Show your support by purchasing VDARE.com merchandise. 
VDARE.com's Amazon connection has been restored! Remember to enter Amazon via the VDARE.com link and we get a commission on any purchases you make—at no cost to you!
[See also James Antle's
Ruthlessness—What Patriotic Immigration Reformers Must
Learn From The McCain Miracle]
John McCain is headed back to the U.S. Senate, perhaps a
changed and chastened man, and perhaps not.
But the manner in which he secured his Senate seat for
another six years is instructive, and not only for
moderate Republicans facing off against conservatives
and Tea Party candidates, but for 2012.
Realizing his career was on the line, McCain began to
run attack ads against his rival,
ex-Congressman J. D. Hayworth, an authentic
conservative,
while J.D. was still a radio talk show host.
When J. D. announced, and surged to within five points
of McCain, the senator did not hesitate to call in Sarah
Palin, though his own
staff aides from the 2008 campaign had been trashing
her as a lightweight and principal cause of McCain's
defeat.
McCain then
repudiated his famous
"maverick" moniker as a misnomer, as it implied
that he had been First RINO, (Republican in name only),
who had relished siding with Democrats against his own
party – a practice that had endeared McCain to the
mainstream media.
McCain then joined Sen. John Kyl in proposing a 10-point
border security plan calling for a fence and troops.
John Amnesty of 2007 was
now doing a passable imitation
of
Tom Tancredo 2008.
McCain used much of his $20 million war chest to savage
J.D. with radio and TV, then created an ad with him
walking the border with no-nonsense Sheriff
Paul Babeu, saying, "Complete the dang
fence!" and Sheriff Babeu responding,
"Senator, you're
one of
us."
While J. D. ran a courageous campaign, he never got the
support to which his conservative record entitled him,
and lost by 24 points.
McCain's victory has cost him dearly with a national
press that loathed the campaign he conducted. Many
concur with the Democratic National Committee that
charged McCain with selling his soul
to win his renomination. From the network studios in New
York to the newsrooms of Washington, McCain is no longer
Lancelot but
Mordred.
Yet, he did what he had to do to keep his job. And he
has kept his job for six more years.
Had he been as
ruthlessly opportunistic and pragmatic
in his run against Barack Obama, as he was in the
campaign against J. D., McCain would be president now.
Indeed, had McCain led the battle for border security in
2008, conceded that NAFTA had not worked, called for its
renegotiation and an industrial policy to create
manufacturing jobs in America, and taken Obama apart as
a
man of the radical left, comfortable in
the church of a racist preacher,
McCain would have been leading his country this year,
not fighting to save this Senate seat.
Instead, the stunning selection of Palin aside, which
sent his campaign surging, McCain ran a race that seemed
designed to lose gracefully and maintain his standing
with the Washington press.
As he has seen how softball failed him in 2008, but
hardball succeeded for him in 2010, one wonders if
McCain has any regrets. And when he gets back to
Washington, will he revert to the maverick for whom the
press fell so hard in 2000?
For conservatives and Tea Party activists, the lesson to
be taken away from McCain's campaign is clear.
Confrontation and conflict are not to be avoided, but
sought out.
And, as one looks around the political landscape, the
issues that are turning toward the
Tea Party and populist right are
astonishing.
Even Democrats are now parroting the right on border
security and amnesty. Voters are overwhelmingly
endorsing English as the national language. Affirmative
action is being voted down in deep blue states like
Michigan, California, Washington. Pro-life is gaining
among the young. Abortion on demand has lost
its feminist luster.
Same-sex marriage has been rejected in all 31 states
where it has been on the ballot. Even Obama refuses to
endorse it, and back up the California federal court,
and now appears suddenly hesitant to impose the values
of
Fire Island
on
Parris Island.
The election of 2010 will surely turn on the
economy—jobs, deficits, debt. So, too, may the election
of 2010. But there are other aces and face cards in
play.
But if the GOP takes the advice of its establishment,
and the
neocons who seek power to start another
war,
and walks away from cultural, social and moral issues,
which are far more popular than the party itself, folks
who care about the character of the country and national
identity should walk away from that party, and find
outliers who will pick up the banner up and carry it
forward.
Americans motivated by causes need to maintain their
freedom and independence of both parties, forming what
George W. Bush liked to call "alliances of the willing."
If the Tea Party has taught us anything, it is that the
mindset that says,
"Lead, follow, or
get out of the way" is the quintessential ingredient
of political success and future progress.
COPYRIGHT CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
Patrick J. Buchanan
needs
no introduction to
VDARE.COM readers; his book State
of Emergency: The Third World Invasion and
Conquest of America, can
be ordered from Amazon.com. His latest book
is Churchill,
Hitler, and "The Unnecessary War": How
Britain Lost Its Empire and the West Lost
the World,
reviewed
here by
Paul Craig Roberts.