Glocksman wrote:I forgot to add that the primaries were a perfect example of this, as the conservatives were unable to unite behind a single candidate, thus leaving the opening for McCain, who while attracting the neocon Iraq vote, didn't have significant drawing power for the Jesus freaks, the libertarian wing, traditional paleocons, and so on.
I disagree. Granted, Huckabee took enough away from Romney that he couldn't win, however at the point he withdrew he was way ahead of Huckabee. Sure they didn't UNITE behind Romney or Huckabee but neither were they equal. Romney was quite ahead of Huckabee when he decided to call it quits.
What McCain did from was support from independents, crossover voters, the 'moderate' wing, and the business wing.
Indeed, the other wings of the GOP that aren't the bible thumpers. Many people like to think the GOP was the bible thumpers, they are wrong. For two decades the 'silent majority' held their nose and voted for the bible thumpers since they held
However, McCain damn well knows that he needs the Jesus freaks if for no other reason that they provide the GOP with the same 'boots on the ground' canvassing volunteers that Unions do for the Democrats.
I dont think so, but sure.
That's why he's pandering to the religious wing right now.
Sure he's pandering to them because they do indeed have a network and they do indeed represent a voting block. I just disagree that he actually needs them.