Focus on the Senate
by J.B. Williams
Issue 102 - February 27, 2008
While the MSM polling data published by the Republican national
Committee aims to make John McCain look like the best they can, the real
numbers say something quite different.
At the time of Mitt Romney's withdrawal, the Republicans had completed
30 state primaries. John McCain lost 19 of the 30. A little over 16.5
million votes had been cast in Republican primaries and only 4.9 million
of those were for McCain, 30.9%, with 69.1% of all Republican voters
having voted against him.
Obama carried his home state of Illinois with 65% of the vote. Clinton
carried her adopted home state of New York with 57% of the vote. McCain
won his home state too, but with only 47% of the vote, less than half of
his constituents. The only states McCain broke above 50% in are liberal
stronghold states, Connecticut, New Jersey and New York and in all three
cases, both Clinton and Obama defeat him in these states by more than a
2
to 1 margin.
28 states have completed both RNC and DNC primaries thus far. By popular
vote, Obama won 14, Clinton 10 and McCain only 4. McCain lost the RNC
primary in 3 of those 4 states, averaging only 14% support from
Republican
primary voters in each. He is at best secure in only 2 of the 4 states,
Alaska and Iowa. In the general election, he can indeed lose both
Arizona
and Nevada.
This is the "winner" RNC heads think they can defeat Democrats with in
the
fall? How???
All Republicans combined have garnered 16.5 million primary votes in 30
primaries. Democrats Clinton and Obama alone have garnered 17.6 million
primary votes in only 28 primaries, 1.1 million more than all
Republicans
combined. If McCain could unite 100% of Republican voters behind his
campaign, and Clinton - Obama only keep their 78% of the Democrat votes,
McCain still loses by over 1 million votes. And he can't unite 100% of
Republican voters, no way - no how!
Of more than 22.5 million primary votes cast and counted to date,
Clinton
has 40% of those votes while Obama has 38% and McCain has but 22%.
McCain
is not even in striking distance of either Clinton or Obama. Who can
McCain invite to share his ticket that will unite GOP voters and deliver
the kind of excitement currently found across the political aisle? I can
think of no one.
So, the Senate is where conservatives must now turn their attention in a
BIG way!
Taking back control of the Senate, which must confirm all Supreme Court
nominees and pass all legislation, must now become job #1 for all
conservatives. The House is not realistically in play, but the closely
divided Senate is.
Use the energy and money you were prepared to put into Thompson,
Huckabee,
Paul, Hunter, Tancredo, Romney, Giuliani or any other Republican, to
make
certain that a conservative is sitting in your Senate seat after
November.
If you can't put a conservative in your Senate seat this year, take a
look
at other Senate races where you can help other states pick up a
conservative seat in the Senate and put your resources to work there.
We're talking saving a nation here.
Whether Clinton, Obama or McCain sit in the Oval Office for the next
four
years, who controls the U.S. Senate will be vital to protecting and
preserving conservative values and principles for the next ten or twenty
years. If conservatives can't unite around this one, they deserve what
they get!
J. B. Williams notes that he is a business man, husband, father, and a writer. His website is at http://www.jb-williams.com.
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