be overtly hostile, no doubt interspersed with ample rebuttal time to Obamatons after every speech.
For a doddering old senile guy, McCain sure looks to be outwitting the shirtless wonderboy.
JammieWearingFool on August 16, 2008 at 9:56 AM
I like the cut of his jib.
amkun on August 16, 2008 at 9:56 AM
So,McCain is counter-pointing ads at the DNC
in Denver!
And when do the Leftys,
start screaming the Fairness docturne!!Ugh.
canopfor on August 16, 2008 at 9:59 AM
“McCain just might pull it off..” Beginning to agree. but, right along I’ve wondered who and where they are polling to get these pro-Obama results so consistently. The last month or so , I have been asking people in my area(semi-rural, suburban and one small city)if they have been polled. The few answering in the affirmative have all been from the city area. If this small(and probably futile and silly)experiment is fairly typical, and since many urban areas are often liberal, a whole segment of the population is simple not represented in the polls?? Just a thought.
jeanie on August 16, 2008 at 10:03 AM
If they’ve got money to burn right now then they should be spending it on commercials that spotlight Obama’s plans to gut our military and severely curtail future spending on new weapons development.
With American voters concerned about a resurgent and increasingly aggressive Russia, McCain should be reminding people that Obama wants to weaken, rather than strengthen, our ability to respond to threats to ourselves and our allies.
AZCoyote on August 16, 2008 at 10:05 AM
I’d like to see a commercial in which they have the Hillary clip on the years of McCain’s experience, “and Barack Obama has a speech he gave in 2004.”
Either on the day Hillary speaks or Obama. Whichever fits.
Wethal on August 16, 2008 at 10:06 AM
I think if team McCain picks the right ads to run it could be extremely effective for the Dhimmis who haven’t had a fatal dose of kool-aide yet.
Mojave Mark on August 16, 2008 at 10:17 AM
I’m glad McCain has found a good way to burn through the money donated him, so then he can be more careful with the money he is going to use from taxpayers.
Spirit of 1776 on August 16, 2008 at 10:23 AM
Only because Obama is probably the worst candidate ever fielded by a political party. Putting aside my dislike for McCain, his campaign has been very poorly run. I don’t know who he lost in 2000 but he needs some new advisors. And if he does go for this stupid recruit a Democrat as he is Veep, McCain is begging to lose. Do you realize what message it sends not only to your own base, but the media and the opposition party when you pick a liberal democrat over ANYBODY else in your party? My party, its platform, and everyone in it is so bad, I had to recruit a VP from the Democrats. I really hope he picks somebody else.
austinnelly on August 16, 2008 at 10:27 AM
It may not move the needle in the polls, but it sticks the needle into Obama’s ribs — something that Obama hasn’t tolerated well in this campaign.
Obama will call this a “racist” statement any moment now.
In my view, this race is McCain’s to lose. The VP choice is going to be extremely important for McCain. The talk this week of McCain picking Lieberman or a pro choice running mate, was very bothersome. Hopefully McCain is experienced enough not to make this kind of gigantic blunder. Obama is all over the radio here in Montana, which I see as a good waste of money by Obama. His commercials offer nothing of substance, and are simply “attack” ads. No sign of change there folks; same Democrat strategy on display for the past several decades. No solutions, no plans offered; attack, attack, attack… I get the feeling that most people here in Montana are pretty “over dosed on Obama”, as the one has deluged this state with messages of the messiah, the great, the one who will make the entire world bow at his knees!
In the mean while, most of us have to drive a minimum of 100 miles a day just to function normally, and the messiah is busy telling us to get over ourselves and cut back on energy. Pretty hard to do when living in rural Montana. I own/operate a service company. Yesterday I made (5) service calls, which required me to pile up 230 miles on my truck. Last week I spent $315 (fuel) on my truck alone; my wife spends approximately $500 a month of her hard earned money just to get to work and back home (5) days a week. Neither of us got a raise of any kind to cover these expenses; therefore, we simply have had to make spending adjustments which take money away from our local businesses. Having Pelosi (Democrats) refuse to have an “up or down” vote on drilling has led to much bitterness here in my home town. People who are Liberal minded folks had better be real quiet about that lil dynamic around these parts, as the people have become real testy about the harm this issue has brought to their lives.
Keemo on August 16, 2008 at 10:29 AM
I’d love to see a commercial that features John Bolton administering a “flogging” to the likes of Pelosi and Murtha; held in a huge stadium with 100 thousand fans cheering wildly while these two criminals receive their punishment ala the days of John Wayne. John Bolton is the modern day John Wayne, which is why Liberals hate him so deeply. Girly-men always hate a manly man, and everyone knows that a requirement for membership into the Liberal world is that you must pass the girly-man test.
O.K.; I’ll drink some more coffee and stop dreaming!
Keemo on August 16, 2008 at 10:37 AM
This obviously is intended to create the imagery of a shiv being used in jail and appeal to racist notions of blacks in prison. How dare you.
/s
I wish I could copyright this, I could probably retire in comfort. :/
aikidoka on August 16, 2008 at 10:38 AM
On a serious note, how about a commercial(s) bringing up Obama’s infanticide lie during the Democrat convention? It’s not like the media is going to ask proving questions about that.
aikidoka on August 16, 2008 at 10:40 AM
And run them on the night that Junior Casey speaks. His speech is supposed to make up for banning his pro-life father from speaking in 1992. Junior won’t be pushing an anti-abortion message, though, given the DNC platform.
Wethal on August 16, 2008 at 10:42 AM
Obama really bristles at anything approaching a personal reference to him. Even when it’s a characterization, not an attack. I don’t hear people saying he’s of bad character. They say he’s inexperienced, hollow, narcissistic, steeped in leftist thinking, all things to all people. He’s not been called a bad person, bad husband, bad father. But his response is, they’re going to make you afraid of me. They’re going to say I look different. If he becomes prez I half expect him to shut down Rush Limbaugh by pushing the Fairness Doctrine as much as he can, because Rush’s parodies of him will be brutal, and like the little boy being teased by his older brother, Obama will have a screaming “MOM, MAKE HIM STOP” temper tantrum. As Dennis Miller says, “I don’t even notice the color of his skin. I do notice the thinness of it, though”.
Paul-Cincy on August 16, 2008 at 10:45 AM
I’m not a fan, but it IS a smart strategery. :)
tickleddragon on August 16, 2008 at 11:05 AM
That would be funny for us but it might not go over too well with undecided Dems.
I think McCain should make a couple simple, strong ads emphasizing his bi-partisan ability to get things done. Show him cooperating with Dems to deliver solutions for America.
Currently he’s running negative ads to define Obama (”That’s the real Obama”). He should use the Dem convention to positively define himself. A bit of flattery for the Dems might go a long way towards convincing them that McCain deserves their votes.
Gilda on August 16, 2008 at 11:11 AM
If anyone had any balls, they’d produce an infomercial/biography of Obama, based on Obama Nation and The Case Against Obama books.
OUCH
marklmail on August 16, 2008 at 11:18 AM
Gosh, Keemo, why don’t you just petition your local government to build a mass-transit system? It’s so simple, a child could have thought of it.
/sarc
Kafir on August 16, 2008 at 11:38 AM
I hope they run GOOD ads for this.
CP on August 16, 2008 at 11:58 AM
Talk about crossing the aisle….
SouthernRoots on August 16, 2008 at 12:21 PM
Kafir on August 16, 2008 at 11:38 AM
Good one Kafir… Thanks
Keemo on August 16, 2008 at 12:36 PM
Given the way long-distance phone charges are billed, it would not be surprising to find that most polling organizations decided they get more “bang for their buck” calling urban areas.
Also, to get a result they would count as valid, a certain number of people need to be reached and polled. If they can only get one or two people at home in the rural areas, they will have wasted their time and money—but the point is still valid. Urban people will poll differently than rural people.
Sekhmet on August 16, 2008 at 12:37 PM
If McCain’s ad people have ANY brains they will follow the Kerry script of “He was for it before he was against it” and show all of Obama’s flip-flops…
sabbott on August 16, 2008 at 1:16 PM
If he’s going to run ads during the convention, his team should probably prepare a couple of stock ads, but also be on the alert for anything politically damning or stupid that comes out of Denver during the opening days of the event, and be prepared to run ads that react to any statements by the party’s politicians or platform positions approved by the delegates.
jon1979 on August 16, 2008 at 1:33 PM
What do you have against Cary Grant?
rightwingprof on August 16, 2008 at 2:16 PM
Even better!
aikidoka on August 16, 2008 at 2:29 PM
The first ad should be the Obama Drinking Game or Obama Bingo
Hope, Change, etc
- The Cat
MirCat on August 16, 2008 at 2:30 PM
Starting to like his Mavericky ways…
JustTruth101 on August 16, 2008 at 3:09 PM
“Mr. McCain”? That’s the first time i’ve seen that!
“So much for laying low during the Democratic convention.”
Buying up commercial time during the Demo convention and running ads is laying really low, if ya know what i mean…and i like it! They will add more anti-Barry vibes to their bizarre (Clinton) convention.
Christine on August 16, 2008 at 3:34 PM
I’ll have you know, sir, that Cary Grant was a Republican!
(Actually, seriously, he was — though he thought film stars should keep their politics private — he put in an appearance at the 1976 RNC.)
tigerinexile on August 16, 2008 at 4:31 PM
Actually, I think the reason was that it was thought not to be classy to advertise at the other guy’s convention. That rule was rudely changed by Clinton in ‘92. As I recall, it was pretty shocking.
Attila (Pillage Idiot) on August 16, 2008 at 9:38 PM
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