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The EconomistNew mandate, new maverickRepublican voters are looking for “true conservatives”, not RINOs (Republicans in Name Only). And, strange as it seems less than two years after he was their presidential candidate,
Mr McCain is now viewed by many as the quintessential RINO. He once collaborated with the Democrats on immigration reform—a double sin to those who believe in total war against the “socialists” and no amnesty for illegal immigrants. He took global warming seriously, and promoted cap-and-trade legislation: two more stains on his character. He called himself a “maverick”; but to today’s grumpy conservative base that looks less like a badge of honour than a licence to cut deals in Washington and ignore the voters back home.
The most recent polls give Mr McCain a lead of 20 points over his main opponent, J.D. Hayworth. It has, in fact, been clear for weeks that Mr McCain has crushed his rivals and is cruising towards re-election. Where did it go wrong for the tragedians, and for Mr Hayworth? The challenger’s claim to be a “consistent conservative” who would scythe down big government was shattered when the McCain team unearthed a three-year-old infomercial in which this self-proclaimed champion of fiscal rectitude and standing on your own feet flogged advice on how people could extract free money from Uncle Sam.
The former maverick has rebranded himself as a “partisan” who toes the party line: he has gone quiet on climate change and flip-flopped on gays in the military. Arizona is in a
panic—some of it justified, most stirred up by election-seeking politicians—about illegal immigration from Mexico. Mr McCain is not one of the main stirrers, but nor has he sought to calm the nativist passions. The slogan of the erstwhile immigration reformer is: “Secure the border first”. Mr McCain stands with Arizona in its confrontation with the federal government over SB1070, a controversial state law plainly hostile in spirit to the more tolerant values that he was once proud to champion and which earned him admirers from the liberal end of politics.
The fascinating question is not why Mr McCain has run the campaign he has: the answer is all too obvious. But might a new mandate bring back the old maverick? A centrist willing to cross party lines can be a star in a finely balanced Senate, and just think how liberating another six-year term could be to a man of 73. The fascinating question is whether winning in Arizona will erase his bitterness at losing to Barack Obama. “I’m reminded of that every day,” he blurted out at a White House meeting in February. Master that emotion and he can still be one of the great men on the stage. Submit to it and it will turn into his fatal flaw.
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http://www.economist.com/node/16791768?story_id=16791768&fsrc=rss