With the recent article in the Washington Post on how McCain plans on going starkly negative for the remainder of the campaign, I had an odd reaction.
It felt a little like victory.
No, I'm not getting ahead of myself. There is still a gargantuan amount of work to be done to put this thing away. But I still can not quite contain my sense that this move may be the final nail in the McCain campaign's coffin. Join me below the jump for details.
With my DVR, I just finished the debate. And I had a couple of thoughts that I'd like to get responses to.
My first thought on McCain is that it looked like he was daring Obama to bring up Palin. He baited Obama over and over again with repeated comments on earmarks and spending, but Obama didn't take the bait. This is important, because Obama attacking Palin would likely have been a loser. (Black man attacking white woman.)
It looks like McCain's other purpose in this debate is to paint Obama as naive and uninformed. At my count, he called Obama naive more than 20 times during the debate, so it was obviously the prepared emphasis. He called him naive on Iraq, naive on Iran, naive on Afghanistan, naive on Syria, naive or Russia, and naive on North Korea.
The problem with this approach? Clinton tried it and it didn't work.
Obama, on the other hand, looked presidential. There were still a few "umms" and "ahhs" and stutters, but not nearly as many as in past debates. Obama has learned how these things work, and those who follow him know he learns his lessons well.
His statements were forceful and to the point. MUCH more so than in the primary debates. The impression I got was that he was more about establishing himself than about making McCain look bad. He agreed with McCain on occasion, brought up McCain's shortcomings when appropriate, but he didn't press the issue.
The traps he didn't fall into? He didn't look weak. He didn't look indecisive. He didn't look elitist.
Your thoughts?
So obviously, there has been a lot of discussion about McCain's move today to suspend campaigning in order to provide leadership on the Wall Street bailout plan.
So, it behooves us to see what McCain actually thinks about the recent economic disaster that has rocked the country.
Follow me below the bump for the details.
Those who know me or have read my previous comments know that I am two things.
But I must say that, relatively speaking, and taking all factors into account, McCain won the convention bounce.
For my admittedly convoluted reasoning, follow me after the jump.
As tonight's results pour in (gotta love Oregon's haul-ass mail in vote counting) and Obama soars past the half-way mark on pledged delegates, I was thinking about this race and what it has meant.
And I wanted to extend a heartfelt thanks to Hillary Clinton.
Please hear me out below the jump.
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