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McCain’s Five-Step Path to Victory

With a Gamecock three-step

Gamecock is proud to present these brillant young conservative republicans that assure us that the movement is in good hands for the future. We have made comments below, but we think that our hero McCain would do well to heed the advice given here and so present this excellent column in toto first:

McCain’s Five-Step Path to Victory

September 22, 2008

By Ryan Mauro and Nicholas Guariglia

With the post-convention bounces fading, the race has tightened and Obama appears to have settled with a slight lead in national polls and in the electoral college. Obama has the potential to substantially increase his projected margin of victory through massive turnout of African-Americans and younger voters. McCain’s pick of Sarah Palin as his running mate has provided his supporters with optimism, and his argument that he’s the “real agent of change” is resonating. However, McCain must further refine his message in order to win the election. There are five steps McCain must immediately take:


1) McCain must craft a coherent message to voters, explaining to them why the economic downturn occurred, how he foresaw this crisis years ago, and what he will do to fix it. His campaign made one of its most serious mistakes in not highlighting McCain’s foresight on the Freddie-Mae and Freddie-Mac crisis, allowing every news article about the economy to become an ad for Obama.

There is little time left to correct this issue. If McCain can prove that he has credibility on the economy, his attacks on Obama’s tax-raising agenda will allow him to become the more trusted candidate on this issue.

2) He must make his comprehensive energy plan, which he calls the Lexington Project, become the historical equivalent of the Manhattan Project. McCain and all his surrogates must say “Lexington Project” at least three times in every campaign stop, in every interview, in every speech. The failure to do this at the convention is another important opportunity missed by the campaign, but there is still time to drive home this message.

The two top issues are listed as the economy and gas prices. However, they are really one issue. When Americans complain about the economy, they are mostly thinking about their struggle at the pump and how it causes everything else to become more expensive. Therefore, whoever wins the energy debate, is far more likely to win the economy debate.

3) McCain must stop Obama’s attempts to appear as a credible challenger to America ’s enemies during Friday’s debate by challenging him on a whole host of foreign policy-related issues. To hone his message, McCain should focus on Iran . He should stop focusing so much on the fact that Obama would meet with Ahmadinejad without preconditions, and focus on Obama’s proven naivete by voting against labeling the Iranian Revolutionary Guards as a terrorist group.

Any student of the Middle East know that’s the IRGC is one of the largest, if not the largest, outfits sponsoring terrorists today, including Hezbollah and Hamas (groups which have “legitimate claims” according to Obama) and the insurgents in Iraq. The IRGC’s role in terrorism is so blatant, even Senator Clinton voted in favor of the resolution, which is another fact that McCain must raise. How could a President Obama contain a nuclear Iran if he isn’t even willing to take basic measures to call a spade a spade?

4) McCain must emphasize that he has a plan, not just an ambition, to reform every part of the federal government. He must pledge to begin a thorough review of every department of the government, and give a timeframe for this review to be completed. He has sworn to fight pork-barrel spending and partisanship that harms the country, but McCain must make the case that his administration will dramatically change the government, making it slimmer, less costly, and more effective.

5) Colorado is the new Ohio . If the race does not take a decisive turn, this race will come down to Colorado . Sure, McCain can theoretically pick off a blue state, but if you look at the polls during each candidate’s peaks, the final map becomes fairly obvious. Most so-called swing states like Michigan and Pennsylvania have shown Obama leading even during McCain’s peak. McCain would be wise to focus on Colorado .

McCain must win two out of Nevada , Colorado and New Mexico . Obama has held a steady lead in New Mexico , and McCain usually has a small lead in polls for Nevada . Colorado has consistently shown a small lead for Obama, although some polls have shown McCain briefly pulling ahead. This shows that McCain has the capability to win here. While it is tempting to invest resources in places like Wisconsin , McCain must invest whatever it takes to solidify a lead in Colorado before being distracted elsewhere.

When the polls showed McCain behind or tied with Obama at best, he made a decisive move by picking Palin as his running mate, leading to a successful convention. We are again at a point in time where the polls appear to have stabilized (as much as polls can anyway) with Obama holding a slight lead. The McCain campaign must again change the dynamics of the race as described, or it must begin preparing its face-saving argument that a close second was honorable in such a tough political environment.

Ryan Mauro and Nicholas Guariglia are writers at WorldThreats.com.

Gamecock’s comments on the above column and additional advice for John McCain in the debate and beyond:

1) McCain holds in his hand the Smoking Gun with Dem fingerprints as regards the present economic crisis. In 2005 he sponsored a bill that Alan Greenspan endorsed that would have prevented Fannie Mae from continuing to encourage/coerce bad loans and from guaranteeing them and/or buying them up. All of the Dems on the Banking Committee voted against the bill and 40+ Dems kept the bill from coming to the floor. McCain should tout his foresight and blast the Dems for causing the crisis, rather than making vague charges of greed against CEO’s of private corporations and slanderous charges of betraying the public trust against SEC’s Cox. McCain has shown that he can re-focus his ire at his former media sycophants when they turned on his, so we pray he will soon wake up and notice that it is liberal democrat policies that are hurting the nation on the war, oil and the economy proper and that they regularly insult him daily right along with their Dem party allies.

2) McCain should oppose the Paulson Plan if it will not ensure that the clogged credit arteries will be cleared, and he must not trade away any future rights to drilling for oil offshore, as has been rumored that Pelosi is seeking to so blackmail the President.

3) I admit I am not familiar with Colorado’s political demographics and so defer to the authors above, but I do think McCain should campaign hard in Ohio, Pennsylvania and Michigan and other states occupied by Obama’s bitter whites that cling to bigotry.

Mike DeVine’s Charlotte Observer columns
Legal Editor for The Minority and HinzSight Reports
“The way to stop discrimination on the basis of race is to stop discriminating on the basis of race.” – The Chief Justice
Race 4 2008
“One man with courage makes a majority.” – Andrew Jackson

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COMMENTS

  • padre29

    The Lexington Project being mentioned is a great idea, one of the problems with McCain is that he does not “brand” things and that would be a great start.

  • neum432

    Not sure if McCain can pull this off. He has already lost the argument on the economy. When faced with the market turmoil..he turned to regulation and oversight. That is exactly what the democrats would favor. McCain has lost the debate on the economic front. He should have stood up for the free market and lashed out at the over regulation of the mortgage industry. Instead, he followed to liberal line of demanded more regulation in an already over-regulated industry. Obama needs to “bomb royale” in these upcoming debates for McCain to have a chance.

  • Swamp_Yankee

    It’s an ace in the hole that the McCain campaign is not using. A vote for Obama is a green light for liberal judges and a blank check for Pelosi and Reid. McCain’s not tying Obama with Reid/ Pelosi/ unfettered liberal government/ and liberal judges.

    This campaign doesnt deserve to win if it cant exploit the least productive Congress and the lowest rated Congress in history. I think Schmidt is running a thematic campaign and may be sitting on this angle.

    Also McCain has led in the last four NH polls. NH offsets a NM or NV loss. And I still think he can peel a Great Lake state into the Red Column.

  • paint_it_red

    The debate strategy is a bit oversimplistic and the CO focus is as well, but I like their points 1,2, and 4. The big point is that McCain is losing ground right now and he needs to change this conversation and soon.

    One other idea is to come up with a bold proposal of his own. Instead of giving $700 billion to Wall Street, how about giving $700 billion to taxpayers in the amount of a $5000 investment credit for each taxpayer to invest in the market, provided they invest in American owned companies employing American workers?