Four Barack Obama wins over the weekend still leave his foot race with Hillary Clinton too close to call--although big mo is in his favor. John McCain has a different problem. Although the Arizona senator is the presumptive Republican presidential nominee, Mike Huckabee is the candidate leaving all the right-wingers' hearts a fluttering. That means Obama, Clinton and McCain had better watch their steps. Huckabee is looking to keep on stepping.
Here's my ebonyjet.com commentary posted earlier today.
Political Two Step
who's stepping on toes on the primary floor?
Monday, February 11, 2008
By Monroe Anderson
This
is the year of delicate dancing.
Playing naughty or nice has not managed to give Clinton or Obama a leg-up over
the other. The senators who would be president remain virtually tied in their
quest for their party's nomination. Even after Obama's sweep Saturday in
Washington, Nebraska and Louisiana, he and his challenger are so close that the
winner may be decided by the party's super-delegates in a brokered convention
this summer in Denver.
But Obama and Clinton are not the only contenders tangled in a tango. John
McCain, who is looking like the sure thing for the Republican party's
presidential nomination, is learning to two-step between the race he'd like to
run and the one the radical right wants to run for him. Somewhere during the 20
years he's been in the senate and this past year's presidential race, McCain
has become a RINO (Republican in Name Only), according to the loudest and
looniest in the GOP.
"Even Fox Cable Network airhead Sean Hannity has thrown his two cents worth of “McCain's not worthy” into the right's national temper tantrum over not having Ronald Reagan to schtick around anymore."
Although McCain has been recognized as a genuine American hero since his days as a prisoner of war in the Vietnam era, the rock-rib conservative was simultaneously cheered and booed when he spoke last week at the Conservative Political Action Conference in D.C. The far right's rank-and-file are not falling in line for McCain.
Even after dropping out of the race, Mitt Romney won the straw poll over McCain
at that event. And on Saturday, long-shot challenger Mike Huckabee trounced
McCain in the Kansas caucus even as the Arkansas senator was being hailed as
the presumptive Republican presidential nominee.
Ann Coulter, the far right's poison-pen-for-hire, has announced that if McCain
is the party's candidate, she'll vote for "the she-devil," Hillary
Clinton. Right-wing radio shrews, Russ Limbaugh and Laura Ingraham have been
spewing out daily doses of anti-McCain diatribes to their national talk show
audiences. Even Fox Cable Network airhead Sean Hannity has thrown his two cents
worth of “McCain's not worthy” into the right's national temper tantrum over
not having Ronald Reagan to schtick around anymore.
There is a long list of outspoken Republicans who are voicing their lack of
enthusiasm for their likely candidate, the top criticisms being McCain's
stances on taxes, immigration reform, gay marriage, stem cell research and
global warming. And, he has a nasty temper and a foul mouth to boot.
Long considered to be a maverick, McCain voted against President Bush's tax
cuts twice, in 2001 and again two years later. The first time, he argued that
the tax cuts helped the wealthy at the expense of the middle class and the
second time he said there should be no tax relief until the cost of the Iraq
war was known. He has also supported making a path to citizenship for illegal
immigrants while refusing to support a constitutional amendment to ban gay
marriage. And, in the ultimate betrayal of right-thinking, the senator from
Arizona sides with science, preferring relaxed restrictions on federal dollars
for embryonic stem cell research and calling for an aggressive action against
global warming.
The Republican's radical right considered tax cuts part of the scripture,
illegal immigration a cardinal sin and the pursuit of science blasphemous.
Limbaugh, Coulter, Ingraham and the gang are subscribing to a scorched earth
where Hillary is allowed to win in November. They believe she'll do an even
worse job than Bush has done over the past eight years, paving the way for a
true conservative to win the White House in 2012.
In his attempt to court the party's crazies, McCain now says he wants to extend
the tax cuts and that he now understands that the border between Mexico and the
United States must be sealed first. He's also promising to appoint supreme
justices cloning Clarence Thomas, Antonin Scalia and Chief Justice John Roberts
to further the radical right's efforts to turn back the clock on women and
civil rights.
So Obama and Clinton tread lightly, but they need not worry: With McCain
traipsing between satisfying the right, the far rights, and wooing the
independents, the Democratic nominee should be able to waltz into the White
House come November.