Browse > Home / American Conservative Union, David Keene, Michael Medved / Chairman of the American Conservative Union

| Subcribe via RSS

Chairman of the American Conservative Union

“The thought of his being president sends a cold chill down my spine.”

That sort of sums it up.

David Keene, Chairman of the American Conservative Union, 01/29/08

Michael Medved keeps citing McCain’s ACU ratings. Well Michael the chairman of the American Conservative Union, along with National Review, and Human Events, has endorsed Mitt Romney over John McCain.

I wonder if Michael Medved will point this out?

Click here or below for the whole article:

Double-talk jeopardy
By David Keene
Posted: 01/29/08 12:01 AM [ET]
Arizona Sen. John McCain’s (R) charge that former Massachusetts Republican Gov. Mitt Romney favors setting a date for a U.S. withdrawal from Iraq tells one a lot more about the “straight-talking” McCain than about Romney.

The Arizona senator had been desperately trying to change the subject in Florida, where voter concern about the economy is seen as giving Romney a leg up in Tuesday’s primary. When Romney called him to account, McCain not only refused to apologize, he suggested instead that “the apology is owed to the young men and women serving this nation in uniform.”

The McCain ploy worked in the short term because the media can always be counted on to glom on to controversy. The coverage of what was being discussed in Florida no longer centered on the question of which candidate might be better able to lead a nation facing hard economic times, but on a debate over whether Mitt Romney had or had not at some point in the past favored a “set timetable for U.S. withdrawal from Iraq.” McCain, in attacking Romney, argued that, “If we surrender and wave a white flag, like Sen. [Hillary Rodham] Clinton [D-N.Y.] wants to do, and withdraw, as Gov. Romney wanted to do, then there will be chaos, genocide, and the cost of American blood and treasure would be dramatically higher.”

That’s about as negative as you can get and would be a damning indictment if in fact Romney had ever said what McCain accused him of saying or doing.

But he hadn’t. McCain and his advisers have been unable to come up with a smoking gun, but point rather weakly to an April 2007 ABC interview that, as Ron Kessler of Newsmax reports, actually “makes it clear that Romney said the opposite of what McCain claimed he said.” No matter. The master of “straight talk” simply continues to assume that everyone will believe whatever he says about just about anything. For example, in the Florida GOP debate he all but denied that he had ever said that he really doesn’t know all that much about economic policy when confronted by questioner Tim Russert with his quote saying just that.

These tactics may work in Florida, where Romney and McCain are locked in an extremely tight race, but McCain may wake up one morning to discover voters have wised up to his sanctimoniousness and realize that all heroes are not Ike.

The McCain resurgence has led to a spate of stories wondering if conservatives will rally to his candidacy if he wins the GOP nomination. McCain himself claims that he has “no problem” with conservatives, but that a few “self-appointed” conservative leaders like this columnist don’t seem to like him because, as McCain adviser John Weaver told a Washington Post reporter recently, they “put their own interests above the national interest.”

Most politicians who identify their interests with the national interest eventually conclude that whatever they have to do to advance those interests is justifiable; that in their case, the end almost always justifies the means. Such politicians can be dangerous and John McCain is just such a politician. In McCain’s world everything is personal: to disagree with him marks one not just as wrong, but as almost definitionally evil.

Politicians often consciously or unconsciously exaggerate or mischaracterize what their opponents have said, but making things up out of whole cloth is different. Lying about what Romney said back in 2007, and accusing him of wanting to wave a “white flag” in the face of our enemies while suggesting that, if nominated and elected, Romney would pursue policies that would result in “chaos and genocide” in Iraq is over the line. Only a politician who believes the future hangs on his own political success could do so with a straight face.

Stories of McCain’s intolerance abound in Washington. He’s attacked his fellow senators personally when they have had the temerity to actually disagree with him. Indeed, one Republican senator told me several years ago that he was confronted by an enraged McCain after voting against a minor amendment in committee and dressed down in “language that would be inappropriate in a barroom, let alone in the Senate.”

It is these qualities that concern many who know McCain best. Mississippi Sen. Thad Cochran (R) is universally liked and admired by his colleagues. He’s known McCain for decades, and while he’s no camera hog, his colleagues listen when he speaks. In endorsing Romney over McCain in what many now view as a two-man race, Cochran said of McCain, “The thought of his being president sends a cold chill down my spine.”

That sort of sums it up.

Share on Facebook

4 Responses to “Chairman of the American Conservative Union”

  1. TPK8 Says:

    Well, when someone like McCain, who wanted to cripple social security and bust the budget by allowing aliens to collect social security, calls himself a fiscal conservative, that’s just crazy. Oh. Wait. Nevermind.


  2. TPK8 Says:

    Edited version.

    Well, when someone like McCain, who wanted to cripple social security and bust the budget by allowing illegal aliens to collect social security, calls himself a fiscal conservative, that’s just crazy. Oh. Wait. Nevermind.


  3. Alex Says:

    Medved has really gone far to the left on this issue. When something like this happens you look for a reason. Perhaps he plans to get a job in a McCain administration.

    I hate to bring this up but when you look to possible motivations I have found this. Medved’s father lives in Israel. John McCain gets strong support from AIPAC.

    Check this picture.

    http://www.aipac.org/about_AIPAC/index_1906.asp

    Now I in general am supportive of Israel. But Israel isn’t America. Israel is a foreign country. And we should never, ever put any foreign country’s interest above our own, and I fear by having tied ourselves so closely to Israel we have. Now again this isn’t an attack on Israel. We should never tie ourselves to ANY country as closely as we have tied ourselves to Israel.

    Now I hate to think it, but could Medved’s support of McCain come from the close relationship AIPAC has with John McCain? I believe it’s something we should at least think about.


  4. Republican dog Says:

    I am so disgusted tonight with the primary results, that I fear for America’s future. Really I do. I make no bones about it as the Republican dog.
    Thank you Chairman of the ACU for setting things right, too bad we cant change the election results..dont you wonder how many illegals voted?, dont you wonder about the alleged voter fraud of some 340,000 people in FL?, and you know McCain had to win Cali to have a substantial lead.., but how did he do it? If deals can be made in West Virginia it cant be a long shot to suspect others deals were had ….CORRUPTION = McCain! and Huckster.
    Corruption: Keating 5 S&L scandal. Read about it.
    Dirty potty mouth McCain……..McNasty’s grin just makes me what to run! and chase my tail………better yet froth at the mouth! grimace.
    Straight Talk Express..my as*, it is the Double Talk Express and thats what a bunch of stuid people want so they voted for McCain????????? Why do we allow stupid people to vote? illegals?
    Why are there diferent rules for the GOP than the dems…? answer that?
    Why arent the primaries staggeredi n the North east to coincide with voters in Cali?
    The whole process is shameful. Unfair. And I would be complaining even if Romney won each and every state! Well, i have my dreams. Snore……..
    So what do I a sophisticated dog have to look forward to…well,more money taken out of my dang paycheck….
    Get ready for no more long term Bush tax cuts.
    Get ready to dish out social security to illegals? darn it.
    Get ready to never see a wall that Bush approved along the border. Thank you McCain, or Obama, or Clinton.
    Get ready to hear more about gang violence on the border- rapes - murder - theft - you name it is there! and its not getting better…check out McCain’s state…its a mess - and he won his state?????????how??? are they stupid? are they dumb? are the deaf? are they blind? who are these voters?
    This whole primary has been to serve the ego of John McCain and his idiot side kick Huckaphoney.
    Mark Levin will give you lots more to chew on if you listen to his brilliant and entertaining and forthright conservative talk show. Check out your listings for a local AM broadcast. He’s a spicey, choice wordster, dogmatic friend of true conservatives and like Sean Hannity clearly in Mitt Romney’s camp - and far removed from McCains. He speaks his mind with candor…and is provocative…and not ashamed to express his profound love for America. I like that.
    So what is the primary all about? …well its revealing what the ACU chairman talks about the character of John McCain, or really the lack thereof…and that’s who could be sitting in the Oval Office. Horrors!!!!!!!!!!!!
    I agree that Medveds comments have been over the top in his support for McCain and his lack of support for Romney…….he’s leaning to the left and has he been bought off? So has the WSJ and Fox news…so little coverage of Romney….I guess they cant stomach supporting the right person…an idol to this dog! Go Mitt! You are the best!


Leave a Reply

Comments will be sent to the moderation queue.


[ Copy this | Start New | Full Size ]