| John McCain’s Presidential Address |
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| Written by Ed Morrissey |
| Friday, 05 September 2008 07:55 |
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Yesterday, I wrote that John McCain had to give a substantially different speech than Sarah Palin did in her debut on the national stage. She needed to show that she could fight back against an onslaught of despicable smears and innuendo coming from the media without playing the victim or getting defensive. McCain needed to sound presidential. Palin needed to introduce herself to the nation; McCain needed to remind people who they already know him to be. McCain accomplished this in a speech that took a little while to find its heart. Instead of a partisan attack on Barack Obama, McCain aimed a little higher. He sounded a message of reform that reached out to people across the political spectrum, and he challenged everyone — but specifically Republicans — to reform government and the way they do business in politics. That’s not to say that he didn’t draw distinctions between himself and Obama, but he did so without rancor, a quality he attacked with more vigor than his opponent:
Other than that, McCain didn’t focus on opposition talk at all during his speech. Instead, he focused on his own policies and put forward a positive, detailed vision of a McCain administration, based on one guiding principle: reform. That concept got applied not just to Washington, but also to education, where McCain made a surprising commitment to school choice, one not heard from his campaign for most of this cycle. The new Republican leader did one critical thing in this speech to the national audience, too. He acknowledged the Republican failures during their control of Congress to act as a reform party. McCain used the moment to challenge his party to reclaim the mantle of reform as an act of penance for the past:
This, I think, was absolutely critical to establish credibility. Yesterday, I asked Mitch McConnell about whether the party would accept the challenge of becoming a true reform agent, and he replied that Republicans had always been the party of reform. I understood what he meant, but the answer didn’t acknowledge the GOP lapse when they held power for more than a few years, post-Contract with America. McCain got to the heart of voter skepticism of the Republican brand better than anyone else at this convention, and voters needed that high-level apology for the sins of the past before they could begin to reconsider giving trust again to the GOP. McCain used this to explain his choice of running mate. Leaving the contrast of Barack Obama’s choice of running mate to the viewer, McCain told America that he needed someone outside the system with a proven record of going after corruption at the risk of party and career to help him accomplish his mission. He also needed someone who didn’t have the stench of the previous Republican failure attached to her for America to trust his desire to accomplish real reform. No other potential candidate has that kind of credibility on reform, and Sarah Palin is McCain’s way of showing American voters he means business. Most of this, though, didn’t necessarily make an emotional impact. McCain left that to the end, when he drew another implicit but strong contrast between himself and Obama. He told the story of his POW years, not to claim some special status but to explain how the experience humbled and matured him into abandoning his selfishness. Palin talked about a “servant’s heart,” but McCain gave that an emotional timbre that underscored his desire to serve his country rather than any other interest:
He then gave a stirring call to service that transformed a quiet, workmanlike speech into something more inspiring, and recalled a spirit that had not yet been seen in this campaign:
The final third of this speech made it memorable, and challenged us — all of us, not just Republicans — to do better, be better, and serve something greater than our own desires. McCain exhorted us to never give up, just as he never gave up, not last summer when his campaign collapsed, not after the 2000 campaign, and not after he broke from the torture of his enemies in a POW camp. Keep fighting for what’s right. In a word, McCain was presidential. And that’s what the American people needed to see from its candidate. All in all, I’d call this a very good moment for John McCain. He stuck to his guns, he didn’t make promises he couldn’t keep, and he stayed true to his own vision of America and the policies that come from that vision. While his speech didn’t have the fire and the surprise of Palin’s, it didn’t have to after her triumph on Wednesday. Cross-posted at Hot Air. |




