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  McCain refines plan for general election
Last updated: 2008-02-09


McCain refines plan for general election
2008-02-09

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Republican John McCain plans to run a general election campaign as steadfast protector of the United States in the face of terrorism as well as a crusader against big government.

The Democrats, he says, offer neither.

"They would govern this country in a way that will, in my opinion, take this country backward," the likely GOP nominee said this week in a speech to conservative activists that served as his opening argument for a fall showdown with either Sens. Hillary Rodham Clinton or Barack Obama.

With chief rival Mitt Romney out of the race, McCain is gearing up for the most wide-open presidential election in half a century and the first since 1960 in which a senator will win the White House.

As McCain pivots from the primary campaign to the general election, he not only must unite disaffected Republicans who view his independent streak warily but also lead a dispirited GOP against a far more energized Democratic Party.

Neither is a small task, Republicans say.

"He has between now and early November to get this worked out with conservatives. There won't be a 'big C' conservative in this country not on the campaign trail for him," said Rich Galen, a GOP strategist who advised former candidate Fred Thompson.

"The best thing that could happen is exactly what happened on the Republican side -- getting a nominee early," Galen said.

One conservative on board is Thompson, who said late Friday he was endorsing his former rival.

"This is no longer about past preferences or differences. It is about what is best for our country and for me that means that Republican should close ranks behind John McCain," Thompson said in a statement.

Said Ralph Reed, a Republican strategist and former director of the Christian Coalition: "This is the most fired up I've ever seen the liberal wing of the Democratic Party. They're hungry and they want to win. If you're John McCain and you're going into that kind of a fall campaign, you need to have the intensity, the enthusiasm and the energy of the grass roots of your party."

To that end, McCain hopes his two broad campaign pillars -- national security and spending restraint -- as well as what he calls his differences with Clinton and Obama on other issues like taxes, health care and judges will bring longtime critics into the fold.

"We have profound philosophical differences. They are liberal Democrats and I am a conservative Republican," McCain frequently said of Obama and Clinton as he campaigned for the primaries -- and laid the groundwork for his fall campaign.

He often claims that a country led by either Democrat would return to a time of a bloated bureaucracy and ignored overseas threats to U.S. security.

Democrats argue that McCain represents nothing more than a continuation of the Bush presidency.

"The more voters get to know the real John McCain the more they see him for the Bush Republican he is," said Damien LaVera, a Democratic National Committee spokesman. "A vote for McCain is a vote for four more years of the same failed Bush policies that have undermined our economy and made America less secure."

National security in general -- and the Iraq war in particular -- is emerging as a cornerstone of McCain's general election push.

"That is going to be, I think, a major issue in this campaign," McCain said Friday in Norfolk, Va. "They want to set a date for withdrawal from Iraq that I believe would have catastrophic consequences."

However, the country has been at war in Iraq for five years -- and a majority of the public has turned against U.S. continued involvement.

Thus, McCain risks alienating independents and moderates, many of whom oppose continued U.S. involvement in the war and have helped McCain all but seize the nomination. His discussions about curbing global warming and protecting the environment could help offset their discontent.

As in the primary, McCain plans to draw on his Vietnam veteran biography and decades of experience on military matters to argue that he alone is the most qualified to be a wartime commander in chief. He long ago started contrasting his embrace of a continued troop presence in Iraq, for an indefinite period of time, with Democratic calls for withdrawal.

"Senator Clinton and Senator Obama will concede to our critics that our own actions to defend against its threats are responsible for fomenting the terrible evil of radical Islamic extremism, and their resolve to combat it will be as flawed as their judgment," McCain said in his Thursday speech to the Conservative Political Action Conference.

It's a soft-on-terror argument that Bush successfully used against Democratic nominee John Kerry in 2004, and one that could rally the Republican base around McCain's candidacy.

To shore up his wayward conservatives base as well as political independents, McCain also aims to score points with his battle against out-of-control federal spending and lawmakers' pet projects.

McCain has been a long time foe of congressional earmarks, fighting against the infamous bridge in Alaska, for example, and poking fun at Clinton for supporting $1 million for a museum commemorating the 1969 Woodstock Music and Art Fair.

When it comes to earmarks, he says, "Not 10,000. Not one. Zero."

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