The Future of the Parties
Brad from The Crossed Pond has responded to one of my posts at The Art of the Possible on Brad's idea of a single term promise from John McCain, among other suggestions for the struggling Republican Presidential candidate. Brad, tag, you're it now.
Now as Brad says, you have to be "preternaturally preoccupied with evangelical issues (either by being an evangelical, or by being particularly concerned with them) to view them as being central to the general election either by presence or by absence." As a libertarian Democrat, and therefore someone who has affiliated with the Democratic Party largely out of my opposition to the Religious Right and its affiliation with the Republican Party, I think I fit the bill of being "preternaturally preoccupied."
My argument is taht while evangelicals failed to mount a significant challenge to John McCain, they did manage to mount a significant challenge (against the will of the leaders of the movement) to Mitt Romney as the presumptive frontrunner and propelled Mike Huckabee into the top tier of the nomination fight. The nomination fight has already been dominated by stories of unhappy evangelicals and conservatives. Now, in the general election, there seems to be a weekly schedule of new stories about how evangelicals are not excited about John McCain.
Perception, in politics, is more important than fact. So I disagree with Brad's own perception that:
Even as far as the media is concerned “evangelical mobilization” is “out” as an election year theme. Though “Obama wins evangelical support” will likely be a back-page story that pops up here and there.
I think that the tug of war between Obama and McCain over evangelicals has already played a major role in media coverage of the race. But could John McCain win if only he could rally the Republican base and connect with evangelicals?
No.
The Republican brand itself is in such disarray, and the county is demographically more Democratic than it was four years ago, that the same base strategy of Karl Rove will not operate successfully for John McCain. Ultimately, George W. Bush went down a pathway in his first term that undermined his own reelection (he underperformed based on historical expectations based on the economy). Now, four years later, are we surprised that we are heading towards a Democratic landslide?
There are plenty of ways that the Republican Party could turn itself around, although a number also depend on the Democrats imploding once in power. I'm not entirely sure about which direction the GOP will take, but I don't think we can rule out that the failure to energize evangelicals and social conservatives as a possible scapegoat.



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