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In 2000 he could say what he believed. He was running as his own candidate. Now, he's had to ally himself to a group he fundamentally disagrees with, and he's too decent a person to enjoy lying about what he believes. Sadly, he's not decent enough to avoid lying.
Remember in 03 when he seemed against the Iraq war, and even in 04 he was ambiguous? He was considered for Kerry's VP slot. After that, he decided his fortunes lay with BushCo, and he became a staunch ally of Bush and a promoter of the war. He never seemed to truly believe what he was saying, but Bush used him to create the illusion of unity, and McCain swallowed his pride, honor, and morality for a weak chance to succeed W in the White House.
Keep the math in mind. A third of voters love Bush, and McCain expected to have them in his fold. One third he has no shot at--they will vote Dem no matter what. There's a third of voters in play, and McCain expected to win them with charm, pannash, experience, and the usual attacks on liberals. Suddenly, the Republican message is hated by those swing voters, and at the same time Bob Barr is threatening to strip away a tenth to maybe even a fifth of his base if he strays from the conservative message. So the BushCo message he had expected to win is unpopular with the voters he has to win over, and if he strays from that message he loses voters on the right to the upstart. This was the same dilemma Gore faced, in the opposite direction, in 2000, when Nader forced Gore to campaign more towards the middle to make up the votes he lost on the fringe.
So right now he has no message. He is trying to stay undefined long enough to let Obama define himself, and to get an idea of what voters are breaking what way, and how serious the Barr voters are going to be. In 2000, he said what he believed. Now, he can't, and he may not even know what he believes.
He has speech writers, so even if his mind blanked, he would have a clear message. The fact that his message is vague is because he doesn't know what message he wants yet.
Don't get too excited yet, though. Bush Daddy had the exact same dilemma in 88. He despised Reagan, but had allied with him. He was a moderate, and in the early primaries seemed unsure of how to campaign, and he fell way back in the polls. At the convention, however, he committed entirely to Reagan's message ("No new taxes!") even though he disagreed with it, and campaigned with no hesitation after that, and he won. Different times, of course. Reagan was more popular than Bush, so Reagan's message was more likely to be a winner. But the point is, McCain may define himself at the convention, position himself perfectly, and get a huge boost in the polls. By remaining ambiguous now, in the neutral zone between primary and convention, he keeps his options open.
That's my take, anyway. He's still a dangerous opponent, if he finds himself.
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