Post em here.I'm thinking his mishandling of the financial crisis and the decision to pick Sarah Palin as his running mate are pretty high up there...
1/26/2009 9:43:46 AM
1/26/2009 9:44:50 AM
[NEW]?
Don't forget about
1/26/2009 9:47:38 AM
I think being John McCain was #1 (I honestly can't believe I'm saying this, I thought he would be the perfect candidate... shows how much I know and don't remember about basic party politics)Picking Sarah Palin was a strong #2
1/26/2009 9:52:40 AM
"The fundamentals of the economy are strong"
1/26/2009 10:59:33 AM
-Sarah Palin-selling out and trying to appease the Bush-wing of the party. He cast aside half of the positions and qualities that got him to where he was.I mean, he lost my vote. How badly do you have to screw up to lose a general election vote of someone who voted for you in the primary, after waiting for 4 years for his chance to cast it?
1/26/2009 11:03:40 AM
Sarah Palin was the moment when I switched my vote. I stomached a lot of the backpedaling he did for the party base, but the moment he picked that backwater governor is the moment that I just couldn't take it any longer.
1/26/2009 11:16:31 AM
Sounds pretty much the same as me, except that I didn't switch my vote, other than writing in "No confidence."
1/26/2009 11:20:34 AM
It doesn't really matter, at all, at this point.
1/26/2009 11:30:50 AM
1/26/2009 11:34:39 AM
^^ Sure it does. Not for McCain, but hopefully for the GOP.^ yep.
1/26/2009 11:37:00 AM
1/26/2009 11:39:08 AM
^^ Between Bill O'Reilly saying he thinks we should compromise our values, and Limbaugh saying he wishes failure on Obama, I don't think the GOP is learning any lessons.And I can't think of a single other GOP figure that comes close to being 2000-era McCain that could rally the party together.
1/26/2009 11:43:52 AM
1/26/2009 11:54:21 AM
He's not old enough to be president yet.And I don't know what his IQ is, but supposedly McCain's was ~130s when he was in the military.
1/26/2009 11:58:06 AM
1/26/2009 12:02:23 PM
1/26/2009 12:58:30 PM
1/26/2009 12:59:11 PM
Running
1/26/2009 1:21:00 PM
Im going to play devils advocate here and say that maybe picking Palin, and moving more to the right gained him more votes than he lost from moderates.....seeing as how the base was not thrilled with McCain as the pick anyways
1/26/2009 1:22:54 PM
the base was going to vote for him or stay home. it was the center that he needed to woo. and he didn't do it.anyway, i say his biggest blunders were:1) palin2) "fundamentals of the economy are strong"3) green screen speech on the night when clinton conceded
1/26/2009 1:25:36 PM
^^I severely doubt that. My Mom has been a registered Republican since 1972 and she voted Democrat for the first time, and she is far from the lunatic fringe. I know that is purely anecdotal, but I have heard plenty of stories just like it. The Falwell crowd was never going to vote for anyone besides McCain.The "suspending the campaign to go back to Washington and unite the country" ploy was also another laughable stunt.[Edited on January 26, 2009 at 1:28 PM. Reason : .]
1/26/2009 1:26:04 PM
1/26/2009 1:29:16 PM
McCain's biggest blunder was being white.
1/26/2009 1:35:03 PM
1/26/2009 2:05:42 PM
1/26/2009 5:04:09 PM
McCain was1. OLD2. OLD3. OLDDid I mention he was OLD.Also, not that issues matter when obamamaniancs get to vote,1. wrong on McCain Feingold2. wrong on cap and trade3. completely unwilling to attack Obama as he ought. 4. why should I vote for McCain when he is Obama's biggest fan anyway? Even McCain made a better case for Obama then McCain, just listen to him gush at that formal dinner a few weeks before the election5. wrong on his "gang of 7" or however many it was, that action alone showed clearly he was not a true social conservative. His conservatism was one of convenience at best.6. Even W gives more exciting speeches7. unable to criticize democrats, but somehow able to criticize his supporters when they would dare say what he himself should be saying.I only hope that the republican party can see how miserably the moderate candidate does. Who could be more moderate than McCain and still he failed to obtain the moderate vote.
1/26/2009 9:50:53 PM
I would have voted McCain over Kerry...and I'm a so called "liberal"(the 2004 McCain, not the 2008 sellout)[Edited on January 26, 2009 at 10:08 PM. Reason : because there's a huge difference]
1/26/2009 10:07:41 PM
1/26/2009 11:32:49 PM
1/26/2009 11:36:47 PM
1/26/2009 11:55:41 PM
McCain's biggest problem is he couldn't decide what kind of Republican he was supposed to be in the race. Regardless of if y'all think a moderate/fiscal conservative or a neo-con/evangelical type is the best GOP type to run, McCain flip flopped from being one or the other, and didn't seem to do a good job of nailing down either faction. Alot of moderates/conservative Dems were indeed turned off of McCain as the race went on, but its a sure bet that most of the neo-con/religious right types thought this man was "lesser of two evils" at best (my favorite bumper sticker being "PALIN - whats his name '08"). Seems like he won the primary only because Romney and Huckabee, the best representatives of the GOP factions, respectively , simply tore one another apart, and allowed McCain to win. As a Democrat, I was most worried about Romney, the traditional "big business" Republican candidate. One last thing, most Democrats hope the GOP runs Sarah Palin in 2012, would be nice to pull a 1984 electoral smackdown revenge.
1/27/2009 1:35:43 AM
1/27/2009 1:51:16 AM
1/27/2009 2:58:59 AM
1/27/2009 8:59:32 AM
^ yeah, I don't like Huckabee politically (too socially conservative, and definitely too populist), but at least he's a personally likeable guy, and he's fairly intelligent. mathman:
1/27/2009 10:20:22 AM
1/27/2009 11:07:54 AM