You don't think it was both, she's a woman and conservative?
I agree that if Romney were the candidate, the race would have been much closer. McCain just comes off as a grump.I disagree. McCain destroyed the Republican Party campaign. McCain should've never been the nominee. Obama was energetic, young, handsome, and an outsider. The Republicans needed one of their own. If Romney won the nomination, the history of this night would be our first Mormon president. Especially following the economic meltdown and Romney's reputation as an economic guru. The Republicans should've never nominated John McCain. They went with name recognition and it bit them in the ass. Palin certainly didn't help, but McCain was the problem. He just wasn't the right candidate for 2008.
Honestly, my first thought upon hearing about Palin's nomination was, "Trying to net the bitter Hilary supporters, eh?"Palin was ultimately a bad choice. He must have figured she would help him with two groups, the hard conservative/religoius factions of the Republican party AND the disaffected Hillary supporters. Palin, looked to him like the person who could get both groups to support him.
I disagree. McCain destroyed the Republican Party campaign. McCain should've never been the nominee. Obama was energetic, young, handsome, and an outsider. The Republicans needed one of their own. If Romney won the nomination, the history of this night would be our first Mormon president. Especially following the economic meltdown and Romney's reputation as an economic guru. The Republicans should've never nominated John McCain. They went with name recognition and it bit them in the ass. Palin certainly didn't help, but McCain was the problem. He just wasn't the right candidate for 2008.
I disagree. McCain destroyed the Republican Party campaign. McCain should've never been the nominee. Obama was energetic, young, handsome, and an outsider. The Republicans needed one of their own. If Romney won the nomination, the history of this night would be our first Mormon president. Especially following the economic meltdown and Romney's reputation as an economic guru. The Republicans should've never nominated John McCain. They went with name recognition and it bit them in the ass. Palin certainly didn't help, but McCain was the problem. He just wasn't the right candidate for 2008.
I disagree. McCain destroyed the Republican Party campaign. McCain should've never been the nominee. Obama was energetic, young, handsome, and an outsider. The Republicans needed one of their own. If Romney won the nomination, the history of this night would be our first Mormon president. Especially following the economic meltdown and Romney's reputation as an economic guru. The Republicans should've never nominated John McCain. They went with name recognition and it bit them in the ass. Palin certainly didn't help, but McCain was the problem. He just wasn't the right candidate for 2008.
I am sort of lost
You are drastically affected by the economic downturn and you liked Obama to begin with right? I don't see the issue here
What industry are you in?
It was the third week of September, and Senator John McCain was speaking to a nearly empty convention center in Jacksonville, Fla. Lehman Brothers had collapsed that day, a harrowing indicator of the coming financial crisis and a reminder that the presidential campaign was turning into a referendum on which candidate could best address the nation’s economic challenges.
On stage, Mr. McCain, of Arizona, was trying to show concern for the prospect of hardship but also optimism about the country’s resilience.
“The fundamentals of the economy are strong,” he said.
A thousand miles away, at Senator Barack Obama’s campaign headquarters in Chicago, the aides who monitored Mr. McCain’s every utterance knew immediately that they had just heard a potential turning point in a race that seemed to be tightening. They rushed out to tell Dan Pfeiffer, Mr. Obama’s communications director, what Mr. McCain, the Republican candidate, had just said, knowing that his words could be used to portray him as out of touch.
“Shut up!” Mr. Pfeiffer said incredulously. “He said what?” Mr. Obama, who had just arrived at a rally in Colorado, hastily inserted the comments into his speech. And by nightfall, the Obama campaign had produced an advertisement that included video of Mr. McCain making the statement that would shadow him for the rest of the campaign.
At the McCain campaign headquarters in Arlington, Va., at almost the same moment that morning, Mr. McCain’s chief strategist, Steve Schmidt, looked stricken when his war room alerted him to the comment. Within 30 minutes, he was headed for a flight to Florida to join Mr. McCain as they began a frantic and ultimately unsuccessful effort to recover.