The McCain Thread

Who will be McCain's runningmate?

  • Mitt Romney (former Governor of Massachussets)

  • Mike Huckabee (former Governor of Arkansas)

  • Rudy Giuliani (former mayor New York)

  • Charlie Christ (current governor of Florida)

  • Fred Thompson (former US Senator of Tennessee)

  • Condaleeza Rice (Secretary of State)

  • Colin Powell (former Secretary of State)

  • JC Watts (former Republican chairman of Republican House)

  • Rob Portman (Director of Office of Management and Budget)

  • Tim Pawlenty (Governor of Minnesota)

  • Bobby Jindal (Governor of Lousiana)

  • Mark Sanford (Governor of South Carolina)

  • Lindsey Graham (US Senator of South Carolina)

  • Sarah Palin (Governor of Alaska)

  • Kay Hutchinson (US Senator of Texas)

  • John Thune (US Senator of South Dakota)

  • Haley Barbour (Governor of Mississippi)

  • Marsha Blackburn (US Tenessee Representative)

  • Joseph Lieberman (US Senator of Connecticut)

  • Sonny Perdue (Governor of Georgia)

  • George Allen (former US Senator of Virginia)

  • Matt Blunt (Governor of Missouri)

  • some other US Senator, congressman

  • some other Governor

  • some dark horse like Dick Cheney


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something struck me last night......I was very impressed with Cindy McCain's bio video....and I was really struck by how much humanitarian work she has done.

Just wondering.....have the Obama's done any humanitarian work on the same scale ( or even a fraction ) as Mrs. McCain has?

Ummm....all that community organizer work that Obama did right out of college that Palin was ridiculing him for the other night? That was helping people who were down and out and really needed help. He was doing it on behalf of several churches in poor parts of Chicago that were hit very hard by steel mill closures.

At any rate, I am not being asked to vote for Cindy McCain. I'm being asked to vote for John McCain. Two different people. I don't have a sense of Cindy's political platform but I have to think it's pretty simliar to John's, and I understand his plenty.

jag
 
That's exactly what I'm saying. They are blood, and for no other reason than it makes Obama look cold-hearted and uncaring, he should at least step forward and make the gesture.

You could argue the same thing when Cheney didn't publicly stand up to Bush when he announced he would try to constitutionally ban gay marriage. It's only his daughter that would be affecting.
 
I've read the story, but it doesn't change that Obama should say *something* about it to quell those who believe he could be doing more for his own brother.

Perhaps George is doing okay, and perhaps he's happy where he is (though one of his neighbors seems to disagree), or perhaps he's too proud to ask for help. Whatever the case, Obama should let his detractors know that he made the offer, but the offer was rejected.

Perception IS reality and the less he does to address the negative perception, the more power it will gain and the more it will heighten people's concerns about his 'character.'

:facepalm:

Okay, so, even though the accusations about Obama's brother from the GOP are false, Obama should defend against those accusations...

But the media better damn well leave Sarah Palin's family the hell alone...

Hypocrisy at it's finest.
 
Cindy looks like the creepy 50+ Mom down the street that has had way too much plastic surgery.
 
You could argue the same thing when Cheney didn't publicly stand up to Bush when he announced he would try to constitutionally ban gay marriage. It's only his daughter that would be affecting.

Ouch.

jag
 
Image removed because it was inappropriate and irrelevant to this discussion.

Be careful, Tron.

Is that a warning? I'm going to walk on egg shells now because of you? Not bloody likely.
 
I am frightened that there are so many people willing to vote for the downfall of our country.
 
I've read the story, but it doesn't change that Obama should say *something* about it to quell those who believe he could be doing more for his own brother.

Perhaps George is doing okay, and perhaps he's happy where he is (though one of his neighbors seems to disagree), or perhaps he's too proud to ask for help. Whatever the case, Obama should let his detractors know that he made the offer, but the offer was rejected.

Perception IS reality and the less he does to address the negative perception, the more power it will gain and the more it will heighten people's concerns about his 'character.'

his half brother, who he hasn't kept in contact with.
:huh: anyone with half a brain should kind of know that's how it goes with families like that.
I had half brothers and didn't even meet them till I was 18, and even then was only friendly with one of 4.
after he died, to this day I have not seen nor heard nor sought them.

It's weird how,and this is not you case lazur but tron's, people will argue about how the poor and how they shouldn't get handouts and then get outraged when the poor don;t get handouts.
and c'mon, we all know, if he had helped his half brother, a distant cousin or two would've popped up.

c'mon guys, it's not like Obama dropped his crippled wife for a hotter/richer model looking MILF is it?
 
c'mon guys, it's not like Obama dropped his crippled wife for a hotter/richer model looking MILF is it?

And it's not like Obama called that new, rich, hotter model looking MILF wife a "c**t" and a trollop and tried to enter her in a Ms. Buffalo Chip contest or anything. :hehe:

jag
 
And it's not like Obama called that new, rich, hotter model looking MILF wife a "c**t" and a trollop and tried to enter her in a Ms. Buffalo Chip contest or anything. :hehe:

jag

Again, I must ask Jag, wasn't the "c**t" comment debunked?
 
http://www.tvweek.com/news/2008/09/mccain_tv_ratings_beat_obama_i.php


McCain TV Ratings Beat Obama in Preliminary Numbers

By Andrew Krukowski

Presidential candidate John McCain's acceptance speech at the Republican National Convention drew more television viewers than his rival Barack Obama attracted at the Democratic party's event last week, according to preliminary ratings from Nielsen Media Research.

Across all broadcast networks Thursday, Sen. McCain’s speech ended the night with a 4.8 rating/7 share, compared to Sen. Obama’s 4.3/7 average, according to overnight numbers from metered households in 55 U.S. markets measured by Nielsen. These ratings are preliminary, however, and are subject to change.

NBC’s coverage of Sen. McCain’s speech started directly at the tail end of the opening game of NFL season, with the speech pulling in a 6.3 rating/10 share, topping Sen. Obama’s speech last week by 26%. That lead-in may have boosted audiences who last night turned out in droves to watch Republican VP candidate Sarah Palin introduce herself to the country.

ABC’s showing of the McCain speech averaged a 4.5/7, down 2% from the same night of the Democratic convention last week, while CBS’ coverage took in a 3.4/5, an increase of 3%.
 
I've read Obama's total viewers may actually be higher because the speech was also aired on BET and Univision, and those numbers weren't counted with the network ratings.
 
I've read Obama's total viewers may actually be higher because the speech was also aired on BET and Univision, and those numbers weren't counted with the network ratings.

Oh Gosh...Here comes something Racist in 3...2....1......
 
But is that really true, danoyse?

I read that last week when Obama's numbers were reported. Although you can argue that it shouldn't count against McCain if his speech didn't air on those stations too.

They didn't show Palin's speech on WE or Lifetime. Sexists. :oldrazz:
 
I read that last week when Obama's numbers were reported. Although you can argue that it shouldn't count against McCain if his speech didn't air on those stations too.

They should still count... cause technically it was a matter of ratings showing/not showing speeches on those networks. But I'm not in the television business...

They didn't show Palin's speech on WE or Lifetime. Sexists. :oldrazz:

Women can't be sexist and black people can't be racist. :hehe:
 
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080905/ap_on_el_pr/mccain_palin
McCain, Palin present themselves as reformers

By TERENCE HUNT, AP White House Correspondent 9 minutes ago


CEDARBURG, Wis. - John McCain said Friday the sagging economy has brought "tough times all over America" as he made a splashy debut with Sarah Palin in critical Midwestern states as the newly crowned Republican presidential ticket.
b

A crowd of thousands cheered the Arizona senator and Alaska governor as they presented themselves as a team of reformers eager to challenge Washington's political establishment.
"John McCain doesn't run with the Washington herd," said Palin, the 44-year-old Alaska governor and surprise pick as McCain's running mate.
"It's over. It's over. It's over for the special interests," McCain promised. "We're going to start working for the people of this country."
Twelve hours after leaving the Republican convention in Minnesota, McCain and Palin were cheered and applauded by a throng of thousands that wound down several streets of Cedarburg, a traditional Republican enclave within Democratic-leaning Wisconsin.
McCain's campaign put out an ambitious estimate of 12,400 people at the rally. Cedarburg's population is about 11,000.
"Isn't this the most marvelous running mate in the history of this nation?" McCain said of Palin, who introduced him as "the only great man in this race, the only man in this election ready to serve as our 44th president."
Two months before the election, small towns are a key target for McCain as he tries to lure independent and blue-collar voters essential for him to win.
Many people in the audience held digital cameras and video cameras above their heads to get a shot as McCain's "Straight Talk Express" bus rolled into town. Palin said it was their intention to bring their campaign directly from the convention to "small-town America" like the small town in Alaska where she once was mayor.
The Republican team plans to campaign together in hotly contested states — Wisconsin and Michigan on Friday, Colorado and New Mexico on Saturday — and then go their separate ways. Palin is expected to return to Alaska just briefly and then go back to the campaign trail, perhaps on Monday.
"Change is coming, change is coming," McCain promised the audience, borrowing the same theme that Democrat Barack Obama has made the centerpiece of his run for the White House.
McCain's campaign as a political outsider and rebel is complicated by the fact that he has served in the Senate for 22 years and solidly endorsed key elements of President Bush's record, most notably the war in Iraq and hundreds of billions of dollars in tax cuts. McCain originally opposed the tax cuts but changed his mind as he sought the GOP presidential nomination.
McCain took note of gloomy economic news from Washington: The government reported that the nation's unemployment rate soared to a five-year high of 6.1 percent in August as employers slashed 84,000 jobs.
"My friends, a little straight talk, a little straight talk," McCain said. "These are tough times. Today the jobs report is another reminder these are tough times. They're tough times in Wisconsin, they're tough times in Ohio, tough times all over America." He did not say how he would fix the economy.
After their speeches, Palin and McCain ducked into The Chocolate Factory to greet customers and sign autographs. After Palin met a few people, she turned to the ice cream counter and said: "I've got to get the moose tracks, please. Moose tracks, you know, near and dear to my heart. I can't go wrong with it." She was handed a waffle cone with a giant scoop.
Then McCain and his wife came up to order. The senator asked for a recommendation and then decided on watermelon sorbet. Cindy McCain ordered a brownie.
The woman behind the cash register, Becky Luft, 20, was flush with excitement and her friend described her as McCain's No. 1 fan. McCain came around the counter to pose for a picture with her.

People in the restaurant congratulated Palin on her nomination, many saying they liked her speech.
"I am very impressed with you," said Doreen Wirth, a Republican and artist from Cedarburg.
McCain and Palin headed to Michigan for an evening rally. After touching down, they stopped in Detroit to collect the endorsement of the Fraternal Order of Police, which has 328,000 members nationwide.
Chuck Canterbury, the union's national president, said McCain is a leader "who understands the words 'in the line of duty' and who knows all too well what it means to put your life on the line."
In brief remarks, McCain noted that Palin's husband is a member of the United Steel Workers union, and told the officers that they "are at the front lines of our cites and towns — you know the challenges we face."
___ Associated Press writer Sara Kugler contributed to this report.
 
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