2012 Feb 6 |
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http://www.theatlanticright.com/2008/01/24/rush-limbaugh-declares-war-on-john-mccain/
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Posted by Michael van der Galien   |   17 comments

You can read the transcript of the show in which Rush Limbaugh declares war on Senator John McCain here. The point is clear: He’s not going to support McCain, no matter what. McCain has angered Limbaugh on more than one important issue. It’s fascinating to see a conservative talk radio host go after a fellow Republican like this, we haven’t seen much of that.

Rush:

A new California poll taken just after Fred Thompson’s withdrawal from the Republican primary shows Mitt Romney as leading big over McCain in California when it comes to which candidate best represents the Republican Party. It’s a new California poll. Romney leads McCain in California when it comes to which candidate best represents the Republican Party. This is after Fred Thompson pulled out. Romney also held a substantial lead in regard to which candidate best represents what the Republican Party stands for. Thirty-two percent for Romney, 20% for McCain, 13% for Huckabee, 10% for Giuliani. This is after Fred Thompson pulls out. Romney getting tough in Boca Raton, Florida, yesterday, became animated during a brief interview with the Palm Beach Post. He was asked about a press release from McCain’s campaign Monday that criticized job growth in Massachusetts under Romney’s watch. Romney said, “What’s his record, by the way? What’s McCain’s record of job growth? What’s he done? I think you have to have a record before you can criticize somebody else’s.” Romney needs to continue to be able to nail that. Poor Obama needs to be doing this, but doesn’t have it in him. So Romney is out there questioning McCain’s record on job growth.

Thad Cochran of Mississippi has just endorsed Romney. Norman Schwarzkopf has endorsed McCain. Now, Schwarzkopf lives here in Florida, and McCain is campaigning in Florida. He’s been in the Panhandle, but he’s here because the Florida primary is next Tuesday. Now, McCain has been here, and he’s been talking to Cubans down in Miami, (doing McCain impression) “I hate Castro. Castro is a sleazebag, and don’t worry about me and don’t worry about Castro. Castro is going to end up dead whether I have anything to say about it or not, but if I have a chance to say something about it, he’s gone, you got me?” So he’s down there, and here’s what I would like. I’m a Florida registered Republican. I’m going to vote in the primary, all right? I say this to you as an average American citizen, not as a political commentator and not as an advocate for anybody, I’m going to say this to you, we have our primary here next Tuesday, and independents can’t vote in our primary, Democrats can’t vote in our primary, it’s only Republicans. And just as I would say to Rudy Giuliani, “Rudy, we’ve heard 9/11, time for some other things,” I would say to Senator McCain, “Senator McCain, we know about your POW heroism. We know about your stuff on the surge. We know of your allegiance on the war in Iraq with President Bush. We know all that. I want to hear you talk about your immigration record, Senator McCain. I want to hear you talk about your record on free speech, meaningful, campaign finance reform. I’d like to hear what you think we should do with the prisoners at Guantanamo Bay. The people of Florida need to hear this.”

He added that McCain “can surround himself with the Schwarzkopf and the generals and so forth and the POW stuff, which we all admire and respect,” but that “you owe it to the electorate to start talking honestly and openly about your complete public record rather than cherry-picking what you want to say to different audiences in different places.”

“Talk about how proud you are of your service in the Senate, leading the Gang of 14, campaign finance reform, voting against two major tax cuts. Those tax cuts would help millions of businesses and employees, spurt economic growth,” he lashed out.

Is Limbaugh as influential as many think? Who knows. Perhaps not. But it’s clear that McCain invokes the ire of people like him. And that’s a problem. Talk Radio, and bloggers, are very influential combined for the GOP. They’re also great at getting the footsoldiers to do something (see immigration bill). Without their support… can McCain win, let alone govern?

Note: I’m not a fan of Limbaugh. I think he’s extreme and not a voice of reason but of emotions. But that’s not the issue right now: it’s his impact and how people like him will vote.

  1. Posted by casualobserver
    | Quote | Trackback | Link #19322
    casualobserver Well, here's one possible take on Limbaugh's influence........if it was significant, you would think Fred Thompson and even Huckabee wouldn't be losing primaries to McCain and Romney.
  2. Posted by kimmie
    | Quote | Trackback | Link #19327
    kimmie BRAVO - BRAVO!!!!    I could not have expressed things better myself!  You go!!   Rush has repeatedly said that the most dangerous thing in this country is ignorance - so true!!  I live in Texas and we have fought McCain's "Dream Act" amnesty bills all summer.  I plead with people to look up McCain's past record and his past, period!!   We need to arm oursleves with truth!!
  3. Posted by C Stanley
    | Quote | Trackback | Link #19330
    C Stanley He's definitely not as influential as he once was, but this is going to be a real test. In fact, it's actually quite a risk he's taking. If Republican voters do hand McCain a win (either in FL, or if it's close enough there and then McCain does well in other states with closed primaries) then Rush has pretty well proved his irrelevance (which would be one more reason to vote McCain IMO, but that's a whole 'nother issue.)
  4. Posted by Tully
    | Quote | Trackback | Link #19340
    Tully I don't think so, Christine. Rush's "relevance" is all with a particular brand of populist conservatism. It's a mistake to conflate that with Republicanism in general. Parties are built of coalitions, and Rush is not speaking for a party, but for a faction.
  5. Posted by Jimmie
    | Quote | Trackback | Link #19345
    Jimmie Perhaps so, but it's a faction that is upwards of 20 million strong and crosses all socio-economic, racial, and cultural boundaries. Ignore it at your political peril.
  6. Pingback | Link #19347
    John McCain » Blog Archive » Rush Limbaugh Declares War on John McCain [...] americanchaos wrote an interesting post today onHere’s a quick excerptYou can read the transcript of the show in which Rush Limbaugh declares war on Senator John McCain here. The point is clear: He’s not going to support McCain, no matter what. McCain has angered Limbaugh on more than one important issue. … [...]
  7. Posted by Ryan
    | Quote | Trackback | Link #19355
    Ryan Rush's last stand reeks of the desparation that is spewing forth from his dwindling faction.  I agree with C Stanley and would be short selling Rush Limbaugh stock if such a financial vehicle existed.  He and his ilk have over stayed their welcome and are more than partly to blame for putting unqualified leaders into power who have made the GOP synonymous with fiscal irresponsibility, hypocrisy, and corruption.  The purging of such pill popping pharisees, while noisey, is exactly what the party needs to regain its power, it's place as the reasonable economic and social voice of our country, and, most importantly, its dignity.  John McCain is the natural choice to put the party back on the tracks and prevail in the global struggle against anti western ignorance.   
  8. Posted by C Stanley
    | Quote | Trackback | Link #19363
    C Stanley
    He and his ilk have over stayed their welcome and are more than partly to blame for putting unqualified leaders into power who have made the GOP synonymous with fiscal irresponsibility, hypocrisy, and corruption
    Hear, hear, Ryan. Tully: I get that, but I don't know how populous his audience is these days and I don't know how much influence he now holds. I only know that most rational Republicans that I know aren't fans and can see the corruptive influence he's had in the type of Republican 'leadership' he's helped along.
  9. Posted by Jed Merrill, ConservativeRepublicans.com
    | Quote | Trackback | Link #19408
    Jed Merrill, ConservativeRepublicans.com Rush is right on.  I likewise will not vote for McCain under ANY circumstances.  (Maybe if he were running against the devil himself, but Hillary is not there yet.)  I will vote Green Party before I vote for McCain.  McCain will undermine us from the inside, while Hillary can only attempt to from without. (Why the Green Party?  I won't vote for Hillary or Obama, but I still feel obligated to vote.)
  10. Posted by Pixie
    | Quote | Trackback | Link #19504
    Pixie admin: bigotry and vulgarity are not welcome here
  11. Posted by Mike
    | Quote | Trackback | Link #20400
    Mike As a long-time Rush listener, I'm kind of put off by his personal vendetta against John McCain.  It seems to me this started with his dogmatic position on immigration, and has blinded him to the damage he is doing to his reputation and to the Republican party.  It seems that logic and reason have left him, and he has dug in his position, and nothing will sway him. It is very irresponsible to say that he would not vote in the general election if McCain is the Republican candidate, since the effect of this is far worse (liberal judges, unchecked entitlement growth, fairness legislation, etc etc).  A non-vote is at least half a vote for the other candidate, and if he manages to convince even 10% of his listeners of this, a close election could certainly be swayed.  I think that Rush would actually agree with McCain on more issues than he will admit.  Elections are always about choosing the candidate with whom you disagree least.  Anything else is childish. Perhaps I'm his only listener with this opinion, based on the lack of this type of constructive criticism around.  Between this and the immigration diatribe, I've just about run out of reasons to listen to him.
  12. Posted by Paul Marat
    | Quote | Trackback | Link #21289
    Paul Marat I will not vote for McCain, no matter what. Many others are like me. McCain will cause the GOP to split in two.
  13. Posted by Paul Marat
    | Quote | Trackback | Link #21292
    Paul Marat McCain is for open borders. 20% of Florida voters are Hispanic. So naturally they're going to flock to McCain because he's a traitor and is going to allow America to become a third world country by having them all swarm into here. The War in Iraq is just an expensive diversion. The real war for our future is right on our southern border. Also, the MSM (Main Stream Media) loves him, so he must be no good.
  14. Posted by Paul Marat, VivaJuanMcCain.com
    | Quote | Trackback | Link #21295
    Paul Marat, VivaJuanMcCain.com That's the website I wanted to tell you about: Viva Juan McCain.com
  15. Posted by Ben Dover
    | Quote | Trackback | Link #21640
    Ben Dover The biggest difference between Limbaugh and Hitler is that Hitler never had a TV program canceled. Ever notice how well Limbaugh's line of mens ties look with brown shirts??
  16. Pingback | Link #80448
    Kumbaya again « Sohum Parlance II [...] Limbaugh meanwhile has it in for McCain. I mean, Clinton and Obama are doing their best to throw the victory to the Republicans this year, [...]
  17. Pingback | Link #87360
    The Rise of the Anti-Rush Republican « Leaning Right [...] leader of the Republican Party, I get confused. He is NOT even close to the leader. Remember his hesitation to support John McCain (but operation chaos was a pretty sweet deal)?  Rush is a figurehead, not a leader, of [...]