Not necessarily. McCain has some skeletal pastors in his closet too as a result of chasing the evangelical vote. He can try to play that card, and he may well, but I think he can't blare it from the heavens. Wright is in some ways old news and voters are focused on what is going to happen to them. They're looking for a leader with a plan right now and trying to chip at Obama's support won't help him too much.Guardsman Bass wrote:Which probably means his campaign leadership is hoping that a conservative 527 will pick it up and run with it.The Rev. Jeremiah A. Wright Jr. appears to be off limits after McCain condemned the North Carolina Republican Party in April for an ad that linked Obama to his former pastor, saying, "Unfortunately, all I can do is, in as visible a way as possible, disassociate myself from that kind of campaigning."
As RedImperator has said, McCain pretty much has to run negatively but he can't do as Bush did because the voters are more focused on the issues and he's got a much tougher and savvier opponent.
I wouldn't necessarily consider that last so damning to be honest. I think it's more a monument to human duplicity in that people were voting Republican and lying about it. They knew they were going to play a very big part in deciding the course of the nation for the next four years. And they didn't want to admit they put a known idiot at the wheel.RedImperator wrote:The vote fraud accusations in Ohio have three key pieces of evidence:
1) Some high-profile glitches in Diebold voting machines which always managed to award votes to Republicans.
2) A promise by Diebold CEO and top Republican fundraiser Walden O'Dell to deliver Ohio for Bush.
3) The discrepancy between the exit polls and the final tally in Ohio.
The third one, in my mind, is by far the most damning. I don't know if there ever was a serious investigation; certainly there wasn't right after the election, when the Republican Party controlled the Ohio state government.
Of course, there should have been a thorough investigation but the allegations remain simply allegations.