McCain Pollster Blames, Well, NOT McCain

| | Comments (14) | TrackBacks (0)

McCain Campaign continues to complain about self inflicted problems as if they were someone else's fault. (C. Edmund Wright comments in BLUE) 


The chief pollster for John McCain's presidential campaign offered a candid diagnosis of how his candidate was done in, on occasion reserving harsh words for fellow Republicans--well, at least he remains consistent with his client!!!

Bill McInturff, speaking at a National Journal breakfast on Thursday, said the political environment for the GOP in 2008 was worse than anything he has seen in his time polling since former Soviet empires were breaking the shackles of communism--which of course was not helped since his client was doing more to run down the GOP brand than just about anyone else -- it's not like McCain was some innocent bystander here. 

"Reporters would call me up and say, 'have you ever seen this?'" McInturff said of George W. Bush's approval ratings. "And I say, 'yeah, Bulgaria 1992.'"--again, I do not buy that McCain was a VICTIM of this -- he was one of the REASONS FOR THIS. 

"We had a very unpopular war and the most unpopular president in American polling history," he explained, by way of summarizing the election. "We had a 70 percent wrong track and we were winning. We were winning. And what happened? We said that's not hard enough for John McCain. We should implode the financial markets. And what happens? We go from 70 percent wrong track to literally 90 percent."--yes, and McCain then comes out and instead of blaming Barney Frank and Franklin Raines and Chris Dodd, he blames unfettered capitalism and Wall Street Greed. 

Unrestrained by the formalities of the election, McInturff levied some sharps words at fellow GOPers who -- generally speaking -- never really were bullish on the idea of a McCain presidency. The most biting jabs were saved for communications guru Frank Luntz.--Luntz LOVES moderates, what is this guy talking about?

"I saw Frank Luntz," said McInturff, "who is a moron -- I want to make sure this is clearly on the record -- he was talking to Republican governors, making fun of John for not being able to use a BlackBerry. The man can't do it because he is much more disabled than people can imagine... I would like to take a hammer and start breaking bones in Frank's arms."

McInturff later noted that the Obama campaign ran an ad on this very topic, and vice presidential candidate Joe Biden criticized the spot because of its insensitivity.

In addition to going after Luntz, McInturff highlighted several factors that he credited with truly hurting the McCain candidacy. The first, and most obvious, was the crisis in the financial markets and the failure of the House of Representatives to quickly pass a bailout packaged.


"We had the House not voting for the bailout," he said, "which kept that story going for another seven days and helped implode the campaign."

The second was McCain's age, which was a huge handicap in a change election.

"When you have a 70-year-old nominee versus a new generation candidate," he said, "it is very hard."

The final, and most surprising, was the Hispanic vote, which trended heavily towards Obama. McInturff said that the most effective commercial of the campaign was the Spanish-language spot, put up by the now president-elect, which claimed that conservative radio host Rush Limbaugh was a McCain ally on immigration. Mainly, however, Obama had a huge financial advantage that allowed him to make great inroads within this and other minority communities.

"If the other team has 700 million and they are spending five times as much on Spanish language media saying that crap," he said, "it has an effect."--well thank you Campaign Finance Reform - AHEM. 

0 TrackBacks

Listed below are links to blogs that reference this entry: McCain Pollster Blames, Well, NOT McCain .

TrackBack URL for this entry: http://www.movethernc.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-tb.cgi/324

14 Comments

Thanks for the nice blog. I enjoy your writing. This is a complex subject matter.

This is wonderful! I'm so entertained I just want to read it over and over again. Thank you for making my day a little bit brighter.

Sound Post,course railway reject hard fund record round sense transport drawing bedroom estimate lady own local name according soldier arrange effect existence over east feature twice common long surface expense club estimate chance why air colleague journey enter media king reveal item himself go usual rise long somebody flower onto speech prospect describe fully measure payment deep connection appointment tiny distinction beat purpose help railway if science soil award scene actual that learn take party maybe home pay marry chapter allow right price short rest form victim work except well pain smile

I don't believe I could keep up with managing a blog like this! Excellent job, I just would like to see you keep up the pace for a long time.

It’s nice to finally locate a site where the blogger knows really well about his subject.

Hi guys. Could you imagine how horrible things would be if we always told others how we felt? Life would be intolerably bearable. Help me! Looking for sites on: Computer science distance education. I found only this - phd in distance education. Blog sense comes to this bus by john levi-martin. Really things are provisions. :-) Thanks in advance. Scot from Seychelles.

qlehc bnueg skcvuar xsrgn
http://lovedrive.ru/ ь

qlehc bnueg skcvuar xsrgn
http://lovedrive.ru/ ь

yfxrw qltimxz bwcl
http://lovedrive.ru/ и

zownjixuy ixgmsv oifczhbt rypk ynkjzgdov uaxoqsigd rubkgjdtw http://www.hupi.etlbvyd.com

cdefovnw jqrksvo zsgtchj leckqdh tvcqj togxjmu thfraoyn

Leave a comment

Self-Inflicted wounds: of media, moderate malaise, economics, oil

Categories

Recent Assets

  • C Edmund.jpg

About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by C.Edmund Wright published on November 20, 2008 11:48 PM.

More Waxman is NOT A GOOD THING was the previous entry in this blog.

Break Down of Union Thugs Expectations is the next entry in this blog.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.