McCain Working Behind The Scenes To Reshape GOP In His (Losing) Moderate Image

October 2nd, 2009 (28) Posted By Erik Wong.

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Politico:

Fresh from a humbling loss in last year’s presidential election, Sen. John McCain is working behind-the-scenes to reshape the Republican Party in his own center-right image.

McCain is recruiting candidates, raising money for them and hitting the campaign trail on their behalf. He’s taken sides in competitive House, Senate and gubernatorial primaries and introduced his preferred candidates to his top donors.

When the death of Sen. Ted Kennedy created a vacant Senate seat in Massachusetts, McCain went so far as to solicit former Boston Red Sox pitcher Curt Schilling to run for the seat.

It’s all part of an approach that is at odds with most other recent failed presidential nominees, whose immediate response to defeat was to retreat from the electoral arena. But those familiar with McCain’s thinking say he has expressed serious concern about the direction of the party and is actively seeking out and supporting candidates who can broaden the party’s reach.

In McCain’s case, that means backing conservative pragmatists and moderates.

“I think he’s endorsed people with center-right politics because he has an understanding that the party is in trouble with certain demographics and wants to have a tone that would allow us to grow,” said Sen. Lindsey Graham, the South Carolina Republican who is McCain’s closest friend and ally in the Senate.

“At a time when our party is struggling and has a lot of shrill voices and aggressive voices, he’s one that can expand our party,” said John Weaver, a longtime McCain friend and strategist.

“John remains the titular head of the Republican Party and he will be until there’s a new nominee,” he said. “Most of the people that ran and lost you never heard from again,” he said. “He’s not going to be like Ed Muskie or Hubert Humphrey.”

For moderate Rep. Mark Kirk of Illinois, the Arizona senator has been a trusted source of counsel, and a generous benefactor.

Before Kirk announced he would seek the Illinois Senate seat formerly held by President Barack Obama, McCain frequently encouraged him to run.

“The key quote was, ‘Service in the House in the minority is worth a warm bucket of…’” Kirk told POLITICO, smiling as he recalled his conversations with McCain about a prospective Senate campaign.

“I actually love service in the House, whether it’s in the minority or not,” Kirk said. “So I disagreed with him on that. But his strong encouragement and backing—and he’s a personal hero of mine—did have an impact on my thinking.”

Yet McCain has offered much more than just inspiration. He has endorsed Kirk in the GOP primary, released his entire donor list to him and made Kirk the beneficiary of a $500,000 McCain-sponsored fundraiser earlier this year. And Kirk now counts Steve Schmidt, one of McCain’s top staffers on the 2008 campaign, as an informal advisor.

“[McCain] has told us that, with regard to my campaign for the Senate, what you need from us you will get,” said Kirk.

McCain, it turns out, has emerged as a political godfather of sorts to a number of other candidates aside from Kirk, providing them with unfiltered access to a national fundraising network he has cultivated over a span of two decades.

In mid-September, McCain invited his favored candidates to the St. Regis Hotel in midtown Manhattan to rub shoulders with 40 of the senator’s top donors at a reception for the Arizona Republican.

Last week, McCain formally endorsed GOP Rep. Jerry Moran in the Kansas Senate primary campaign against his more outspoken conservative opponent, Rep. Todd Tiahrt, and hosted a Capitol Hill fundraiser for Moran.

“He…tells me that he has been very circumspect in what races to get involved in. From my vantage point, it’s not a broad scale ‘I’m for everybody,’” said Moran. “It’s ‘I’m picking candidates that I feel very comfortable with,’ candidates that I think share some of his beliefs and philosophies of governing, and the largest part of that, I think, was fiscal responsibility.”

McCain’s increasingly active role—and his attempts to advance candidates cut from his own ideological mold—isn’t necessarily welcomed in all corners of the party.

“John McCain is a moderate. Birds of a feather fly together,” said Family Research Council President Tony Perkins. “It’s not surprising.”

Erick Erickson, founder of the influential conservative blog, RedState, was even sharper in his criticism of McCain’s initiative.

“I’m sure John McCain has a lot of political favors he wants to return in 2010, but I don’t trust his views of who a winning candidate is anymore than I trust his ability to pick a winning campaign staff,” he said. “McCain has never really been a conservative, so I wouldn’t be surprised if he’s picking non-conservative candidates.”

McCain told POLITICO in a brief interview that he was determined to play a major role in the GOP’s rebuilding effort—beginning with the party’s 2010 campaign.

“I think it’s important, at this stage in my career, to try to support candidates that I think represent the next generation of leadership in the Republican Party,” the 73-year-old McCain said on his way to the Senate floor for a vote last week.

Loyalty also factors into the equation.

His campaigning for former eBay CEO Meg Whitman, a moderate facing a contested California primary, comes after she served as his presidential campaign co-chair. McCain has also helped Florida Gov. Charlie Crist, who provided a key endorsement on the eve of his state’s presidential primary.

Another McCain endorsee, Vaughn Ward, is a former Marine who ran McCain’s Nevada campaign. Ward, who is now running for the House in Idaho, said he plans to have McCain come out to campaign with him and raise money for his bid.

California Assemblyman Van Tran, a Vietnamese American who is challenging Democratic Rep. Loretta Sanchez in Orange County, said McCain doesn’t forget his friends.

After endorsing the senator in 2008 against the urging of a local party establishment that preferred Mitt Romney, Tran said McCain was ready to return the favor when Tran visited him in his Senate office earlier this year.

The first words out his mouth, Tran said, were “How can I help?

“It’s a matter of personal loyalty and friendship,” said Tran. “This is basic reciprocity for the support and friendship I had given him.”

Those close to McCain say that, as much as anything else, his burgeoning political role reflects a determination he reached shortly after the conclusion of the presidential contest—that he would remain a factor on Capitol Hill.

“This is John’s way of staying in the game,” said Graham. “I guess he could have taken the ball home and said, ‘Well, I’ve had my shot.’”

“McCain spent about one day thinking about the presidential race and then was thinking about the Senate,” said Charlie Black, who was McCain’s senior advisor on the campaign. “Nobody should be surprised that McCain is as engaged in politics as he’s ever been—presidential race or no presidential race.”

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  • killczar

    take your mugwumpery style of govt. and shove it.

  • John

    This is exactly why the Repubs are dead. Yes their are true conservatives in the party, but they are the exception. The promotion of Michael Steele to chairmanship confirms that they have no intention of setting themselves apart from the dems. Its Democrat or Democrat Lite!

  • YERMOM

    fuck off mccain

  • mike3481

    Arizonans could and should declare Sen. McCain a “Lame Duck” because he’s nothing more than “Obama Lite”.

    This might force McCain to disprove that he’s not “Obama Lite” which of course he can’t, cos he is “Obama Lite”.

    Mac’s up for reelection in 2010. He must lose that election to send a message to the rest of the jelly spined GOP.

  • Sgsaur

    3rd Party, anyone?

    • John
    • cold soldier

      As much as I agree with your line of thinking, all that will do is put that jackass back in office.

  • copperpeony

    Time to invest in “Depends” McCain. I voted for you but you were a disappointment and please be quiet now.
    Also please shut your daughter (the lib) up too.

    We need fresh, aggressive blood not a patriot who bobbles between the left and the right.

  • Ace

    Time for this phony war hero to be put out to pasture.

  • Badger

    If he can bring real conservatives’ that don’t necessarily like his politics that much to the table of what is shaping up to be a true conservative party I’m down with that but if he continues his bambi bambi shtick then he’s punted. He won’t be any major player in the front two rows of this party as we’re still gagging at his half assed and feeble candidacy. That nasty taste is still in people’s mouths and will be for quite sometime. Nope the people I believe will want a hard right somewhat beginning 2010 and we can’t screw the pooch.

  • Chuck O

    Another clueless RINO. Just doesn’t get it.

    • Badger

      Does this word “another” apply to my post? Are you calling me a RINO?

      Thanks in advance……

      Badger

  • http://none WWTD

    He’s the head of nothing. Go away…don’t fuck it up again. At this point moderates don’t even want your moderation. Arizona…help us out here.

  • More than Duty

    MCCain = Stooge. At point blank we just let these morons run are lives into the ground sense Korea, now our generation has to step up and save this country from the very fools that curse’s us Ipod wearing morons. We’ve been paying attention and they don’t like it, theve sent out their Republican Gaurd Bath Party (FBI) Army investigating all those who oppose the Liberal and Liberal Lite Elitist Tryants.

  • Mike F.

    Drizzle, drazzlel, druzzle, drome, time for this one to go home! Please Mr. Wizard, take McCain and Lindsay Graham away!

  • Sully

    Yeah let’s get behind a ‘REAL’ conservative that’s actively trying to make sure something other than Socialist jihadi-lovers get *financed* and elected in 2010.
    Let’s get behind……

    Er…. is Ross Perot still alive? Maybe that ‘third party’ idea can work better in this century.

  • http://www.accdf.com aboutTObegin

    FUC*in RINO!

    -aTb :mad:

  • Phil Byler

    RELAX, everyone, consider the source. It is Politico, a liberal leaning, Democrat supporting outfit. The Politico article’s conclusion about John McCain seeking to remake the GOP is based on McCain supporting certain candidates who supported McCain in the past and who incidentally on their merits deserve support. Look again at those candidates, who include: Vaughn Ward, a Marine who ran McCain’s Nevada campaign, for a U.S. House seat from Nevada; Meg Whitman, the best GOP candidate out there for the California Governorship; and Van Tran, a Vietnamese-American challenging Democrat Loretta Sanchez for the U.S. House seat from Orange County, California. Such support, however, does not mean McCain is out to remake the GOP as a more moderate party. That is just wishing by Politico, which again I note is a liberal leaning, Democrat supporting outfit.

    My suggestion for everyone to relax does include Rush Limbaugh, who talked about this on his radio show Friday. Instead of needlessly and insensibly fussing about the Politico article, Rush might have noted McCain’s conservative voting record this year and say how Republicans need to be pulling together behind a conservative platform that even McCain is following in: voting AGAINST every Obama bailout bill; voting AGAINST every Obama deficit spending bill; voting AGAINST the confirmations of tax cheat Geithner, radical pro-abortion advocate Sebellius, leftist Kagan and transnational legal theorist Koh to their respective positions in the Obama Administration; voting AGAINST the confirmation of Sotomayer to the U.S. Supreme Court; and in announcing he will be voting AGAINST Obama’s cap and trade bill and ObamaCare. If more Republicans are elected and vote like that, then we will be fine.

  • Bobby E

    McCain is FOR renewing the Fairness Doctrine and amnesty for all illegals in this country and that’s all I have to say about this guy any more, except that there appears to be more McCain dissenters than just me.

    • Phil Byler

      Bobby E, I will not hesitate to join you in criticizing McCain for good reason, but what you cite is incorrect.

      No, McCain is NOT for renewing the Fairness Doctrine. Right now, the Fairness Doctrine is not in effect, so it could not be a matter of renewing it anyway. President Reagan’s position was that the Fairness Doctrine was unconstitutional, and that is why it was suspended adminstratively back in 1987. McCain has not departed from Reagan’s position on the Fairness Doctrine, and at this point, not even the Democrats say they intend to bring the Fairness Doctrine back. (Differently, the threat from an Obama Adminsistration Czar is to impose localism rules to support “minority business” that would have the effect of cutting into what is market xsupported conservative radio.)

      No, McCain is NOT for amnesty. The criticism of the 2007 immigration bill, which was what President Bush wanted to help get Hispanic votes for the GOP, was that it would de facto result in amnesty. But the bill’s supporters denied that was the case because of the law enforcement provisions. The problem was the historical experience of the last major immigration reform law, which was enacted during the Reagan Administration and signed by President Reagan; the law enforcement provisions of that Reagan era law were not enforced, and that is what created the current problem. So when the 2007 immigration bill faced the firestorm of opposition, McCain and other stepped back, and McCain went to the position of law enforcement coming first, citing the Reagan era law experience and accepting the political reality that without law enforcement, no other steps in immigration were acceptable and would result in the amnesty that he ostensibly opposed. All of this, however, is a world apart from where Obama and many Democrats are: they support outright amnesty.

    • killczar

      the deal is to shut the borders down now. mccookoo is not for that. and anyone that would have juan letthemallinnez on your presidential advisory team is a fucking lunatic.

    • Bobby E

      In other words, Phil, what you’re saying is that there is no good reason to criticize McCain at all. This I am already familiar with regarding your support of McCain. Sheeesh! I’ll tell you what I’ll do … any posts regarding McCain I won’t address here in this forum as long as you start taking issue with others here, individually, regarding McCain. As I just stated in the previous post, I am NOT the only McCain dissenter here. Sheeesh!

    • Phil Byler

      No, Bobby E, I am not saying that there is nothing to be critical of McCain about. I have been critical of McCain at times. But I have responded at times to you because: (i) the specific criticism you made is not merited by the facts; (ii) McCain is being a valuable conservative this year in opposition to Obama and the Democrats; and (iii) we need to direct the fire at Obama and the Democrats.

      What I am saying about this one is that what Politico is writing is off base, that McCain is simply supporting good GOP candidates and that McCain is simply doing what he did in 2004 in campaigning hard for Bush for President and in 2006 with Bush in campaigning hard for GOP congressional candidates — being a Republican supporting other Republican.

      The Democrats are wise to what is a weakness on Rush’s part. The Politico article was a Democrat plant to get Rush ticked off. Politico is spinning McCain’s support of some Republican candidates into something that the people at Politico knew would get Rush ticked off — hence the quick call to Rush to get his comment — knowing the time that Rush spent in attacking McCain is taken away from attacking Obama, the Democrats and the major media and couuld cause discord among Republicans at a time when McCain is voting reliably conservative, is seeking to keep unity in the Republican Party for future races and is well regarded by many Americans as a patriot war hero. I am interested in seeing a ceasefire among Republicans so that we concentrate on attacking Obama, the Democrats and the major media.

    • Phil Byler

      killczar, what John McCain and President Bush have been concerned about is getting Hispanics to vote Republican. A fair number of Hispanics did in 2004, but far less did in 2008 in apparent reaction to the opposition to the 2007 immigration bill supported by Bush and McCain.

      So, instead of McCain as President who believes in law enforcement, you have Obama, who is in favor of outright amnesty, letting in as many illegals in the ocuntry as possible and getting as many illegals legalized as possible to swell the number of Democrats.

    • Sully

      ‘Dissent’ all you like. Just don’t post lies or other shit worse than any KosKid ever thought of and think you won’t get called on it.
      I don’t agree with everything McCain just like I didn’t agree with everything Reagan, who amnestitized illegals and kept the Princeton Progressive POS Volcker on as Fed chief.
      ANYWAY… if there’s any chance of turning conservative values back into a GOVERNING movement, rather than something folks just blog about, it has to include (preferrably convert) so-called moderates.
      Unless you shoot them, of course.

  • Tom in CO

    gtfo mccain

  • puck30

    I went to a McCain rally last year. And also went to a Palin rally.
    Palin wasn’t the weakest link last year.

    • Phil Byler

      Neither McCain nor Palin were weak.