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Home stretch attack has to involve the economy; Update: AOL Hot Seat Poll added

posted at 10:00 am on October 7, 2008 by Ed Morrissey
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With four weeks to go and the entire electorate engaged in this presidential election, what line of attack holds the most promise for John McCain — and for that matter, Barack Obama?  Both campaigns have to find a message that resonates with voters at this moment in order to win their allegiance, especially those in the center who still have not yet decided whom to support.  With the media focused on the global financial crisis, that means the 1992 James Carville equation applies: it’s the economy, stupid.

John McCain has used five basic lines of attack in the last few weeks against Barack Obama:

1. William Ayers and his radical past
2. Fannie Mae collapse and Democratic responsibility
3. Foreign policy
4. Tax-and-spend liberal
5. Chicago politician, not reformer

All of these can help McCain and hurt Obama, and certainly campaigns can carry more than one theme at a time.  However, there is an opportunity cost to pushing less-resonant themes.  It wastes resources that could be used for better messaging, and could backfire by painting a candidate as out of touch with the real concerns of the electorate.

Of these five, then, #2 and #4 look to be the most promising.  Painting Obama as a tax-and-spend liberal is rather easy, and the McCain campaign has done that for months.  Obama promises hundreds of billions in new spending, and since we’re already in deficit spending, Obama has to raise revenues to pay for his new programs.  He can’t tax the rich alone to get that kind of money, and Obama refuses to offer even one program that he’d cut during an economic crisis.

Unfortunately, Republicans use this attack line too often to make it resonate well in this election, true though it may be.  The economic crisis gives McCain a wonderful opportunity to make #2 the main attack theme of the last four weeks.  Americans are angry over the collapse of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and the poison they spread throughout the financial sector.  Democrats have begun calling it a failure of “deregulation”, but they spent years protecting Fannie and Freddie from regulators who saw the rot from the inside.  McCain tried pushing legislation to strengthen regulation on the two GSEs.

McCain has to redefine this crisis to the reality of Democratic (and Republican) indifference to the corruption and bad business practices of Fannie and Freddie.  He has to argue that government distortion of lending markets for political gain created the crisis, and that Democratic defense of the GSEs delayed regulatory action until it was too late — and Barack Obama stood on the sidelines and did nothing to stop the collapse.

McCain sponsored legislation; Obama wrote a letter.  McCain took action; Obama did nothing but talk, and far too late.  That has to be the message — and it’s a winner.

Update: Here’s the AOL Hot Seat Poll. They had to condense the question and answers for space, but the post gives the key:


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1. William Ayers and his radical past
2. Fannie Mae collapse and Democratic responsibility
3. Foreign policy
4. Tax-and-spend liberal
5. Chicago politician, not reformer

#2 is most important, and McCain needs to tie it in with #4 (Raising taxes in a recession could create a depression…). Mix in some nice #1 attacks and he could win.

BadgerHawk on October 7, 2008 at 10:03 AM

McCain has attacked Wall Street, but you can’t out-populist Obama Bin Biden. McCain ought to explain how conservative economic policy works, like Reagan did & won two landslides.

jgapinoy on October 7, 2008 at 10:04 AM

John, we are out here fighting for you, now FIGHT FOR US!!!!

bloggless on October 7, 2008 at 10:05 AM

…he ought to explain how Bush’s economic policy has been great except for the massive spending, which Mac will change.

jgapinoy on October 7, 2008 at 10:05 AM

“Sen. Obama can’t tell you the truth about how his party blocked reforms that I and other Republicans tried to bring to FM/FM. He knows that if Americans learn that he and his party nearly detroyed our economy out of greed that you will never elect him POTUS.”

I hope I hear something along those lines tonight.

BadgerHawk on October 7, 2008 at 10:06 AM

John McCain has to give HONEST truthful and VERIFIABLE points when he attacks Obama, as Patterico says.

Not even a SHRED of fudging. The TRUTH will set us FREE.

Nobody cares about Ayres, unfortunately.

HARRY + NANCY + a ZERO like OBAMA = Disaster

originalpechanga on October 7, 2008 at 10:07 AM

2 and 5 are best, in this list.

I believe 2 is strongest, I’m just worried that McCain will fold under the “racism” charge.

McCain and co should go back to how Obama ran for state senate and see what promises he made then and if he fulfilled them.

I believe Mccain already mentioned that Obama promised a tax cut for 95% of illinois during the state election, then voted for the biggest tax increase ever after elected.

There has to be more …

Stuff like that resonates.

lorien1973 on October 7, 2008 at 10:08 AM

McCain needs to act like he did yesterday at the debate tonight. Be tough, and we will fight with you. We want to fight with you. But we won’t do it alone. Sure, we’ll go about trying as usual, but if you want to get us fired up and really on-your-side, we need to see the kind of passion we saw yesterday.

Attack Obama and the Democrats on Fanny and Freddie. Tell the people, without the media filter, how deregulation was NOT the problem, and how you’ve spent your career fighting the exact causes.

Please!

Abby Adams on October 7, 2008 at 10:08 AM

Whatever the line of attack, it should be two-pringed: Carpet-bombing by McCain and surgical strikes by Palin. This two-on-one attack will be highly effective, especially since Biden is mostly irrelevant.

Would be nice if Palin showed up at the debate tonight. A reminder that Obama is surrounded.

EMD on October 7, 2008 at 10:08 AM

OH…. and Barack wrote that letter in MARCH 2008! What good would that POSSIBLY do us NOW?

originalpechanga on October 7, 2008 at 10:09 AM

McCain has attacked Wall Street, but you can’t out-populist Obama Bin Biden. McCain ought to explain how conservative economic policy works, like Reagan did & won two landslides.

jgapinoy on October 7, 2008 at 10:04 AM

I don’t think there’s enough time for McCain to try to explain things in depth. He just needs to hammer home the point that Obama and the Dems are reponsible for the current mess. Americans are pissed off and want to know where to point the finger.

And I know President Bush’s policies didn’t lead to this, but he could have sounded the alarm a little more often and a little louder. Some solid leadership couldn’t have hurt.

BadgerHawk on October 7, 2008 at 10:09 AM

I think accountability would be a great theme. As in, “In a McCain presidency, we will have a government that is accountable to the people, not a government that not only blames the people for its own failures, but also expects them to pick up the tab.”

BigD on October 7, 2008 at 10:09 AM

Don’t forget they have saved over a week’s worth of money when they shut down campaigning for a while… I suspect they can run a number of attacks.

CC

CapedConservative on October 7, 2008 at 10:10 AM

I believe Mccain already mentioned that Obama promised a tax cut for 95% of illinois during the state election, then voted for the biggest tax increase ever after elected.

lorien1973 on October 7, 2008 at 10:08 AM

Specific points of argument will stick in voters minds and avoid the diminishing returns of chanting “tax and spend liberal” over and over.

I like how as the polls look even worse this week than last week you seem to be more positive. You’re funny.

BadgerHawk on October 7, 2008 at 10:11 AM

BigD on October 7, 2008 at 10:09 AM

Yep. He should also talk about personal responsibility; how government is morbidly obese and he’s the only one who will trim the fat in washington.

If its a repeat of debate one, I’ll cry.

lorien1973 on October 7, 2008 at 10:12 AM

jgapinoy
sounds good

maverick muse on October 7, 2008 at 10:12 AM

Drill Baby Drill!

Mr. Wednesday Night on October 7, 2008 at 10:13 AM

I think accountability would be a great theme.

BigD on October 7, 2008 at 10:09 AM

What about a pledge tonight that if McCain were to be elected and ever cause the kind of mess that Obama and the Democrats have created with FM/FM, he would hold himself accountable and resign?

I like the way it sounds but I don’t know how it would play nationwide.

BadgerHawk on October 7, 2008 at 10:14 AM

You’re funny.

BadgerHawk on October 7, 2008 at 10:11 AM

I’m only positive because McCain -finally- took my advice yesterday and hit Obama on FMFM like I’ve (we’ve) been saying for weeks (!!).

I’m worried it’s too late, and he won’t go as far as I would (calling for the resignation of dodd, frank, rangel etal) but it’s about as good as we’ll get.

I’m holding my breath for tonight.

lorien1973 on October 7, 2008 at 10:14 AM

If McCain concentrates on the “Chicago politician, not reformer” aspect, he will have more than enough to dump on B.O. on just that basis alone. Anyone who has seen and studied Chicago Politics for any given period of time usually requires about six or more hot showers to wash all the grime and slime off. I think the reason why so many people are bowing in homage to B.O. is because they haven’t looked at his days in Chicago politics. If they did, they would be backing away from him in droves. It’s THAT bad out here, and McCain can use just this one aspect to make it a long night for B.O. tonight.

pilamaye on October 7, 2008 at 10:14 AM

Take Obama on tonight about Freddie, Fannie, Acorn, Barney Franks, Ayers, Wright, etc. They are surprisingly all connected in strange ways.

It is time to settle all family business.

Mr. Joe on October 7, 2008 at 10:15 AM

I like the way it sounds but I don’t know how it would play nationwide.

BadgerHawk on October 7, 2008 at 10:14 AM

No way. It’s a tacit admission that your policies could cause it to happen again. That’s awful.

I’d prefer McCain demand that Frank and Dodd resign and explain their roles and conflicts in the situation. And ask Obama if he’ll agree to that and call for their resignation.

lorien1973 on October 7, 2008 at 10:16 AM

I’m only positive because McCain -finally- took my advice yesterday and hit Obama on FMFM like I’ve (we’ve) been saying for weeks (!!).

lorien1973 on October 7, 2008 at 10:14 AM

Small victories. At least Palin appears to have saved herself as a national figure and possible the new face of the party, and it looks like McCain, if he goes down, will go down fighting.

BadgerHawk on October 7, 2008 at 10:16 AM

If Johnny Mac has any problem coming up with arguments for tonight, he should simply read editorial columns from Investors Business Daily, such as the two below, from today;

http://www.ibdeditorials.com/IBDArticles.aspx?id=308185654524278

http://www.ibdeditorials.com/IBDArticles.aspx?id=308186097284712

Star20 on October 7, 2008 at 10:16 AM

Video: Chris Shays Exposes Congress role in Financial Meltdown

Yesterday during a meeting of the House Committee Oversight and Government Reform, Review of Lehman Brothers Finances, Panel 1, Congressman Christopher Shays blasted Congress for their role in the Financial meltdown and blasted Waxman and the Democrats for not investigating Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and the role they played in starting the Crisis. He then lists all the Republican attempts to reform FM/FM that were blocked by Democrats.

Skip ahead to 2:09 (near the end) to hear his remarks

Watch to the end to hear how Waxman kept Republican from participating in this hearing

Anybody with the skills and time to download the video from C-SPAN, clip the Shays piece and put it on YouTube?

TheBigOldDog on October 7, 2008 at 10:16 AM

They shouldn’t separate the themes, they should narrate them together with pivots…. and learn to mix the different pivots and themes between speeches… they should go deep and have fresh segments that are mixed together… listening to McCain and Palin seems too punchy and bumper stickery…

You can go from Ayers to Fannie Mae by noting that 1) Obama called McCain erratic in Crisis 2) “Exchanged ideas” with Ayers on a panel called “Intellectuals in times of Crises” in 2002 3) yadda yadda talk more about relationship, lies to cover up 4) Bring up McCain’s reform proposal 5) Bring up bama getting paid off 5) Defend McCain’s record while calling out Obama’s Big (Lie) Blame

ninjapirate on October 7, 2008 at 10:16 AM

I guess you’re right. I’m just a sucker for self-accountability.

BadgerHawk on October 7, 2008 at 10:17 AM

I see Carville’s hand in this. I really do–and that is not a bad thing. Anyone else think maybe a few Clintonistas are aiding McCain out of pure hatred of Barack X?

PimFortuynsGhost on October 7, 2008 at 10:17 AM

Ed, what we’re beginning to see from the various document drops is a complete picture of Hussein. While I agree McC should focus on the economy with FN/FR was the primary driver, the real nexus should be the Dems underlying corruption and how it effects the “real” economy.

This is how it all ties back to Hussein: he’s a corrupt Dem machine pol who uses public funds to reward friends, who in turn help keep him elected. And the losers are American taxpayers who are captive to this incestuous cycle of deceit which ultimately effects everybody’s economic well being.

kuhio on October 7, 2008 at 10:17 AM

Let McCain focus on the economy, with his gravitas, experience and DC knowledge.

Let Sarah focus focus on the radical associations, with her “Real American” status.

lodge on October 7, 2008 at 10:18 AM

Action vs. Inaction

Possibility of real change/reform vs. 1970’s

Counter “deregulation” claim

Freedom vs. Further enslavement by the government i.e. welfare, health care, baby bonds, etc.

Dr.Cwac.Cwac on October 7, 2008 at 10:19 AM

Team McCain has got to learn how to properly narrative things so it doesn’t get spun… it’s almost like they’re in a bubble and lack self-awareness of how media and political communications work… I first noticed this with the “community organizer” jab… that should have been rewritten to be more focused for instance… there are a ton of those kind of mistakes committed by this campaign…

ninjapirate on October 7, 2008 at 10:21 AM

I see Carville’s hand in this. I really do–and that is not a bad thing. Anyone else think maybe a few Clintonistas are aiding McCain out of pure hatred of Barack X?

PimFortuynsGhost on October 7, 2008 at 10:17 AM

Um, yeah. I think there is a little PUMA action going on.

Senator Obama should have learned to never trust a Clinton (or their surrogates)……OR to make sure that they are never standing behind him.

Dr.Cwac.Cwac on October 7, 2008 at 10:21 AM

American Thinker bookworm gives a concise and easy to memorize contrast between regulation/deregulation and oversight/transparency. THIS dichotomy (posted last Sunday) times perfectly within the allotment for a debate response and for ads.

Guy Sorman “Economics Does Not Lie” is at City Journal. Each point within the outline is clearly understandable and much appreciated by the likes of me, someone who spent her entire life eschewing the study of “economics”. If this author was shared in high school government class curriculum, young American’s would gain concrete rationale for choosing efficient means towards personal and professional productive success and wise political assessment of government. If McCain doesn’t “get” how to explain economics in his speeches, he should memorize Guy Sorman who DOES in such a way that average people GET IT.

Share it.

maverick muse on October 7, 2008 at 10:21 AM

Anyway to link Lehman Brothers CEO Deek Fuld to His Holiness directly?

Dr.Cwac.Cwac on October 7, 2008 at 10:22 AM

ninjapirate on October 7, 2008 at 10:21 AM

I just think they didn’t keep up those attacks enough. It was effective and Obama was whining for a week about it. They should have kept it up – looked into what he did as an organizer. Instead, they gave up valuable battlefield space.

lorien1973 on October 7, 2008 at 10:22 AM

It’s not too late!

Americans want some heads! McCain needs to promise that he will deliver them. ALL of them. Dodd, Frank, Raines, Johnson, Gorelick! And anyone else involved in fleecing the US. Name names and put his congressional colleagues on notice. Reform is coming. Ethics charges et. and they had better fall in line w/solving this crisis or he and SaraCuda will take it to them.

JAM on October 7, 2008 at 10:23 AM

I just think they didn’t keep up those attacks enough. It was effective and Obama was whining for a week about it. They should have kept it up – looked into what he did as an organizer. Instead, they gave up valuable battlefield space.

McCain picked up Rudy’s “nothing, zippo, nada!” line yesterday

lodge on October 7, 2008 at 10:24 AM

Rev. Wright is a legit issue, they were very close.

although it should be the job of a 527 to take it on and they are nowhere to be found

jp on October 7, 2008 at 10:25 AM

I favor an “All of the Above” approach to Obama Drilling.

- Ayers Drilling
- Rezco Drilling (especially since the Feds are helping out with the headlines on that front)
- Hanging Gardens of Obamalon
- Michelle O’s “Healthcare” Plan
- Energy Policy
- Rev. Wright Drilling
- 9% approval rating Congressional buddies
- Frank, Dodd, Pelosi and Frank’s Fanny Friend
- Kwame Kilpatrick Drilling
- Franklin Raines and Jim Johnson

Every day, Obama should be pummelled with everything, including the kitchen sink. Endless, hard, pointed and 100% factual attacks. Get him and the MSM so f-ed up with damage control that they have zero time for anything else… then go around them and pitch a positive, change is coming, message of substance.

Damiano on October 7, 2008 at 10:26 AM

Would love to see McCain get up tonight and say womthing like:

“Folks, here is some straight talk. Neither I nor Senator Obama have ever actually created a job. Neither of us has ever run a business. We’ve both had government provided health care for much of our careers. We’re both well off financially. But here’s what you need to know about some real differences: I have voted against rampant government spending throughout my career. Senator Obama has never voted to cut spending a single time. I voted against an energy bill that did nothing but hand out subsidies to ethanol and helped cause food shortages around the world. Senator Obama voted for it. I sponsored legislation in 2005 that might have prevented this crisis by ending Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac’s distortion of the mortgage market and predatory lending practices. Senator Obama said nothing, but accepted over $100,000 from Fannie and Freddie executives while his fellow Democrats killed our reform legislation.

Now Senator Obama says he will cut your taxes and fix our economy. But there is nothing in his record – absolutely nothing – to suggest we can believe him. When I tell you I will cut your taxes, I’ve done it. When I tell you I will rein in government spending, I’ve done it. When I tell you I will take on the special interests, I’ve done it. “

rockmom on October 7, 2008 at 10:26 AM

http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=S8QcpdUtxNQ&feature=related

the Freaking Odinga story should be a huge thing to attack Obama on. He campaigned in a 3rd World country for a Marxist ‘cousin’ of his who signed a pact with Jihadist for crying out loud!!!!!!!

jp on October 7, 2008 at 10:28 AM

Palin will be in NC tonight. Although, to read the Raleigh News and Observer, you would never know it.

bloggless on October 7, 2008 at 10:29 AM

Forget the economy…obama’s policies etc.

Focus on how Barack Hussein was groomed for the presidency by a saudi prince who helped him get into Harvard..the Harvard Law review and was raising money for him when he was in his twenties.

Focus on Raila Odinga, Barack Hussein’s cousin with ties to al qaeda and documented attempts to islamicize 80% Christian Kenya. There is plenty of video of Ubama campaigning for him..WHY IS THIS NOT ON THE COVER OF EVERY NEWSPAPER?

Obama is a real Saudi sleeper candidate.

This is no laughing matter and is definitely the most serious threat this country has ever faced.

Come on Ed…do the job the saudi owned MSM won’t do.

There is real verifiable evidence out there.

SaintOlaf on October 7, 2008 at 10:30 AM

McCain shouldn’t even go near foreign policy except to hit some highlights, which, in my mind, include Obama’s ridiculous series of changes on Georgia while vacationing in Hawaii.

I agree with the Fannie-Freddie assault. McCain will reform; Obama will merely enable the Franks and Dodds and we’ll never get to the bottom of it.

Ayers is actually a two-fer and McCain shouldn’t drop it. Our country needs a leader who isn’t set on some fricking ideological agenda. McCain needs to point how Obama and Ayers spent $50 to $161 million (I keep seeing different figures) of foundation grant money to accomplish nothing for the Chicago schools. The question McCain needs to pose is “What the hell will the guy do with a federal budget?” For crying out loud, look at Obama’s Global Poverty Act of 2007. He wants to send the UN as much as $845 billion over 10 years for some blackhole poverty project. And that’s on top of our current foreign aid commitments.

Though Obama purports to be a Christian, he doesn’t understand that it’s not government’s role to do God’s work. In this country, we’re generally fortunate enought to be free to go about that task ourselves as individuals and as communities.

BuckeyeSam on October 7, 2008 at 10:30 AM

What’s interesting is that Obama has been using the first half of #4 in his stump speeches against McCain, and has started using #2.

When Obama tries to portray McCain as a tax-and-spend conservative, I have to laugh, but he gets lots of cheers from his base at the rallies.

McCain needs to go to specifics as to how he intends to spend less money than Obama, and to specifics as to where he thinks the waste in Obama’s programs would be.

unclesmrgol on October 7, 2008 at 10:34 AM

I think it would be wise to use all 5 talking points. Especially if “education” come up in talk. McCain should ask, directly, why obama thought it wise to let Ayers a known american terrorist, help with remodification of Chicago educational system. I bet he would be saying umm and ahh quite a bit stuttering like a little sissy.

As for the fannie/freddie deal, McCain should ask why obama has some “interesting people” on his campaign whom are linked exclusively too this “economic crisis”.

But either way all the points are great.

upinak on October 7, 2008 at 10:37 AM

Let McCain focus on the economy, with his gravitas, experience and DC knowledge.

Let Sarah focus focus on the radical associations, with her “Real American” status.

lodge on October 7, 2008 at 10:18 AM

+1

Browncoatone on October 7, 2008 at 10:40 AM

But either way all the points are great.

upinak on October 7, 2008 at 10:37 AM

Tru dat, playette.

On Barack’s economic policies, McCain should point out that way have tried the same policies previously……..during the Carter administration. How’d that work out? Get facts from Carter’s term and cross-reference with Obama’s plan. Note that there is predictable future of economic contraction under liberal, socialist ideas.

Dr.Cwac.Cwac on October 7, 2008 at 10:43 AM

Ed, this is all great but what good is it if the media doesn’t cover McCain talking about it? or picks and choses what they want to cover? For example, not covering his economic attacks on Obama.

AYNBLAND on October 7, 2008 at 10:45 AM

Time to exclaim that when elected he will appoint a special commissioner to look into the FM’s scandal.
Maybe even name someone, if Enron can lose 1/10th the amount of money, and people served time, then how could something this colossal be ignored.
Justice needs to be served to the American people, no one is above the law, no one should be allowed to destroy peoples lives, and continue to rule them. The head of these committees must be held accountable, that is what they were appointed to do. Democrats and Republicans alike, and there are only two people in this race that has proven they are willing to take on their own party.
Justice to the people must be served…but it won’t be if the fox is allowed to continue to watch the hen house.
All those points are valid, but number 2 has to be driven home…if they liked how the Democrats handled their money and ran FM’s, then they will love how the Democrats will handle health care, the continuing economic crisis, tax increases, spending.

right2bright on October 7, 2008 at 10:56 AM

Forget the economy…obama’s policies etc.

Focus on how Barack Hussein was groomed for the presidency by a saudi prince who helped him get into Harvard..the Harvard Law review and was raising money for him when he was in his twenties.

Focus on Raila Odinga, Barack Hussein’s cousin with ties to al qaeda and documented attempts to islamicize 80% Christian Kenya. There is plenty of video of Ubama campaigning for him..WHY IS THIS NOT ON THE COVER OF EVERY NEWSPAPER?

Obama is a real Saudi sleeper candidate.

This is no laughing matter and is definitely the most serious threat this country has ever faced.

Come on Ed…do the job the saudi owned MSM won’t do.

There is real verifiable evidence out there.

SaintOlaf on October 7, 2008 at 10:30 AM

yep, Sue Myrick was in town last year and told audience to read some book about how the Saudis/Islamist had infiltrated our Govt.

This is serious stuff, the Odinga stuff is amazing its not all over TV. This was recent too, what Obama did. Drudge needs to get informed and PUSH HARD

jp on October 7, 2008 at 10:57 AM

1. William Ayers and his radical past
2. Fannie Mae collapse and Democratic responsibility
3. Foreign policy
4. Tax-and-spend liberal
5. Chicago politician, not reformer

my take with a little different ordering

1. Ayers, Wright, Rezko et al sponsor Obama
2. Chicago politician(inherently crooked) with personal
earmarks to family and friends
3. Tax and spend liberal voting 97% with Pelosi
4. Fannie and campaign donations and earmarks
5. Foreign Policy, wrong war, wrong on dipolmacy

They are all related and lead in the order as listed. Each gives birth to the next. Palin attacks started at number 1 and over the next four weeks it will be a intergrated picture.

No step can be left out. McCain will exploit each point by a comparison to his career record, especially his call for regulation over the last ten years as regards the GSE’s. That alone, with his calls for justice, will channel voters outrage at the self induced crisis we are currently in. He will make it very clear that Obama, Pelosi, Reid and Frank are not qualified to lead.

patrick neid on October 7, 2008 at 10:58 AM

Kudlow has a great take here. The spending cut message is quite insufficient in this enviroment.

phronesis on October 7, 2008 at 11:01 AM

#2 is hurting McCain even though the Democrats are responsible for the disaster.

That’s where he must concentrate his firepower.

drjohn on October 7, 2008 at 11:03 AM

Poor Mary Matalin. Carville looks like he just swallowed his own poison.

AubieJon on October 7, 2008 at 11:09 AM

#2 is hurting McCain even though the Democrats are responsible for the disaster.

That’s where he must concentrate his firepower.

drjohn on October 7, 2008 at 11:03 AM

Let’s be candid. Neither of these candidates has a Nobel peace prize in economics. Judging from his tax returns, I would submit that Obama hadn’t learned of the benefits of an interest-bearing checking account until about 2005.

McCain should look at Ed’s 2:00 post from yesterday. McCain is the politician on the side of the angels in this credit mess. He should argue that now that we’re in this mess, that last person we should look to to get us out is Obama and his Fannie- and Freddie-enabling colleagues. With constant echoing, within a week or so, I think McCain can turn the tide on Obama.

And quite honestly, it’s time to resurrect Martin Luther King’s words: based on the content of their character, not the color of their skin. Risky, sure. But blacks are voting for him in droves because he’s black and too many whites are voting for him because they want to say that they voted for the first black president. Let me know when you find someone who vouches for his character. All I see people laud are his sales skills.

BuckeyeSam on October 7, 2008 at 11:12 AM

Y’all have SUPER advice, but I’d love for McCain to look directly into the camera, and suggest to the intelligent American people…
“Since there’s a mountain of info that I cannot possibly cover here … YOU google these names and connections, read EVERYTHING, both sides, and you’ll eventually uncover the the truths. Then compare those to what’s coming out of Obama’s mouth/camp”
tee hee
One can dream.

pambi on October 7, 2008 at 11:15 AM

McCain’s scorched earth campaign looking disturbingly bobdole-ish. He’s too much of a mildcat.

whitetop on October 7, 2008 at 11:17 AM

Comment from wretchard(Richard Fernandez)on lead article from The Belmont Club.

wretchard:

My sense is that there is a lot of energy out there that is looking for direction. It gets directed or misdirected in various ways. Guys get punched. People commit suicide. Journalists panic. And so on. Barack Obama can ride this wave of panic and energy into the White House. And so far he’s been better at harnessing hostility and anger than John McCain, who was given a golden opportunity to run against Congress but has so far been unwilling to get off the the statesman platform. This may stem from McCain’s desire to bring the country through the crisis in bipartisan shape. Obama, on the other hand, is aiming I think to be the Last Man Standing.

But events are pushing McCain into scorched earth territory. Maybe he now realizes that whatever happens there is no going back to the old order. Whether Washington is turned into ACORN central or the place simply falls apart in a big barroom brawl is yet to be determined by events. But I suspect that everyone — the politicians, the big media people, the old movers and shakers — they are headed for a smash. Some will survive, but the game will have changed. And the first order of the day is survive. There will be no prizes for second place.

a capella on October 7, 2008 at 11:21 AM

Replace foreign policy with national security and tie to oil. Include Obama’s cozy relationship with Cesar Chavez,

Y-not on October 7, 2008 at 11:26 AM

By not concentrating on the economy, McCain gives the impression that not only is it less important than his main themes, he’s saying that if I had a solution for this mess, I’d state it. So, obviously, I don’t. Would you vote for a guy who in the midst of economic crisis, said he doesn’t really understand economics? McCain needs to find an advisor who has an understanding of how to GET OUT of this mess, not how we got into it.

NNtrancer on October 7, 2008 at 11:29 AM

McCain is Duty Bound to call for Frank and Dodds’ resignation and for Pelosi and Reid to step down for gross negligence and extreme partisanship in the face of a National Crisis!

Do this and own the airwaves and the debate for not just tonight but for weeks to follow.

He must defend our capitalistic, free market system or the alternative is socialism or worse Marxism!

Country First?

Go Sarah keep up the character attacks you are a pitbull and we Love Ya!

dhunter on October 7, 2008 at 11:34 AM

Where’d you get the picture of an iguana?

whitetop on October 7, 2008 at 11:38 AM

We can’t turn this into a Willie Horton election, folks. People are scared about their own livelihoods and their homes and their retirement. We can’t scare them about Barack Obama being associated with some Saudi prince or some guy in Africa they’ve never heard of. It will not work. The Ayers argument is that Obama lied about how well he knows Ayers, not that Obama is a terrorist.

I like the idea of McCain calling for a special prosecutor. Not a commission, a prosecutor. And no immunity for Congress. Daniel Mudd and Dick Syron (the latest CEOs of Fannie and Freddie who really jumped headlong into the subprime market) should have their heads on pikes. McCain should also continue to call for Chris Cox’ head. People want heads to roll now, they don’t just want a check for $1000 and that’s all they are getting from Obama.

rockmom on October 7, 2008 at 11:46 AM

And Obama wrote a book about himself. Whooppee.
It’s amazing to me there are people out there who are undecided. It’s a war of ideologies. Nothing more.
You either want intrusive govt with big deficit spending & a surrender foreign policy global society mantra, or you still believe in the Constitution that America must remain a sovereign nation with small limited govt operating without a deficit.
It’s a no-brainer to me.

Badger40 on October 7, 2008 at 11:52 AM

Jeez. If I were McCain, I wouldn’t know what to think.

1. HA bloggers scream “Go after Ayers!”
2. McCain does.
3. HA bloggers scream “No! I said go after the Dems and Freddie and Fanny!”
4. McCain does.
5. HA bloggers scream “WTF is wrong with you? Go after the economy! Jeez McCain is stupid!”

fossten on October 7, 2008 at 11:54 AM

McCain needs to point the blame with the economy and housing crisis back to the dems and point out that they have been in control of congress for the last two years

ConservativePartyNow on October 7, 2008 at 12:08 PM

Jeez. If I were McCain, I wouldn’t know what to think.

1. HA bloggers scream “Go after Ayers!”
2. McCain does.
3. HA bloggers scream “No! I said go after the Dems and Freddie and Fanny!”
4. McCain does.
5. HA bloggers scream “WTF is wrong with you? Go after the economy! Jeez McCain is stupid!”

fossten on October 7, 2008 at 11:54 AM

6. McCain ignores the ground noise and the static, even from his own side.

I like the idea of McCain calling for a special prosecutor. Not a commission, a prosecutor. And no immunity for Congress.

rockmom on October 7, 2008 at 11:46 AM

I’m intrigued by your idea, and also by the one repeated by someone above, that McCain call for Dodd and Frank to resign. The latter really would turn the election into nuclear war toe-to-toe, Rs vs Ds, outcome very uncertain. Your idea sounds a little better, but also dangerous. Special prosecutors can do a lot of harm – when we get behind the idea, we give the other side a lot of ugly ideas.

I do think we agree that, if it’s at all possible, McCain needs to call on his entire life’s experience in a way to ride a wave of popular revulsion. If he could catch that wave, 6 points or 16 points down in the polls could disappear overnight. But it may be beyond him or anyone to engineer and control such a strategy. He’s got a better chance than you or I to lead an enraged populace, and his character fits the role better than Obama’s, but the behavior of mobs is unpredictable.

The other alternative is to fight Obama on the economy frontally – negatively via FM&FM and tax-and-spend, and positively via accountability, growth, energy, etc. – while using Obama’s vomit-inducing associations, social extremism, and dissembling to win the undecided and weakly committed voters in the last week.

CK MacLeod on October 7, 2008 at 12:15 PM

Though Obama purports to be a Christian, he doesn’t understand that it’s not government’s role to do God’s work.

BuckeyeSam on October 7, 2008 at 10:30 AM

AMEN!!! Preach it brother!

dominigan on October 7, 2008 at 12:15 PM

McCain seems to be pretty clever in this. If you will notice it has been Palin going after Ayers, not McCain. McCain has been going after the Freddy/Fanny issue. Palin started a day earlier and is getting the media attention right now, but is primarily a diversion to keep Obama’s campaign on the defensive elsewhere while McCain nails him on the Freddy/Fannie issues. I suspect that in the debate tonight McCain will continue the attack on the Freddy/Fannie issues and not bother touching on Ayers. He doesn’t need to, as the press is doing all the publicity for him on the Ayers matter. This does force Obama to prepare for two lines of attack tonight, which has got to be a distraction. Plus this puts Obama on the defensive at a time when he should be on the offensive. The press is forcing Obama’s camp to spend time defending what is just a side issue while McCain is free to hammer him on the real issue. This keeps Obama from talking about the economy while McCain continues to address it. If McCain has enough side issues to keep this up into November he is in good shape no matter what the polls say right now. Expect Palin to bring up other inflammatory things to continue to distract the Obama campaign and force then to burn press cycles talking about secondary issues while McCain continues to hammer on the economy and the role of the Dems for getting us in this mess.

Buford on October 7, 2008 at 12:18 PM

Re. poll:
Voter supression a problem?
Voting is much too easy!…especially in Ohio.

jgapinoy on October 7, 2008 at 12:30 PM

Not enough folks are looking at #5…

For a snapshot of how Obama’s going to change WASHINGTON, one only needs
to look at what he has done in CHICAGO. Illinois is where Obama has been
doing the great majority of his work. His entire political career has
been focused on improving local conditions… state legislator, and now
US Senator for Illinois.

Illinois state pension fund is $44 billion IN DEBT (worst in the country).

Cook county (Chicago) has the HIGHEST sales tax (10.25%) in the country.

Chicago school system one of the worst in country.

Body count for last six months = 292 murdered in Chicago alone
(Only 221 killed in the war in Iraq… THERE’S MORE DEATH IN CHICAGO!!)

Chicago is a combat zone. Of course, they’re all blaming each other.
Can’t blame the Republicans, there aren’t any in power!

The entire gov’t leadership is ALL DEMOCRAT:
Senators Barack Obama & Dick Durbin
Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr.
Gov. Rod Blogojevich
House leader Mike Madigan
Atty. Gen. Lisa Madigan (daughter of Mike)
Mayor Richard M. Daley (son of former Mayor Richard J. Daley)

This is the political culture that Obama comes from in Illinois.
And this is how he intends to CHANGE Washington politics?

Mark_Tampa on October 7, 2008 at 12:33 PM

I’d keep spreading the love for at least another week.

The Anderson Cooper attention to Ayers may be the start of some balance in part of the MSM. I mean, MSNBC remains the lead Obama shill, and die hard O-bots are probably not tuning in anywhere but there, ’cause the Koolaid’s soooooo good.

So if CNN wants to increase it’s numbers, it’s got to look at Obama a little more critically. Cycling through a variety of weak points gives reporters cover to call it something new. Unless you tune in to Fox News, Rush, Hannity and the like, it may be the first time you’ve heard about a lot of this stuff.

I saw The One in another commercial that I’m sure is pretty effective last night. With no music or other background, He talks about how we’ve seen in the last 8 years that giving tax breaks to the top doesn’t trickle down but how pain trickles up to “you.” It doesn’t matter how wrong what He says is, what matters is that people hear it.

I’d like to see McCain and Palin combine in a series of messages featuring the Governor speaking plainly about an issue and then the Senator speaking plainly but strongly about why he approves the message. No background music to distract from the message when either speaks, though a sound effect segue (such as a gavel) between them might work — I’d have to hear it. 5 seconds or so could be devoted to Obama’s position. Not just “I approve this message” but “I approve this message because Gov. Palin is right. . . .” The Governor could point out the Ayers/Wright issues in 15 seconds and then McCain could drum home how important character is. She could give a 15-20 second talk on energy and McCain could approve that because exploring all avenues are vital to becoming energy independent, contrasting Obama’s stance.

EconomicNeocon on October 7, 2008 at 12:33 PM

Some one should let James Carville know, this is the worse kept secret in the Country. Let me restate, this is all over you tube, so a lot of people sweating markets in their home countrys, know who is at fault too. Thankfully they are not a product of the American Public School system, and can still put 2 and 2 together. Marty Davis Blogs Chickaboomer, for Chicks and Boomers:) Fannie Mae whos your Daddy?

http://chickaboomer.blogspot.com/2008/10/fannie-mae-whos-your-daddy.html

Dr Evil on October 7, 2008 at 12:33 PM

I understand the need for a theme, but I prefer “all of the above”. The financial problems, and the dem ties to them are important. But, what gets me fired up is the thought of Ayers and Dhorn laughing it up and making fake bombs while staying in the Lincoln bedroom. Or, Wright badmouthing Lincoln while staying in the room named for his portrait.

cozmo on October 7, 2008 at 12:37 PM

I created this last night in preparation for all of the “Keating Five” references we are going to be hearing in the news before and after the debate this week. Please spread the word.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_KNBYgx4-Ao

http://cann0nba11.wordpress.com/2008/10/06/obama-ten/

cannonball on October 7, 2008 at 12:43 PM

For all the Monday morning quarterback campaign strategists that have been pissing and moaning so much, you may want to read this:

http://www.americanthinker.com/2008/10/what_if_mccain_knows_what_hes.html

CC

CapedConservative on October 7, 2008 at 12:50 PM

Why is it every time I see that picture of Carville, he looks like he is suddenly feeling that laxative he took an hour before suddenly kicking into high gear on its way to overdrive?

pilamaye on October 7, 2008 at 12:53 PM

All of the above, but the financial crisis is what’s on people’s minds.

Terrye on October 7, 2008 at 1:03 PM

I’m a believer in K.I.S.S.

McCain needs to say the following: The Republican concept of government is to keep it small and efficient. President Bush did not make good use of his veto pen. I have promised to put a freeze on most all agency spending and I have promised to use my veto pen to curtail spending. When government grows, it becomes unwieldy and less transparent. It is this lack of transparency that allowed the Fannie & Freddie crisis to occur. The American people could not see clearly what was going on.

Now, Senator Obama wants to grow the size and scope of the federal government by adding national healthcare, universal preK, and other such programs. I will say that again. He wants to expand the size of the government, making it even less transparent. If Fannie & Freddie blew up because there was not enough oversight and regulation, which I asked for, then what do you think will happen if healthcare and preschool education become government-controlled programs? The very same thing, folks!

Connie on October 7, 2008 at 1:43 PM

The attack has to be twofold. One, he needs to shift the discussion to Oslime-a’s character. Second, he needs to continue to hammer the liberal record while touting his own.

csdeven on October 7, 2008 at 2:31 PM

CapedConservative on October 7, 2008 at 12:50 PM

I agree. Pretty close to 80% of what I’ve been thinking he should do, he is now doing. It’s not that I’m psychic but rather observant. Watching the direction he is going it seems there are limited tacks he can take. I simply pick the tack that seems the most logical. His advisers are miles ahead of most of us, but if we observe closely, we can get pretty close.

Someone posted an acronym the other day that referred to observing, planning, and action. I forget the exact wording, but it made a lot of sense.

csdeven on October 7, 2008 at 2:40 PM

OODA Loop?

capitalist piglet on October 7, 2008 at 3:06 PM

Ed,

You and McCain camp are missing things. McCain should attack congress and politics, the good old boy network. it was the good old boy network that caused fannie and freddi, it was the good old boy network that Obama used with Ayers, it is the mistaken belief that gov is the solution that destroys the tax and spend side. What better example of a good old boy network than chicago? He can attack the ruling elite because they have failed. Obama is part of that ruling elite because he never fought them. The reform message will work if done right. Not just earmarks but drilling, deregulation for friends and people of power, monoplies, lack of anti-trust,

90% of the people think the system is broken. McCain must attack the system. The system brought us fannie and freddie, wall street greed, lose of jobs to offshore, lower standard of living.

the people want change because they think the system is broken and stacked against everyone but the elites. McCain must tie his reform message to the economic troubles, to liberlism. that over the last decade the government has become by, for and of the corporations.

unseen on October 7, 2008 at 3:17 PM

#2 has to be the lead story, maybe with a little ACORN-strong-arming-Chicago-bankers worked in.

How McCain can make this point, in two minutes or less:

“A lot of you might be wondering how so many banks failed so quickly, and you might have heard my opponent blaming it on deregulation and President Bush. In fact, the deregulation was signed by President Clinton in 1999, and Fannie Mae chief Harold Raines was encouraged by Democrats in Congress to make risky loans to people who couldn’t afford them, backed by taxpayer money. By the way, Harold Raines made $90 million in the process, and is an advisor to the Obama campaign. In 2005, I foresaw the present problems, and with my Republican colleagues introduced legislation to regulate Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and prevent them from making risky loans. Every Republican on the Senate banking committee voted for my bill, every Democrat voted against it, and the Democrats filibustered it in the Senate. So Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac continued to make risky loans, which other banks bought and thought they were safe because of government backing. When people started defaulting on these loans, the Government had to buy them out. While Fannie Mae was going broke, they gave more money to Barack Obama than any other Senator in the past four years. I ask you, fellow Americans, do you want a President who had the foresight to try to fix this problem three years ago, or do you want the fox guarding the henhouse?”

Hopefully, McCain will get a question on this from the “townhall” questioners, and express it better than I just did.

Steve Z on October 7, 2008 at 3:54 PM

1. William Ayers and his radical past
2. Fannie Mae collapse and Democratic responsibility
3. Foreign policy
4. Tax-and-spend liberal
5. Chicago politician, not reformer

Okay, I’ll bite on 2, 4, and 5.

Address Obama as “my opponent” (this always pisses the off the clubby Senate types – besides if asked you can say “he apparently has a problem with his name” – a double dig!!!).

On Fannie/Freddy (#2 and #4) :

If my opponent was so concerned with oversight at Fannie/Freddy and the stability of mortgage backed derivatives why did/does he propose over 1 trillion dollars in new spending during the primaries? (this gets Obama into a corner – he says he no longer opposes tax cuts and plans to delay additional spending during the current economic crisis – this is an apparent acknowledgement of supply side economics).

#5 Fact: It is safer to be a young person in Iraq, than to be a young person in your “hometown” Chicago, the City can’t balance its budget, but it can find time to author a ban on text messaging, and the second straight sitting governor of Illinois may be indicted for fraud in connection with his dealings with your business partner Tony Rezko.

Are Chicago and Illinois models for how our federal government should operate or symptoms of corruption that can undermine the integrity of all levels of government?

How are you going to clean up Washington, if you have so clearly failed to clean up Chicago or Illinois state politics?

Senator McCain, “your opponent” is all teed up. Hit him hard and often.

Your opponent is not a new politician, but an old liberal in a young person’s body.

Angry Dumbo on October 7, 2008 at 3:55 PM

I’m sure it wouldn’t hurt to point out that the market is tanking because so many polls show Obama out in front.

Vashta.Nerada on October 7, 2008 at 5:13 PM

What? No immigration? If McCain just attacked Obama as a open borders, treasonous scumbag, we would have this election sewn up.

Except for the fact that McCain is also an open borders, treasonous scumbag.

You pundits have no one to blame but yourselves for losing this election. You did not support conservative candidates, so now you reap what you sow.

Stop your whining, because I told you so. You are the ones responsible. Keep playing ostrich with the immigration issue, since it suits your globalist neo-con candidate who is not going to win the presidency.

petit bourgeois on October 7, 2008 at 6:26 PM

For all the Monday morning quarterback campaign strategists that have been pissing and moaning so much, you may want to read this:

http://www.americanthinker.com/2008/10/what_if_mccain_knows_what_hes.html

Good stuff….I hope he knows what he’s talking about.

Let’s roll!

ex-Democrat on October 7, 2008 at 8:50 PM

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