October 09, 2008 Obama Still Hasn’t Closed The Sale—But Can McCain Stop Him?Two weeks after the
Republican convention in St. Paul, They had erased the eight-point lead
Barack Obama had opened up in That is
ancient history now. Since mid-September, the stock market
has cratered, losing half of the $8 trillion that has
vanished since October 2007. All five of America's great
investment banks—Bear Sterns, Lehman Brothers,
Merrill-Lynch,
Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley—have either ceased
to be independent or ceased to be. The nation's largest savings and loan,
Washington Mutual, and largest insurance company,
AIG, have gone belly up, with the
federal bailout of the latter costing $100 billion
and counting. Perhaps $3 trillion of the $8 trillion in
stock value that is gone disappeared after passage of
the $700 billion federal bailout of Wall Street. No bottom is in sight to the worst
market crash since 1929. Recession is now certain.
George W. Bush has fallen to 26 percent approval, a
level unseen since Richard Nixon was
driven from office in the Watergate summer of '74.
Four in five think the nation is on the wrong course. Yet, Obama has only a six-point lead
in an averaging of national polls. While he has moved
ahead in Obama still has not closed the sale.
He has overtaken McCain not because of any brilliant
campaign he has conducted but because of the dreadful
news pouring out of Wall Street. McCain and Palin are
being dragged down by Dow Jones, not Barack Obama.
As
of today, the country is not so much voting for Barack
and the Democrats as it is preparing to vote against the
Republicans.
Consider: The Congress, whose Democratic ranks the
nation is getting ready to enlarge—the Congress led by
Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid—has an approval rating half
that of Bush.
Indeed, looking back on the Year of Barack, 2008, it is
clear he has never closed the sale, either with the
people or his own party. After he came off the blocks with a
startling triumph in Iowa and ran up a dozen straight
primary and caucus victories in February, arrived the
spring when Hillary, though Obama's media auxiliary was
ordering her to get out, defeated him in Texas, crushed
him in
Ohio and Pennsylvania, and humiliated him in
West Virginia and Kentucky.
Each
time the voters take a long second look at Barack, their
positive first impressions seem to dissipate. Barack is
a weak closer.
Herein lies McCain's hope. The country wants change, but
it has not concluded it wants Obama. But if John McCain
cannot raise grave doubts about his agenda, his
associates, his record, his character, his fitness to be
president, Obama is going to win by default.
Obama has succeeded in the debates by playing defense.
By his cool demeanor and persona, he has diminished
apprehensions about an Obama presidency. There is no
evidence of surging enthusiasm. The Obama media are well aware of
Obama's Achilles' heel, his great vulnerability, the
doubts about him that still exist in the public
mind. That is why they are near hysterical about Palin's
ripping of Obama for
"palling around"
with
"domestic terrorists" like William Ayers, the 1960s
and 1970s
Weatherman radical who
conspired to bomb the Capitol and Pentagon and was
quoted the morning of 9-11 as saying he wished he had
set off more bombs. The MainStream Media call this
irrelevant, as it was so long ago. Yet can one imagine how the media
would have reacted had they learned that a GOP
presidential nominee was introduced to politics and
worked in harness with a KKK bomber of black churches in
the 1960s, who was quoted the morning of As McCain is an Establishment man on
illegal aliens, NAFTA and Wall Street bailouts, uneasy
with social issues like affirmative action and abortion,
he lacks the full panoply of weapons that successful
Republicans like Nixon, Ronald Reagan and Bush II used
to win two terms. He seems to confine himself to the
limited arsenal
Gerald Ford, Bush 1 and Bob Dole employed when they
went down to defeat. This election is not over. Yet even if
McCain gets a bit of luck, a
dead cat bounce on Wall Street, he must persuade the
nation Obama is an unacceptable occupant of the White
House if he is to win. Palin appears ready to take the heat
to make that case. But McCain seems ambivalent to the
point of being bipolar on whether
he wants to take responsibility for peeling the hide
off Barack Obama. Perhaps it comes down to what McCain
really thinks about an
Obama presidency—and how he wants to be remembered
by history. 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 |
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