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The McCain Enigma

12 Feb 2008 12:15 pm

Jon Chait notes that John McCain has engaged in some pretty astounding policy meandering over the years in a way that makes it absurdly hard to tell what he would actually do as president:

Determining how McCain would act as president has thus become a highly sophisticated exercise in figuring out whom he's misleading and why. Nearly everyone can find something to like in McCain. Liberals can admire his progressive instincts and hope that he is dishonestly pandering to the right in order to get through the primary. Conservatives can believe he will follow whatever course his conservative advisers set out for him and will feel bound by whatever promises he has made to them. Even the ideological tendency McCain is most strongly identified with--neoconservative foreign policy--is, as John B. Judis explained in The New Republic, a relatively recent development: McCain originally opposed intervention in Bosnia and worried about a bloody ground campaign before the first Gulf war (see "Neo-McCain," October 16, 2006). McCain's advisers include not only neoconservatives but also the likes of Henry Kissinger and Brent Scowcroft. It would hardly be unimaginable for McCain to revert to his old realism, especially if Iraq continues to fail at political reconciliation. He could easily be the president who ends the war.

The amazing thing about McCain is that his reputation for principled consistency has remained completely intact. It is his strongest cudgel against opponents. Wall Street Journal editorial page columnist Kimberley Strassel recently gushed that McCain is "no flip-flopper." "Like or dislike Mr. McCain's views," she added, "Americans know what they are." Then, in the very next paragraph, she wrote that McCain will now be "as pure as the New Hampshire snow on the two core issues of taxes and judges" and that "[t]he key difference between Mr. McCain in 2000 and 2008 is that he...appears intent on making amends" to conservatives.

It seems to me that one's best bet under conditions of uncertainty is to assume that politicians will, in fact, implement the agendas they're campaigning on. So if John McCain says he'll resist the repeal of the Bush tax cuts he probably will, as president, resist the repeal of the Bush tax cuts. But what's really disturbing about McCain's many flip-flops is their often obscure motivation. His far-right swing on national security has wound up serving him well in the 2008 GOP primary, but it actually took place back in the mid-to-late 1990s, so it's not the result of straightforward political calculation. Similarly, his big veer to the left in 2002-3 didn't seem to have much of a root cause beyond personal pique -- he was pissed at George W. Bush and at the time Democrats were pushing a pretty modest, tepid agenda so McCain embraced large chunks of it to spite his rival.

And as Chait emphasize, McCain actually denies that any of this swaying to-and-fro ever took place, so he doesn't have any kind of story to explain what it's all about.

If you find the vague themes of nationalistic collectivism running through McCain's career to be appealing, maybe this meandering on substantive issues looks reassuring to you. If you don't see the appeal, then I think it looks frightening. But from a pure electoral perspective, the really dangerous thing is that it's hard to imagine McCain (or anyone) ever doing anything more brazenly flip-floppy and dishonest than his shifting story on taxes and yet it hasn't changed his reputation at all. All we can take from that, I think, is that McCain can say literally anything he wants and the press will still say his shit smells sweet. There's the old joke about Bush saying the earth is flat and the papers reporting at as "Flatness of Earth Disputed" but if McCain were to say it you'd just get a "New Study: Earth is Flat" headline.

Still, in terms of what McCain would actually do as president, the fact of the matter is that we just have very, very, very little evidence. Under the circumstances, the best thing to do is probably to assume he'll do what he says he's going to do -- cut taxes, curtail spending, and bomb Iran -- but there's sort of no telling.

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Comments (15)

it's hard to imagine McCain (or anyone) ever doing anything more brazenly flip-floppy and dishonest than his shifting story on taxes and yet it hasn't changed his reputation at all.

Ah, so he's like Barack Obama. Obama flip flops:

1. Once pro-pot legalization. Now against.
2. Once supported the children of illegal immigrants receiving the same benefits as citizens, "whether it's medical, whether it's in-state tuition." Now against.
3. Once supported ending the embargo with Cuba. Now against.
4. Once supported abolishing mandatory minimum sentences. Now against.

Barack Obama - the younger cooler John McCain.

McCain foreign policy: non-treaty-based long-term military presence in Iraq and preparation for war against Iran.

McCain domestic policy: {null}

McCain's flip-flopping is irrelevant.

I disagree that there's no telling, because whatever else is true, the guy does have a 20-year Senate voting record that's not terribly inconsistent. He's always on the right side of the Senate - check out the 108th, 109th and 110th

His Senate voting record, especially on domestic issues, is just not something anyone ever bothers to talk about, because it undermines the very sticky and pre-set maverick story.

If, miracle of miracles, McCain were to signal that he is a foreign policy realist, he would become more appealing to a lot of middle of the road types than our saviour Barack, who --it seems--has a Che Guevara poster in his "unofficial" Houston headquarters.

http://www.myfoxhouston.com/myfox/pages/Home/Detail?contentId=5700252&version=1&locale=EN-US&layoutCode=VSTY&pageId=1.1.1

the best thing to do is probably to assume he'll do what he says he's going to do -- cut taxes, curtail spending, and bomb Iran

What about Congress? Or don't they count? Even if McCain gets elected, he would still have to work with a democratic Congress. Especially a Senate where (hopefully) Lieberman does not hold the deciding vote.

What about Congress? Or don't they count? Even if McCain gets elected, he would still have to work with a democratic Congress.

In the hypothetical where McCain gets elected, presumably it would be because there was significant voter movement towards his platform, i.e. lower taxes, lower spending, and more wars. The Congress will almost certainly be Democratic but they'll have to accede to at least a couple of his priorities.

McCain can say literally anything he wants and the press will still say his shit smells sweet.

But will that still be true if he's in a head-to-head with Obama? Who do they love more? I think we know it will remain true in a head-to-head with Clinton.

I agree that McCain has probably let his personal philosophy guide his actions on one or two occasions, but the career-long effect (and campaign spin) has been to establish his brand of High Contrarianism: "If all these people are pissed at me, I must be doing something right!" As the Politics of Spectacle has become big business, McCain seems to have finessed the sweet spot with the Emm Ess Emm.

As to prediciting how a President McCain might actually govern, I'd guess he's probably pretty tired of dancing and will follow through on most of what he's promising now.

That is the number one problem with Senators, and why they rarely win. No one has a clue how any of them would govern. They've spent their Senate careers trading votes and favors. McCain and progressive tendencies? That's news to me. The guy has a far right voting record. He rubber stamps everything but the tax decreases. As far as the "mnaverick" image? It's all a media creation. Pure and simple. It has no basis in reality. He plays to the media(think Joe Klein .. not the NRO) and they likewise play to him.

Matt, I read this post of yours several times, trying to figure out what you were trying to say.

Only then did I realize that the title was NOT, "The McCain Enema."

Need more coffee. Must warn Earth ...
.

What's McCain going to do when he gets to the White House? He's going to bomb, bomb, bomb, bomb, bomb the ragheads.

But what's really disturbing about McCain's many flip-flops is their often obscure motivation.

Haven't you pretty much explained the motivations in this very post? He's basically conservative but not particularly thoughtful or ideological, so his policy moves tend to be driven by ambition, personal pique, or some combination thereof. Maybe I'm missing something, but the basic structure seems pretty simple. That doesn't tell you what he's going to do next, because for that you'd need to know who he's listening to and who he's mad at, but even that information shouldn't be too hard to discover about a guy who talks as much and has as many enemies as McCain does.

Wondering what McCain would do if elected is completely reasonable in the sense that he really hasn't proposed anything. He talks about Iraq and the surge and of course is prostrating himself to the hardcore dogmatic conservatives but policy? Nothing. Obama gets hit as not being substantive enough, only rhetorically impressive, Clinton is labeled a wonk without a heart and McCain? The war guy. What else. What does he propose? What does he see as needing attention? Earmarks. And more war. Not a lot there.

At least with McCain there is a paper trail, while it now appears clear that Obama went out of his way to put almost nothing down in public print throughout the 1980s and 1990s to prevent his opinions on the issues of the day from coming back to haunt him in a future campaign.

http://isteve.blogspot.com/2008/02/barack-obama-is-kindest-bravest-warmest.html

Okay, there's his massive autobiography but nobody, such as Matt, appears to have read that.

Yes, Steve, he's black. We get it.

"It would hardly be unimaginable for McCain to revert to his old realism, especially if Iraq continues to fail at political reconciliation. He could easily be the president who ends the war."

That's moronic.

The only way McCain will end the Iraq war is if somebody finally convinces him that he can't attack Iran, shift more troops to Afghanistan, and insert troops into Pakistan without removing the troops in Iraq (by sending them over the border into Iran.)

Anybody who believes McCain will "end the Iraq war" is on major hallucinogens.


Comments closed February 26, 2008.

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