Sending Childers up McCain's spine
Mississippi House race indicates GOP has more cause for concern this fall
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McCain begins to crumble? April 21: Washington Post’s Eugene Robinson discusses Sen. John McCain’s mud-wrestling on the economy, the new flip-flopping regarding the endorsement of Rev. John Hagee, and the senator’s temper. Countdown |
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But there's another story being written about a contest that took place Tuesday in a very different state, which should give Republicans some pause as John McCain ambles through the final weeks of his campaign's extended free ride.
I'm referring to the special election in a northern Mississippi congressional district, the one President Bush carried in 2004 by 25 points. There, in the cradle of the conservative South, Democrat Travis Childers came within 410 votes of winning outright the seat former Rep. Roger Wicker (R) never took with less than 63 percent. Childers, who survived a barrage of TV ads aimed at connecting him to his national party, is now considered the slight favorite to win the May 13 runoff against Republican Greg Davis.
A fluke? Not really. Just last month, physician Bill Foster (D) captured former House Speaker Dennis Hastert's district in solid Republican territory. If Childers prevails in the runoff and Democrat Don Cazayoux carries a similarly red district (La.-06) in a special on May 3, Democrats will have won three special elections in a row in districts that, according to Hotline master number-cruncher Amy Walter, Bush carried by an average of 59 percent in 2004. That, as they say, is a trend.
Disaffection with the GOP brand at the House level has developed into a major concern this year for the man now trying to promote that brand from the top down. Few doubt McCain will carry Mississippi or Louisiana this fall, but then few people thought Democrats had a chance to pick up those House seats, either. Regardless, the disconnect between traditional Republican voters and their candidates, widely detected for months by pollsters and fundraisers, is now playing out at the polls. The dynamics are similar: the GOP candidate faces fundraising challenges, a lack of enthusiasm among base voters and a Democratic opponent whose appeal to independents helps nullify party labels.
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The disconnect is playing out elsewhere, too. In North Carolina, local Republicans bickered this week with McCain over a TV ad the state party plans to run in advance of the gubernatorial primary on May 6. The 30-second spot doesn't attack the policies or character of the two leading Democrats running for governor. Instead it plays off those candidates' support for Obama and raises the specter of his former pastor, Jeremiah Wright, beginning with a photo of Obama and Wright together and a clip of Wright's controversial remarks about America. "He's just too extreme for North Carolina," a narrator says of Obama.
McCain quickly cried foul. "The television advertisement you are planning to air degrades our civics and distracts us from the very real differences we have with the Democrats," he wrote in a letter to local party leaders. "In the strongest terms, I implore you to not run this advertisement."
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But local Republicans defied McCain, refusing to back down. This is not about McCain or the national GOP, state party chairwoman Linda Daves told the Charlotte Observer. "It is about North Carolina, our values."
Of course, such Sister Souljah moments have upsides for McCain, who keeps a delicate balance between appealing to conservatives and independents. It allows him to stake a claim against the tawdry side of politics while his party does his dirty work for him. But when the GOP brand is tainted, so is McCain, who then has more to worry about than trying to match the Democrats dollar for dollar. While Obama has yet to "seal the deal" among Democrats, McCain's task to convince voters that they should stick with a Republican, even one they like, could be a far more difficult challenge this fall.
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