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Threats Against the President Are Intolerable

A poll by a Facebook user where one of the options is threatening to our President? Really? Thankfully, Facebook managers removed the offensive poll.

Whether these kinds of threats are being made by sincere conservatives/libertarians/dissenters, or whether they are being made by Leftists trying to make those other people look bad, threats against the President as a person are inexcusable. Threaten his political career, say that his legacy will be a negative one - that's one thing. But we are a nation of laws, and we have lawful means of opposing a President's proposals without violence. We have lawful means of removing a President from office - elections, or impeachment/conviction if a President has committed serious crime.

Let us neither sink to the level of threats against the person nor shy away from our duty to stand up for the Constitution and the liberty it was designed to protect. That's true patriotism.

Tags: POTUS   winning  
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I Support the President of the U.S.A.

I support the President of the United States of America. Currently, the person in that office is Obama. I generally believe in the smooth transition of power as provided for in our Constitution.

As I am not an employee of the federal government, I do not serve the President. As a citizen, he serves me. As I am not a federal employee, I do not need to obey the President, except where he is enforcing the law.

When the President is protecting us from foreign enemies, when he is prosecuting criminals, when he is doing what the Constitution tells him to do, I support him - except when he is signing legislation I believe to be harmful to the union or my rights, and when he vetoes legislation I support.

I believe in supporting candidates, including Presidential, who will have the guts to defend our nation, and the restraint to work for limited government. I will do that with my votes, my time, my money, and my efforts. I will use the ballot to remove a President from office - I condemn any effort to do it with violence or coercion or deception. We are a nation of laws.
Tags: obama   POTUS  
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Senator Ted Kennedy

Is there much doubt that Ted Kennedy would have been elected President at some point (1976, or 1992) had it not been for his role in the death of Mary Jo Kopechne? This fantasy that some people, especially the news media, have about "Camelot", the good feelings many people had about the JFK Presidency, and sympathy over the evil assassinations of JFK and RFK would have propelled him into the office.

Of course, that would have taken him out of the Senate, and after a term or two as President, then what?

The best thing we can do to honor his memory is to stay sober.


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The Bush Legacy

It is impossible to write a definitive judgment on the legacy of President George W. Bush at this time, although there have been many evaluations and retrospectives in the last several months.

Left-leaning folks, especially those who have had Bush Derangement Syndrome from the moment the first chad dangled, will try to blame him as much as possible while denying him as much credit as they can, and some Republicans will defend Bush's every move, even if they would have pitched a fit if it had been done by a Democrat.

We should be vigilant against those who would try to write him into history as the worst President ever.  They will try to do so for political expediency, since he is the most recent Republican to serve in that office, and the only President besides Obama that most newer voters will remember with any understanding.

We should also be careful not to let Bush's decisions or tolerations that were decidedly expansive of government be portrayed as proof that limiting government doesn't work.


Those who champion limited government knew that Bush was not a solid conservative way back in the 2000 race.  But enough Republicans felt he had the best chance of regaining the Presidency that we as a party opted for a flawed candidate who could win as opposed to a more ideologically pure candidate who would lose.

Evaluating a President is difficult to do when there are many things we don't know. 
There is information that will remain classified for decades to come.  We don’t know how many threats have been neutralized, or what private negotiations, promises, or requests have been made between a President and foreign forces.  We don't know the rulings that some of Bush's judicial appointments will make.

Comparing one President to another is difficult when they had different world situations, different Congresses, different court ruling and Constitutional amendments, and different natural disasters with which to contend.

At this time, we can only give a tentative assessment of the Bush Presidency.

And what should be the criteria?  That depends on the duties of the President.  If I broke my leg during Bush's time in office, it is highly unlikely that it was his fault.  Just because something happened while he was President does not mean he should get blame or credit for it.  Something has to be the result of his actions or his inaction (when and where he should have acted) for him to deserve the credit or blame.  Economic growth or recession is always assigned to a President, but a President can do very little, aside from reducing taxes and government interference, to boost the economy.  A President can do much to harm an economy.  Aside from government positions, a President does not create jobs.

What are the duties of the President?

-Serve as Commander-in-Chief.  This includes protecting our national security, directing the military, controlling our nukes, and securing our borders.

-Sign or Veto Legislation.  Could the legislation have been written much better?  Was there a veto-proof voting block in Congress?

-Make Appointments/Nominations.  This is especially important with judicial nominations, including to the Supreme Court of the United States.

-Execute/Enforce Federal Law
.  Did the President aggressively crack down on crime and corruption?

-Issue Executive Orders, Pardons, Commutations.

In addition to these duties, a President can offer moral leadership and use the bully pulpit to encourage some things and discourage others; and be the international face of the union.

As Republicans, conservatives, and advocates of limited government, we would tend to also judge a President on how well he or she contributes to limiting government, advances our principles in the public mind and around the world, and strengthens the Republican party by getting Republican elected and raising funds.  This is a tricky one, however.  One could argue that Democrat Bill Clinton helped to get a conservative majority elected in Congress in 1994, but most of us would not cite Bill Clinton as one of our favorite Presidents.

It is NOT the duty of a President to:
-Ensure you get the education you want at the cost to you that you want.
-Ensure you have a job you enjoy with the compensation you want.
-Ensure you have the kind of house you want at the cost to you that you want.
-Ensure you have the health insurance coverage you want at a cost to you that you want.
-Ensure that everyone else likes you and supports your goals and needs, or that you like you.
-Control the climate of the world.
-Get polar bears to mate.

We are still dealing with mistakes Carter made.  Heck, we're still dealing with mistakes LBJ and FDR made.  Reagan helped to bring down the Iron Curtain.  He also signed an illegal alien amnesty bill that was supposed to solve the problem, but helped to encourage millions more poor, unskilled, and dangerous illegal aliens to flood into our country over the subsequent decades.  Bill Clinton signed the DOMA and welfare reform, but let Islamofascist terrorists be treated merely as criminals instead of what they were – a national security threat.  Bush didn't make that same mistake, but he has expanded the size of government with domestic programs and spending.

I do believe that Bush was committed to protecting this nation.  However, I can't reconcile that with our porous borders.  Maybe there is something we don't know yet.

Bush left office with a low approval rating.  Congress has a much lower approval rating, but I'm not writing about them.  Much of Bush's low approval rating comes from Leftists who would never ever approve of his work.  Some of it is from conservatives and libertarians who wanted to see Bush limit government instead of expanding it, or people who are very upset about the illegal alien situation – these are people who are not likely to be favorable towards a Democrat President, either.  There's probably a small percentage of that overall disapproval percentage that blame Bush for furthering a conspiracy involving Skull & Bones, New World Order, Illuminati, North American Union, Metric System Adoption, and socks that disappear in the wash.

However, there is probably a portion of that disapproval percentage comprised of people originally ambivalent or even slightly favorable towards Bush who simply grew fatigued of his Presidency.  After all, attention spans do seem to be shrinking.  Even the most popular television shows usually see a steady decline in ratings after peaking early in their run.

If someone is forming their opinions on Bush mostly on information from the drive-by media, Hollywood, special interest groups, and state university professors - especially the likes of Michael Moore, Bill Maher, the New York Times, The Obama-infatuated Time magazine, advocates for pre-natal or post-natal infanticide, Christophobes, Big Socialist Labor, and gender confusion advocates – then they probably haven't seriously given consideration to Bush being a sincere public servant with some worthwhile accomplishments.

We won't be able to arrive at a well-informed, low-bias perspective on the Bush Presidency for a long time.  Right now, we don’t know how much worse things could have been, or what lasting good fruit, if any, his Presidency will produce.  There are some things we can discuss – Iraq, Bush's stance of ESCR, his tax cut policies, No Child Left Behind, and any number of other things for which the Left has bashed him.  If we're going to promote limited government and national defense, we'll have to stand up for those principles in these cases.  But by no means can we pass final judgment - favorable or unfavorable - on his Presidency right now.

Don't let the Left write all of the history books.  But concentrate most of your energy on holding our new federal government accountable.  We have a lot of work to do.

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Yes, He Will Be My President

For over eight years, we have heard the whining and hysterics and paranoia and derision from the Left about President Bush.

He stole the election!
He actually believes the religion he professes!
He's going to force women into back-alley abortions and make sure they'd never get equal pay for doing the same amount, quality, and level of work!
He's going to end all medical research!
He's going to destroy education and force all the kids to be indoctrinated with young-earth creationism and abstinence preaching!
He's going to destroy the planet with global warming!
He's not going to force other people to provide me with top-notch health care are no cost to me!
He's giving tax breaks to the rich!
He's taking us to war only to enrich a handful of companies!
He's making hurricanes to kill black people and preventing them from leaving areas facing disasters!
He's not listening to or cooperating with Democrats, or other countries – everything is unilateral!
He's going to cancel elections and turn us into a Christianist Theocratic Dictatorship!
He's letting Cheney and Rove run everything!
He let 9/11 happen when he could have prevented it, or was in on it!
He's listening in to my phone calls, reading my e-mails and chat sessions, and going to stick us all in secret prisons and torture us!


Just about every person he nominated was vehemently opposed as one or more of the following:
1. completely inexperienced
2. just a crony
3. just a political hack
4. out of touch
5. extremist
6. the person who was really going to be in control of the whole Presidency
7. incompetent
8. evil

There was no honeymoon, there was no "wait and see".  This kind of thing was how it was from the start.

Sure, most people rallied behind him immediately after 9/11, but that moment was very brief.  Aside from that moment, it has been a constant barrage.

And now, some Republicans are tempted to respond just a little bit in kind now that there is a Democrat President coming in to office.  One way we see this is with calls to "protest" Obama’s inauguration – not picketing like so many unwashed Leftist freaks – but by deliberately not watching and letting others know that they are going to "protest" or "mourn".

I call on my fellow Republicans, conservatives, and defenders of limited government to be respectful of the inauguration.  Regardless of who is being inaugurated, these events are a testament to one of the blessings our founders secured – a smooth and orderly transition of power.  In some countries, bloody coups are pretty much the norm, or corrupt dynasties that crush all potential rivals and rule for decades.

Thank God we live in the U.S.A.

We are a nation of laws, not men. 
Our nation is a collection of fifty states, each a democratic representative republic.  Collectively, our fifty states elected B. H. Obama as President per Constitutional procedure.  We should respect that, because we value doing things in an orderly, lawful way, an unlike too many of our political opponents, we have respect for the office of President and for our Constitution.  Notice that a President on our side wouldn't take his jacket off in Oval Office, while one their side soiled an intern’s dress with a body fluid that shouldn’t have touched another person other than his wife.

Think of the inauguration as a celebration of our Constitution.


I'm no fan of Obama or Biden.  That's obvious from my blog entries.  But as far as we know, there wasn’t enough voter fraud to call their election into question.  They won by unfairly blaming Bush and linking McCain to Bush, by fostering false hopes and wishful thinking and racism, and through massive voter ignorance – but that is all legal and orderly and Constitutional.

DON’T be like so many of our political opponents, who were constantly disrespectful and tacky and whiny and at times downright bizarre.

DO support our President in what he does right.

DO be vigilant in protecting our rights.

DO stay informed, be active, network, encourage, and persuade others towards limited-government thinking and action.

DON’T cast pearls before swine, wasting your breath with hardcore Leftists who will never change, but instead focus on the young and the undecided and the moderates, who will notice the difference in how we react to Obama and how the Left reacted to Bush.

Yes, Obama will be my President, because that is who our country elected.

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Excerpts From a President Reagan Speech

Will we ever have such an awesome President again?
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Fun Turning the Tables?

If we were to act like the from-the-beginning Bush-bashers did with his appointments, every time Obama names his choice for any position, we - every blog, radio host, columnist, TV host, and talking head - would say...

"How could he do that?  Why, that person...

a) is completely inexperienced!"
b) is just a crony!"
c) is a political hack!"
d) is out of touch!"
e) is an extremist!"
f) will really be the one in control!"
g) is incompetent!"
h) is evil!"

But we rarely employ the same tactics as the other side.
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Already Lowering Expectations For Obama

Terence Hunt of the Associated Press gets started on lowering expectations for the Obama administration with the story, "President-elect Obama Faces Daunting Challenges."
His name etched in history as America's first black president-elect, Barack Obama turned Wednesday from victory's jubilation to the sobering challenge of leading a nation in crisis.
There’s that magic word again.  You know, I was able to buy a house AND get two other new lines of credit opened up in the middle of this "crisis".  Why?  BECAUSE I PAY MY BILLS!  I can pay my bills because I don’t buy stuff I can’t afford.
Young and charismatic but with little experience on the national level or as an executive,
Now you’re just being racist.  At least that is what we were told when we talked like that before the election.
Ending an improbable journey that started for Obama a long 21 months ago, he drew a record-shattering $700 million to his campaign account alone.
And some of it is from legal donations, too!  Say, where are all of those people who were complaining about money buying the elections four and eight years ago?  They’ve been really quiet this time around.  I wonder why?
Naming the staggering list of problems he inherits - two wars and "the worst financial crisis in a century," among them - Obama sought to restrain the soaring expectations of his supporters.
Finally getting to the wars – yeah, things are looking up because we did things the way McCain wanted.  And this is hardly the worst financial crisis in a century.  We’re not even in Carter territory yet.  But notice that the start and end of that sentence is designed to start carefully backing away from the promises made during the campaign.
A tide of international goodwill came Obama's way on Wednesday morning, even as developments made clear how heavy a weight will soon be on his shoulders.
Well, duh.  It is the Presidency.  This isn't voting for who will win on American Idol.
Rep. John Lewis, a Georgia Democrat and leading player in the civil rights movement with Jackson, said on NBC's "Today" show: "He's going to call on us, I believe, to sacrifice. We all must give up something."
Okay.  But I will not have as much money to spend on things that support union employees.
"It is not a mandate for a party or ideology but a mandate for change," said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada.
In that case, how about some real change like libertarianism and federalism?
The son of a Kenyan father and a white mother from Kansas, the 47-year-old Obama has had a startlingly rapid rise, from lawyer and community organizer to state legislator and U.S. senator, now not even four years into his first term.
That’s a really nice way of saying he is an affirmative-action President, and we shouldn’t expect too much from him.  After all, he’s going to be spending a lot of time learning.
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LA Times’ Daily Homosexuality Promotion

I have to stifle a laugh whenever homosexuality advocates accuse us of being fixated on homosexuality, when they are doing everything to keep it constantly in our face.  An example of that is this editorial in today’s Los Angeles Times, which discusses whether an openly homosexual person could be elected President.  So which of the major candidates is an open or closeted homosexual, thus prompting this editorial?  Oh that’s right.  As far as we know – none.  This also illustrates how Leftists pigeonhole people into groups based on which sex turns them on.
Even many Americans sympathetic to gay rights will be startled by a new Zogby International poll indicating that more than 60% of registered voters would support a qualified gay candidate for the presidency.
I am not only sympathetic to the rights of homosexual people, I am a strong supporter of their rights – just like I support rights for heterosexual people.  What I do not support is using the coercive force of government to make others appear to affirm behaviors they find immoral or destructive.  I do not support having to share a restroom with a woman dressed as a man.  I do not support criminalizing preaching from the Bible.

In theory, I could back someone for President who identifies as a homosexual person, although I would still maintain that homosexual behavior is a misapplication of sexuality.  Every President in history has probably, at one time or another, behaved in ways that I wouldn't approve.
Zogby's findings don't come entirely out of the blue. Last year, a Gallup poll asked respondents whether they would vote for a presidential candidate who was gay. Fifty-five percent answered yes (compared with only 45% who would support an atheist candidate).
Homosexuality is a way of behaving with your body.  Atheism is a denial in the existence of God, which can color someone's entire outlook on life.  The aversion I would have to supporting a declared atheist is that if someone does not believe in an omniscient being to whom they are accountable, then that person will figure that they can “get away” with anything they don’t get convicted of in criminal or civil trials.  I don’t want a flawed human being who thinks they are the most powering being in the universe, or at least the world, to actually be handed that power.  I want someone who believes in some form of "cosmic justice" so that they know they'll have to answer for their actions.
Polls about the acceptability of a gay presidential candidate reflect a larger trend in support for gay equality.
Of course homosexual people are equal to any other people.  But sodomy is not equivalent to coitus, nor is the pairing of two people of the same sex the same as the paring of two people with both sexes represented.
In a Field poll conducted shortly after the California Supreme Court's same-sex marriage ruling in May, 51% of registered California voters favored allowing gay and lesbian couples to marry.
This language is misleading.  Very few people, if given the chance, would disrupt a ceremony or remove an adult from another adult’s bedroom if they both consented to being there.  Forcing an unwilling populace to issue neutered marriage licenses is not the same thing as allowing homosexual couples to “marry”.

The editorial board at the Los Angeles Times needs to focus on more important matter than trying to get the rest of us to think sodomy between two men is a wonderful thing.

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Separation of Church and State?

During Warren’s interviews of McCain and Obama, did ANYONE point out the difference between having a federal government program to address the issues raised and private solutions?  Did anyone point out that there are churches - like Saddleback -- that can address social issues as long as the congregants have more money to give the church (lower taxes) and the freedom to act?

If you want to know what the federal government should be doing, read Articles I, II, and III of the Constitution.  Article 2 is what the President should be doing.  Everything else is up to individual states or the people – individuals, families, churches, temples, synagogues, YMCAs, JCCs, businesses, civic organizations, charities – you get the idea.

A President can stand up and hold meetings and give speeches encouraging private action, but not everything has to be an act of Congress or an executive order.  No matter how many laws are passed and no matter how much tax revenue there is, we will still have problems.  We’re going to have problems until Christ returns.  Government is not the only way of handling problems.

I wish someone would have pointed to the audience and said, “You are the employers and the employees, the investors and the customers, the neighbors, friends and family members, the union members, the church members, the jury members, the people who call the cops and file the crime reports, hire the lawyers, and raise the children, and give to charity.  What YOU choose to do can have a tremendous effect.  YOU can stand between evil and the innocent.  YOU can choose to care for others and pressure others to do so.”

If we are going to take separation of church and state seriously, the state should not pretend to be a church.

Related post:
http://walrus.blogtownhall.com/2007/09/06/is_jesus_a_republican.thtml
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McCain’s Story Makes a Better Narrative

People have grown weary of the “First Black President” story, especially because it is now clear that the Annointed Black Leaders (Jesse Jackson, Al Sharpton, etc.) would not cheer an Obama election as a milestone, what with Obama having too much Typical White blood in his background, not having “slave blood”, and his “talking down” to… well, you know.

As Obama continues to introduce any semblance of specifics of what he actually means by “hope and change”, continues to “reposition” his views, and stumbles when speaking off-the-cuff, his story loses more of its luster.

Meanwhile, here’s the “maverick” McCain, whose candidacy was all but dead, who many Republican voters have vowed not to back, who Obama is trying to paint as a continuation of an unpopular Presidency, holding his own in the polls.  Here’s a war hero who endured harsh captivity.  Here’s the guy who was beaten by the current President eight years ago.  He served in the military, he’s served in Senate, and he didn’t give up his ambition after losing eight years ago.  Obama, much younger and with much less experience, can still have his time four, eight, twelve, sixteen years from now.  Why not see what he can do in the Senate?

And so the MSM folks, while they personally favor Obama’s politics over McCain’s, know they can make an exciting narrative with a McCain victory – one they hadn’t considered until very recently.  The Obama narrative has been around for years, and it is getting stale.  So maybe, just maybe, they’ll be less hostile to McCain, or at least will do less fawning over Obama.

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Boiling Down our Choice in November

Who do you want as Commander-in-Chief?
Who do you want nominating judges?
Who do you want wielding the veto pen?
Who do you want giving executive orders?
Who do you want issuing pardons?


Our two realistic choices are Obama or McCain.  There are plenty of people who don’t like McCain for many different reasons.  But as much as we’d want McCain to have a different record and different policies in some areas, Obama is even worse.  I can’t think of a single issue on which Obama is more conservative than McCain.

I know some of you think that sitting on your hands or voting for a third party candidate will send a message to the GOP leadership.  Maybe it will.  But it will also be sure to get Obama elected, and then he will be…

--The Commander-in-Chief… one who thinks that talking and hugging will get genocidal maniacs to change.

--Nominating judges, including Supreme Court justices… ones that will be sure to expand the power of the government at the expense of the individual, the family, and the employer, yet will limit our military and intelligence agencies in their fight against foreign terrorists.

--Vetoing any good conservative legislation and budgeting that makes it to his desk.

This could bring irreversible damage.  Once government limits a freedom, once a new government program is started, it is extremely difficult to make a reversal or a positive change.  Once a terrorist attack occurs, those people are dead and that property is destroyed.

You don’t have to love McCain.  You simply have to recognize his Presidency will not be as bad as an Obama Presidency.  Third parties are not a realistic option.  Our choice is voting for the most conservative, or in this case, the less Leftist.  Build up viable conservative candidates for future elections.  But for 2008, we will choose either Obama or McCain.

Better McCain than Obama.

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Say No To War

...Unless a Democrat is President.  That’s pretty much the standard for the Left.  And yes, I stole that from ProtestWarrior.com.

If, over the next few months, we captured or killed OBL and all of the top terrorist group leaders, democratic stability and peace took definitive hold in Iraq and Afghanistan and spilled over into Iran, and we found out that the threat of our impending military action caused Saddam Hussein to abandon the planned use of WMD against Israel…

I’m almost certain the response from Obama and other Dem leaders would be “We could have achieved the same results from holding summits, without the expense in American lives and dollars via Bush-McCain's failed policies.”
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Get Them On-Record NOW About Obama

What would electing Obama mean?  Now is the time to get activist leaders, commentators, columnists, politicians, professors, and just about any other prominent public figure who touches on politics or culture on record about the following:

1) If Obama becomes President of the United States of America, will he be the first “black”/African-American President?

2) What will that signify for race relations in our country and the plight of African-Americans?

I want people on record.

If they say yes to #1, I don’t want to hear about how Obama is only “half-black” after the election, or during some subsequent campaign with another “first African-American nominee.”

They have a little more wiggle room with #2.  But if anyone is dangling Obama’s skin color out in front of us in a way that implies electing him would be a major milestone for race relations and the plight of African-Americans, I don’t want to see the same people turning around after his election and acting like nothing has changed since the 1960s.


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What Makes Someone a Good VP Candidate?

I’ve blogged before asking who McCain should pick to be VP.  What kind of things are really considered, and should be considered?

I’m thinking out loud here.  If you have something to add or think something I write isn’t realistic or important, please join in and let me know your thoughts and experience.

Constitutionally, the VP is not assigned all that much to do, provided the President serves a full term.  The VP breaks tie votes in the Senate.  Of course, the President can assign tasks to the VP, but the VP has no power to actually change anything, and in theory the VP takes tasks voluntarily and can refuse them.

So practically, the VP is of most important use during the campaign, and subsequently in promoting the Administration's policies. Who a candidate for POTUS chooses as a running mate reveals something about himself or herself.

What makes someone a good choice as a running mate?

1. First and foremost, that person should be able to be President, and it shouldn’t be difficult for the public to buy that.  If the President falls ill or undergoes surgery, dies, leaves or is removed from office, then this person will be called upon to serve as President.  For the sake of succession, it would also be good if that person is young enough and popular enough to be a good candidate for President in eight years.  In 2000, were many people expecting Dick Cheney to run in 2008?  I don’t think so.  Like the candidate for President, this person should have demonstrated the right temperament, judgment, leadership, management, and integrity.  Significant experience and good health would be a plus.

2. Secondly, the running mate should be someone who balances the ticket, meaning that he or she should be able to deliver additional financial support and additional states.  These days, that likely means someone who has displayed some different – but not necessarily conflicting - priorities (including voting record), is from a different part of the country, has served in a different capacity, and has different personal demographics.  This person should have some different strengths, possibly to counteract the weakness of the head of the ticket.  McCain is a Washington insider representing Arizona, but is perceived as a maverick.  He’s an experienced legislator.  He has military experience and foreign policy strengths and has some fiscally conservative policies, but is seen as weak with the socially conservative base of his party.  He’s older, white, and male.  So, perhaps his running mate should be someone seen as an “outsider” with executive experience; someone associated with an area other than the southwest; someone with private sector experience and seen as solidly conservative; someone who is significantly younger – but someone who won’t make McCain look too old when they stand side by side.  (Skin color really matters more to the Democrat base and the MSM.  If we stick with a “white” male ticket, we might attract all of those racist and sexist Democrats – the ones who don’t want to vote for a black man and the ones who are upset that Hillary didn’t get their nomination and don’t want Obama to win.)

3. Something else to consider: Will this person bring energy and momentum to the campaign?  Do they have charisma that will boost McCain instead of overshadowing him?  Are they good at making the case for our side in speeches and debates?

4. If this person is currently in elected office, will they be vacating an “unsafe” seat should they become VP?  It would be best if that isn’t the case.

5. For this election cycle, the running mate should be someone who is not too closely tied to the current Administration.

So who meets these criteria?

Ideally, a ticket should be able to attract support from the different factions of the GOP base, as well as enough “independents” and crossover Democrats.  But keeping the various base factions – the WSJs, the libertarians, the Religious Right, etc. – motivated enough to vote for the ticket in high numbers isn’t always going to happen.

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